*** Forwarded message, originally written by [EMAIL PROTECTED] on
23-Jan-05 ***


CHAIRMAN VANCE AND THE LIBERTARIAN FACTOR
by Chuck Muth
January 23, 2005

A couple weeks ago in this column, I took Washington state GOP Chairman Chris
Vance to the political woodshed for foolishly taunting and agitating the
Libertarian Party bull in his backyard.  The underlying issue was November's
gubernatorial election where the Republican candidate lost by a mere 129
votes (out of about 3 million cast)...while the Libertarian Party (LP)
candidate chalked up over 60,000 votes.

Vance has since responded to that column, and I'll get to that in a minute.
But first let me put to rest an argument which has been made by some folks
who maintain the LP candidate in that race pulled more votes from the
Democrat than the Republican.  These folks are saying that more Democrats
voted for the LP nominee because she was an "out" lesbian than Republicans
who voted for the LP nominee because the LP is historically known for its
limited-government bona fides.

I don't buy that argument for a minute.

But let's say these folks are correct.  Let's say that 99 percent of the LP
candidate's votes came from actual Libertarians and disaffected Democrats.
That would mean that 1 percent of the 63,465 votes received by the
Libertarian candidate came from Republican voters who weren't happy, for one
reason or another, with the Republican Party or its gubernatorial candidate.
That would be 634 votes.

Again, the Republican lost by only 129 votes.

And bet your bottom dollar there were a LOT more than 634 unhappy GOP campers
who threw their "protest" vote to the LP candidate.  No matter how you slice
it, the GOP's failure to "reach out" sufficiently to citizens who support
limited government public policies cost them that election...despite the
voter fraud which apparently occurred in liberal King County.

That being said, let's get to the Chairman Vance's rebuttal to my initial
column...

"Republicans must stop thinking of the LP as a wing of our party," Vance
writes to a GOP grassroots organization which had posted my column on their
website.  "Like the Democrats, they are a party that competes with us for
votes."  He adds, "My objective has not been to convince Libertarians to vote
Republican."

And that's Vance's problem.  There are a LOT of "small l" libertarians in his
GOP...whether he wants to admit it or not...and Chairman Vance wants to take
the votes of such limited-government Republicans for granted rather than
compete for them.  Kinda like the way Democrats take the black vote for
granted.

The big difference though, which the Chairman apparently fails to recognize,
is that while there is no "black" party competing with the Democrats for
black votes, there IS a limited-government party competing for Republican
votes.  Vance doesn't need to convince members of the Libertarian Party to
pull the GOP lever; he needs to convince his own libertarian-leaning
Republicans who are fed up with a party which has too often been all hat and
no cattle when it comes to limited government.

"Our objective must be to make it clear to conservatives that the LP is not a
conservative party," Vance continues.

I guess that all depends on your definition of "conservative."

In fact, Ronald Reagan himself saw "conservative" and "libertarian" as pretty
much two sides of the same limited government coin.  "If you analyze it I
believe the very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism," the
Gipper told Reason magazine in a 1970's interview.  "The basis of
conservatism is a desire for less government interference or less centralized
authority or more individual freedom and this is a pretty general description
also of what libertarianism is."

Does anyone of sound mind and body question Mr. Reagan's conservative
credentials?

"I have consistently emphasized their support of gay marriage, abortion,
legalized drugs and prostitution; and their opposition to the war on terror,"
the Chairman writes.  But his portrayal here is a distorted exaggeration of
what diverse voters, in both parties, believe politically.  And don't point
simply to the party platforms.  You can't swing a dead cat at a GOP
convention without hitting a Republican who takes issue with some part of the
Republican platform, including President Bush.  Nevertheless, let's look
specifically at the issues Vance chooses to "emphasize":

*  Not all Libertarians support gay marriage; however, more than a handful of
Vance's Republicans certainly object to a constitutional amendment banning
it.

*  There are significant numbers of pro-life Libertarians, just as there are
significant numbers of pro-choice Republicans in Vance's tent.

*  On the drug issue, there are large numbers of Vance's Republicans who
support the legal use of medical marijuana, as well as a growing number who
view the GOP's "war on drugs" to be a complete and utter failure, not to
mention a serious threat to individual and constitutional liberties.

*  And when it comes to the war on terror and Iraq, there is a large segment
of the Libertarian Party which vigorously supports both, just as there is a
large segment of Vance's GOP which opposes them.

To try to portray ALL Libertarians based on the characteristics of some of
the dominant activist members is akin to describing ALL of Vance's
Republicans as Bible-thumping, gay-bashing Victorians.

"One of my 2004 objectives was to file a Republican for every statewide
office to make it more difficult for the LP to get the 5% of the vote they
needed to remain a `major party,' and we succeeded," Vance proudly boasted in
his rebuttal.  "As a result, for the next four years, LP candidates will have
to collect signatures and hold nominating conventions in order to get on the
ballot, rather than simply file as Republicans and Democrats do."

Wow. There's something to be proud of, huh?  Rather than compete on the field
with his opponents, Chairman Vance prefers to lock the gate in an effort to
keep those opponents from even taking the field.

I'm sure Chairman Vance and others consider this to be smart, hardball
politics, and I guess they have a point.  But to me it smacks as...well,
cowardly.  You can smell the fear.  The chairman's stated objective is to
prevent competition, not beat it.  And while he may have won a short-term
victory by locking the gate and forcing the LP to climb the fence to get on
the field next season, Vance is setting himself and the GOP up for long-term
problems for years to come.

"The job of WSRP Chairman is to get Republicans elected, not help the LP
compete with us," Vance concludes.

Well, in that case, the Chairman was, as former Senate Minority Leader Tom
Daschle would put it, a "miserable failure."  His ill-considered approach to
the LP cost his party, at the very least, the Washington governor's office.
So much for getting Republicans elected.

In addition, Vance has given LP'ers grist for the political mill for years to
come.  If you've ever played serious team sports, you know that coaches
routinely post news stories in the locker room which highlight derogatory
quotes by opponents in order to "fire up" their own players.  "Coach" Vance
has handed a library of such motivational quotes to his Libertarian Party
opponents.  Not very smart.

For their part, I don't think the Libertarians did themselves any favors in
the credibility department by nominating for this race a "novelty"
gubernatorial candidate who was generally far out of step with them
philosophically on most core issues. It wasn't as embarrassing as nominating
Howard Stern to be their gubernatorial candidate in New York some years ago,
but it did nothing to promote the image of a serious party of principle.

Nevertheless, the LP is still in the political minor leagues these days. It
can be forgiven for such electoral "rookie" mistakes.  Chairman Vance, on the
other hand, should know better.  I'm sure he's a nice guy and committed
partisan leader with lots of political ambition...but had he been manager of
the Yankees, Steinbrenner would have canned him by now.

# # #

Chuck Muth is president of Citizen Outreach and may be reached at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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