Libertarian Orphans
By David Boaz
 
Wall Street Journal
January 31, 2006
 
The Gallup Poll's annual survey on government found that 27% of Americans are 
conservative; 24% are liberal, up sharply because the poll was taken after 
Katrina, which boosted support for the proposition that "government should do 
more to solve our country's problems." Gallup also found -- this year as in 
others -- that 20% are neither liberal nor conservative but libertarian, 
opposing the use of government either to "promote traditional values" or to "do 
too many things that should be left to individuals and businesses." Another 20% 
are "populist" (supporting government action in both areas), with 10% 
undefined. Libertarian support, spread across demographic groups, is strongest 
among well-educated voters. 
 
So where are the libertarians in politics and the media? Since the Clinton 
impeachment and the Florida recount, there's been a polarization: Congressmen 
and TV pundits define themselves as red/blue, pro-/anti-Bush, partisan 
Democrat/Republican, and take rigid liberal/conservative positions on Iraq, tax 
cuts, Social Security reform, gay marriage, abortion. But polls tell us that 
Americans aren't quite so partisan.
 
With big-government conservatives spending money like Imelda Marcos in a shoe 
store, and big-government liberals supporting the Patriot Act, even 
pro-government populists are represented in D.C. It's the libertarian voters 
who are orphans. Democrats stand like a wall against tax cuts and Social 
Security privatization. Republicans want to ban abortion, gay marriage and 
"Happy Holidays." It's not just Congress -- in Virginia's recent elections, all 
the Democrats were tax-hikers and all the Republicans were religious rightists. 
What's a libertarian to do?
 
The worst aspect of all this is the oracles who appear on TV. You'd think 
they'd be thoughtful, independent. Yet they're as partisan as the pols. The 
typical cable show brings viewers two guests, a liberal and a conservative. You 
can count on conservative writers to defend everything President Bush does, and 
on liberal editors to denounce the GOP -- no matter what. 
 
Of course, it could be that most Americans are, in fact, liberals and 
conservatives. Maybe Gallup is wrong, every year. But the exit polls on 
election day 2004 offer some confirmation. According to those polls, 17 million 
voted for John Kerry but did not think the government should do more to solve 
the country's problems. And 28 million Bush voters support either gay marriage 
or civil unions. That's 45 million who don't fit the polarized model. They seem 
to have broadly libertarian attitudes. In fact, it's no secret that libertarian 
voters make up a chunk of America. But you'd never know it from watching TV -- 
or listening to our elected politicians.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



ForumWebSiteAt  http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Libertarian  
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Libertarian/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to