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DOOLEY FOE A CLUE TO GOP FAILURES
What the
state of Georgia
needs more than a good five-cent cigar is a competitive two-party system.
The Democrats not only run this state; they own it. Without a strong
Republican Party to counter the Democratic monarchy, we will be doomed to a
continued purgatory of demigods like Tom Murphy and his court jesters who
act as if we don’t exist.
But it is
not the Democratic machine that impedes Republican progress or that accounts
for the drubbing they took in the redistricting session this year. The
biggest obstacle Republicans face in their efforts to make this truly a
two-party state is themselves. They can’t seem to grasp that the enemy is
the other party.
When
Republican U.S. Senator Paul Coverdell died unexpectedly in office two years
ago, there was no question that Governor Roy Barnes would appoint a Democrat
to replace Coverdell. The surprise was the appointment of his predecessor,
Zell Miller. Barnes and Miller were not exactly bosom buddies but Barnes
wanted someone who could hold the seat for the Democrats. He could not have
made a better choice. Based on his performance to date, Zell Miller
could win reelection to the United States Senate by acclamation if he
chooses to run again and Barnes, who put party before petty piques, looks
like a genius.
Contrast
that with the Republican approach to party unity. One of our state’s most
respected political figures –Republican or Democrat – is 6th
District Rep. Johnny Isakson. Isakson should have been elected to the U.S.
Senate instead of Tom Daschle’s lapdog Max Cleland, but he was denied the
nomination in the Republican primary because of his moderate stance on
abortion. Isakson would have beaten Cleland, no two ways about it but he
couldn’t beat the right wing zealots in his own party. The Republicans gave
the nomination to charisma-challenged Guy Milner. Of course, Cleland
defeated Milner and is one of the strongest supporters of abortion rights in
the Senate. How is that for astute political thinking?
It gets
worse. Barbara Dooley, the dynamic wife of UGA athletic director Vince
Dooley, has announced as a Republican candidate for the new 12th
congressional district carved out by state Democrats for Champ Walker, son
of state Senator Charles Walker, of Augusta, a member of the Democratic
inner circle. You would assume the Republicans are doing handstands that
someone with Barbara Dooley’s high profile and influential contacts is
getting into the race. Not so. Her candidacy doesn’t sit well with 10th
district representative Charlie Norwood. The Augusta congressman is
opposed to Dooley because, according to sources, she used to be a Democrat.
I wonder if anybody has told Norwood that Ronald Reagan was once a Democrat?
Rather
than join other state GOP notables like Senate Minority Leader Eric Johnson,
of Savannah,
and 1st District Congressman Jack Kingston in supporting Dooley
and presenting a unified front for what is going to be a steep uphill battle
for the Republicans, Norwood
has implored another candidate to enter the race. Evidently, he feels that
a good old-fashioned divisive primary, ala the Isakson-Milner debacle, is
just what the Republican Party needs these days. While he’s at it, maybe
Norwood can offend all the people in Georgia who would like to see more
women running for public office.
Georgia
has not elected a Republican governor since the days of Reconstruction and
that isn’t going to change in 2002. Many Republicans truly believe that
Roy Barnes is going to be defeated for reelection because of the way he
engineered the state flag change. That is so ludicrous that I have quit
trying to explain the political facts of life to those people. The people
will just have to find out for themselves this November that the 19th
century has come and gone. If the Republicans hope to be competitive in
the current century, they had better get busy recruiting blacks and
Hispanics and women and let the flag issue go. Democrats are hoping the
Republicans don’t do either – and they probably won’t.
It seems
the Republicans would rather ride their ideological high horses than be
elected. The Democrats would rather be elected. And that, my friends, is
why we don’t have a strong two-party system in Georgia. |