Democrats must dream in shades of red
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JOSEPH N. BELL
Newport-Mesa Democrats are stirring in their bunkers at the prospect
of an open seat in the House of Representatives when and if Chris Cox
is approved as SEC chairman by the U.S. Senate.
Rejection seems unlikely. If the appointment of California judge
Janice Rogers Brown -- who believes that people of faith are
embroiled in a war against secular humanists who threaten to divorce
America from its religious roots -- to the federal appeals court and
John Bolton -- who believes that anyone who disagrees with him should
be squashed -- to the United Nations can get Senate approval, then
Cox should be a slam dunk.
So hope springs eternal, even among Democrats in Orange County. Is
such hope rational in a congressional district carefully crafted to
provide Republican security in perpetuity? Probably not.
The odds against the Democrats are comparable to George Bush
admitting a mistake. Or expressing himself in a complete sentence.
But if they can find a suitable candidate, the Democrats are
determined to give it their best shot.
Because I feel strongly that it’s time for the two-party system to
be introduced to the Newport-Mesa area, I’d like to suggest some
campaign issues that the Democrats might use to appeal to local
voters in the contest for Cox’s office. What the local Democrats have
to contend with for starters is the conviction -- held here despite
growing sophistication and a vastly changing population for the 55
years I’ve lived in this area -- that Genghis Khan could win the
congressional seat about to be abandoned by Chris Cox as long as
“Republican” was beside his name on the ballot.
That’s why the Democrats are going to have to put a creative spin
on issues with a conservative appeal to have any chance at all. So
here are a few suggestions they might run up the flagpole.
A cardinal thrust of conservatism is to get government out of our
lives at every level as fully and as quickly as possible. The
Democratic candidate can embrace this issue by promising to work for
a reform of the Patriot Act, which spends billions of dollars
annually grubbing around in our private lives, demanding such highly
personal information as our health records and the books we check out
at the public library. Like all good conservatives, the Democratic
candidate should promise to seek the fine line between legitimate
security concerns and erosion of the civil rights that underpin our
whole society.
The candidate can also pledge to support every effort aimed at
preventing the government from telling us who can or can’t get
married, what stem cells we can use for research aimed at saving
millions of lives, what constitutes biased teaching by college
professors, when and under what circumstances a woman can buy a
morning-after pill, and what creative people in the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting are allowed to think. And he or she would promise
never to be a part of government interference in such personal and
private matters as the decision to allow Terry Schiavo the freedom of
passing on -- especially in light of the recent autopsy, which proved
that the action supported by the president and the Congress was
clearly wrong.
Then there’s the airport issue, which could be a real winner for
the Democrats, at least in Newport-Mesa. Local citizens of every
political stripe are reminded dozens of times daily of the increasing
traffic out of John Wayne, which will only get worse, due in large
part to Cox’s blindsiding of the El Toro airport.
Democrats can build on the irritation of conservatives toward Cox
over this issue. Their candidate could rise, like a Phoenix from the
ashes, to announce that all is not lost and that if elected, he or
she will swallow civic pride and offer a hand to the city of Los
Angeles in its bid to build and manage a commercial airport in El
Toro.
Then there is outsourcing -- and its surrogate parent, privatizing
-- which have become very big in these parts. Here, the role of the
Democratic candidate must be to urge caution in the application of
both local and national outsourcing and privatizing.
Without such caution, some pretty scary possibilities seem to be
already underway at the federal level. The Pentagon, for example,
might logically be outsourced to the Halliburton Co., which already
pockets much of the defense budget. The National Parks Service could
be turned over the logging industry, which would quickly eliminate
the fire hazard caused by healthy trees by cutting them down, thus
saving millions of dollars paid out to forest rangers. By outsourcing
the National Institute of Health to the pharmaceutical industry,
drugs would get to the market much more quickly, and expensive
testing procedures could be cut back.
Although such decisions might appeal to many local voters, a
Democratic candidate must draw the line -- and privatizing seems a
good place to do it, especially in light of the unpopular effort by
the Bush administration to inject it into Social Security.
Finally, the Democratic candidate must regard the needs of his or
her constituents to be more important than personal upward mobility
and thus promise to pay primary attention, always, to the folks back
home. That would be a welcome change.
I came here 55 years ago in the era of Congressman James Utt, who
believed sincerely that an army of U.N. troops was being trained in
Georgia to take over the U.S. and kept us informed by highly creative
newsletters from the front in Washington. Although Utt was in a class
by himself, he was followed in his job by a national officer in the
John Birch Society and a string of congressmen mostly to the right of
King George III. Chris Cox didn’t change the pattern much
philosophically.
The Democrats might be able to change it modestly, but they can’t
bury it. With that as a starting point, maybe we can at least get a
real taste of two-party politics when it comes time to replace our
present congressman.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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