Eulogy for True Republicans: A Vanishing Species


Some of my best friends are Republicans. No, really! There is no shame in brand loyalty to the grand old party of Abraham Lincoln — especially here in the abolitionist country of northwest Connecticut. But times have changed.

Republicans used to be true conservatives. They stood for emancipation, of course, but also for free enterprise, personal liberty, freedom and human rights. Republicans were fiscal conservatives; they believed in balanced budgets. Republicans were natural conservationists; they wanted to protect the environment, not destroy it. True Republicans were opposed to "foreign entanglements," foreign interventions and foreign wars — unless they served the national interest, directly and unavoidably.

So, what has happened? Are there any true Republicans left? Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying you have to be a complete idiot to be a Republican, I’ve traveled that road myself. Although a youthful, closet New Dealer under President Franklin Roosevelt, born to a Republican family in Sharon, I nevertheless helped, albeit in a minor way, with Dwight D. Eisenhower’s successful presidential campaigns in Manhattan in 1952 and 1956 — the only two years in American history when Manhattan went Republican.

My only excuse is this: Eisenhower was a true Republican.


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All that has changed. Social Security, Medicare, public education, the environment, family farms, small businesses and working Americans have all come under attack. Sensing this early on, I became a convert, a born again Jack Kennedy Democrat, in 1960, when the alternative was Richard Nixon.

Then we got Ronald Reagan. Ever since, we have seen a decline in the population of true Republicans to the point where today they should be placed on the endangered species list — now that Richard Pombo is no longer in office.

Our admirable commander in chief, President Eisenhower, warned us of the risks of the "military-industrial complex," but prescient as he was, even he failed to anticipate the current U.S. administration, the illogical successor, and perhaps final solution to the grand old Republican party. Well, who but God could have foreseen it?

West Cornwall resident Julia Scott drew the attention of readers of The Lakeville Journal to the revealing content of a letter from President Eisenhower to his brother, Edgar Newton Eisenhower, dated Nov. 8, 1954. With all thanks and appreciation due Mrs. Scott, the text of that letter bears repeating here, as a sort of eulogy for true Republicans, as distinguished from born-again ones:

"Should any political party attempt to abolish social security, unemployment insurance, and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you would not hear of that party again in our political history."

Ike then went on to say: "There is a tiny splinter group, of course, that believes you can do these things. Among them are . . . a few other Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional politician or businessman from other areas. Their number is negligible and they are stupid."


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Stupid they may be, but negligible they are not. For one thing, they own the White House. Unfortunately, speaking out about this clearly is not considered politically correct speech. There may even be homeland security implications.

True Republican President Gerald Ford had to return from the grave recently to say what he really thought about the current administration, the unholy trinity of Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld, and their pointless, costly and mistaken war in Iraq.

Now, under the usurped banner of the Republican party, with a renewed "urge to surge," and in fear of the inevitable historical record, more Americans and untold numbers of Iraqis are being asked to die for a mistake.

In conclusion, let me be clear about this: I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with being a born Republican. But in good conscience, can you be a born-again one?

 


Sharon resident Anthony Piel is a former legal counsel of the World Health Organization.

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