The least of them the bottom 47%
To: Mr. Romney
Subject: The First Policy is the Economy, but it is not the
only Policy.
I am a Republican because I recognize that the first policy
of government must be to get the economy
right. If you do not get the economy
right none of the other policies matter.
However the
difference between the two political parties with respect to the economy has
narrowed in recent years. And not just
in America but in Britain as well. The
so called New Labor Party represents an open acknowledgement that the Socialist
Dreams have been replaced by economic realism.
Since Billy Clinton lead the Democrats back to the center on the economy, the debate
between the two Parties turns less on economics and more on the other issues
which divide us.
For example welfare had been for at least three generations
thought by Democrats as an alternative substitute to gainful
participation in the economy.
Welfare reform under Billy Clinton is another open acknowledgement that
welfare was no substitute for work. Both
Parties had come to see that the culture of welfare was ruinous to the human
spirit.
(As I understand the position of Doctor Professor Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan on welfare reform, it came down to one issue: will we guarantee the children of welfare
absolute protection? Dr. Gingrich is the
only political leader to answer Dr. Moynihan’s position. Dr. Gingrich offered the idea of creating
orphanages. (I had previously
recommended we call orphanages “24 hour schools,” as a more up to date term.) But Billy Clinton turned a blind eye on the
plight of the children of welfare. No
guarantees for the children were forthcoming.
They “rolled over Moynihan” as one administration staffer said.)
But the fact remains that before welfare reform the
Republican Party held the leading position on that issue and the culture of dependency . The Democrats for over three generations aligned themselves with
that poisonous culture of welfare. (The
recent movie Precious showed the lives of welfare recipients.) However, the point I am making is
strategic: as the Democrats move to the
center the argument for Republicans
grows weaker.
Had the Republicans followed Dr. Gingrich’s suggestion the
Republicans could have once again taken the moral high ground by offering 24
hour schools for troubled youths. There
are 19,000 children in New York City's homeless shelters. You may feel that these are just part of the 47% who are dependent on
the government and you don’t care about them.
However, the 5% to 10% you identify as being in the center and who may
be amenable to our arguments are concerned about the homeless, and about the 50 million without health insurance
coverage, and about the 23 million unemployed or under employed or just too
discouraged to look for work.
If you want to persuade the middle 10% you must concern yourself with the bottom 47%
for the middle 10% of voters are looking at how you would treat “the least of
them,” before giving you their
vote.
PS And I think the
Iranian nuclear program should be destroyed and the regime must be overthrown.
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