Sunday, June 28, 2009

Some Perspective for this Fourth of July

I find myself (like I am sure so many of you do) continually at a loss for words these days. I look for solace in old books, and new—including Beck’s new take on Common Sense,Mark Levin’s Liberty And Tyranny, and W. Cleon Skousen's The 5,000 Year Leap.Through it all, I’ve been constantly drawn to the words of Kipling’s If (“If you can keep your head when all about you / Are losing theirs and blaming it on you…”). Now, more than ever, we need to keep our heads about us, and to focus on what is fundamental and necessary to fix this mess.


This calm approach is especially needed as we end another turbulent week of death (e.g., McMahon, Fawcett, and Jackson), irresponsible behavior (e.g., Mark Sanford), revolution at home (e.g., Obama’s legislative bullet train to utopia), and revolution abroad (e.g., Iran and Honduras). As we head toward the long, July 4th weekend, I would like to offer some perspective.


Every problem has a starting point. Understanding the starting point is the first step toward solving the problem.


I believe the starting point for our current dilemma will be found in the 1880s: the decade in which American scholars began debating the socialist ideas that were sweeping Europe; the decade when Woodrow Wilson and Teddy Roosevelt first rose to prominence in academia and politics; and the decade in which FDR’s generation was born. Two of the leading debaters were William Graham Sumner, the Chair of Political and Social Science at Yale, and Edward Bellamy, the author of the third-largest selling work of fiction in America in the 19th Century—the utopian novel, Looking Backward: 2000-1887.While Bellamy wrote about a utopian future brought about through socialism, Sumner wrote about the devastation such a system would bring to the freedom and wealth of the middle-class because of the burdens and sacrifices they would be called to make in order to create and maintain such a system.


Those of us who thought this hundred-year debate ended with the Reagan Revolution listen in horror as these old arguments shout at us again from today’s 24/7 news cycle. Unfortunately, we are forced once more to fight against the utopian nonsense that government control of our material well-being can wipe all our cares away, and comes without consequences for our freedom.


Those of us who cherish our God-given freedoms, and who see ourselves as “forgotten” in this whole mess, need to focus on four simple words—What; When; Why; and How—and the questions they represent. The path toward finding the answers to these questions is reflected in the following four quotes:


1. What—“…no free government, or the blessings of liberty, can be preserved to any people, but…by frequent recurrence to fundamental principles.”—James Madison and George Mason, Virginia Declaration of Rights, June, 1776.


2. When—“If you are on the wrong road, progress means doing an about-turn and walking back to the right road; and in that case the man who turns back soonest is the most progressive man….”—C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity.


3. Why—“Conservatism means clear common sense, which equally rejects the fanaticism of precedent and the fanaticism of change. It would not have midnight last just because it exists; and yet it knows that dawn comes not in a flash, but gradually…. So the conservative is the real statesman. He brings things to pass in a way that lasts and does good.” Albert Beveridge, Historian and U.S. Senator, from a Senate floor speech, 1905.


4. How—“Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at its testing point.”—C.S. Lewis.


What we need to do is revisit the fundamental principles that formed the foundation of our Declaration of Independence, our Constitution, and our civil society. We need to understand these principles, and again have the confidence that they are historically and logically correct. Then, we need to implement them to solve our problems and improve society.

When do we need to do it? We are barreling down the wrong road at break-neck speed. We need to stop right now (but no later than the election of 2010) and turn back to those principles!

Why do we need to do it? Our society can not survive the “fanaticism of change” now enveloping us without the sound common sense of our principles, calmly applied to today’s problems. Society needs the steadying hand of true Conservatism, wisely applied.

How do we do it? The mundane, yet important, work of freedom in our daily lives—at work, at home, and in our neighborhoods--has always been hard, but it has always been courageous and, ultimately, rewarding, too. We must, once again, summon the simple courage of our convictions in our fundamental principles, and act on those convictions. It is both that hard, and that simple.

Remember as we celebrate July 4th, that our founders didn’t end the Declaration with “…hey, this was fun! See you when the war’s over!” They ended that document with a solemn pledge heard around the world and through the ages—the pledge to each other of their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor.

It is time we keep our heads about us, and calmly make this same pledge. Then, we need to engage together in the hard work of fixing our problems (and the mess Obama is creating) in a manner consistent with our principles.

Have a Happy 4th!

Ed Hubbard

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

A GOP Agenda for a Metropolitan County

If you’re not from the Houston metropolitan area, you might ask yourself “why should I care who leads the Harris County Republican Party?”

Houston, Texas is the fourth largest city in the nation, Harris County is the third largest county in the nation, the population of this metropolitan area is larger than most states, and (most importantly) this area has been the most Republican-leaning of the major metropolitan areas in the nation for at least a generation. Therefore, the short answer is that what happens here in the near future will help shape the future of the Republican Party for the next decade. And, what we plan to accomplish here is to revitalize the GOP by expanding the party’s base into urban neighborhoods. This will be no easy task, but it must be done. Simply put—we intend to attack this effort as if it were a crusade, and then spread this crusade to other metropolitan counties across the country.

The single greatest challenge facing Republicans who want to change the political dynamic in our urban neighborhoods is overcoming the negative perception of our party in those neighborhoods. Frankly, we are perceived as only caring about the concerns of the most fortunate members of our communities, while so many of our neighbors struggle within perpetual cycles of behavior that destroy any chance for future economic growth and happiness. The question for Republicans is, do we have the will to join hands with our struggling neighbors to help create the solutions for the problems they face, or will we simply stand back and let the Democrats continue to make matters worse for all of us by renewing and expanding the welfare state?

I believe that, by doing the hard work of applying our Republican principles of liberty, responsibility and growth—individual to individual, school to school, and neighborhood to neighborhood—we will turn these conditions around. I am confident that this crusade can work, because our ideas have worked whenever they’ve been implemented. When enterprise zones, privatization of public housing, public/private partnerships for providing community services, and educational choice and competition have been implemented, they’ve worked to improve the lives of people in the affected neighborhoods. But to make this effort work now, our approach must be comprehensive and permanent.

Why is Harris County important or unique to this plan? Harris County is still the largest, politically conservative county in the country, and still has Republican elected officials in positions that can affect the direction and outcome of this effort. Therefore, we Republicans in Harris County must be the laboratory for this GOP effort.

To be that laboratory, we intend to create an environment in which our neighbors in these communities will listen to the GOP again. We will start by talking about the issues they care about—education (including not only the tools for the 21st Century job market, but also the foundations of character and morality needed to be an effective citizen); economic growth and opportunity; low taxation; limited and effective local government; and a strong defense with secure borders—in a manner and tone that will attract people to listen to us, and join us. To start this discussion, we will become members of every community and offer these metropolitan voters something to vote for.

We will establish a permanent and active presence in every precinct, neighborhood and school district in the county. Framing the issue clearly, a young Marine, home from two combat tours in Iraq, recently made a challenge to a group of conservative activists—if he could risk his life a half-a-world away for strangers, couldn’t we muster the courage to cross the streets of our county to embrace our neighbors, talk to them about our principles, and invite those who agree with us to participate in the GOP? If we truly believe in our principles of liberty, responsibility and growth, this Marine’s question should answer itself.

Establishing a permanent and active presence means more than attending public events to be seen. Instead, we will actively engage in activities that are designed to improve the life of these neighborhoods. This aspect of the crusade must involve creating and participating in activities where our activists can engage with our neighbors, such as community clean-up projects, recycling programs, adopt-a-highway programs, food-pantry and family-shelter programs, child and adult mentorship programs, and sponsoring and teaching adult education and citizenship classes.

As we establish our presence, we will work with members of these communities to develop actual policies consistent with our principles, which address the issues relevant to their lives; and we will help establish networks of civic organizations and community centers that will provide a community infrastructure through which these neighbors can eventually help themselves, rather than turn to government.

Finally, to sustain this crusade permanently we will recruit, train and support party leaders and candidates from these neighborhoods who will press our agenda in their precincts, city councils, school boards, and legislative districts.

Houston and Harris County share many of the elements of the old and young, and the large and small cities and metropolitan counties spread across the country. But they also share something other similar areas don’t have—a conservative political base from which to launch this crusade. If Republicans successfully develop an urban/metropolitan policy agenda here, we will use that agenda as a blueprint to take to every major city and metropolitan area in the country, and thereby help enrich our urban communities while assuring the competitiveness of the GOP for the next generation.