It's all about the Judges. Republicans can not sit on their hands or we are in big trouble.
The Upcoming Presidential Election Should Be All About The Supreme Court for Social Conservatives Big Trouble
We are in big trouble. Whether you consider the historical cycle
of presidential elections; the results of the 2006 election; the mood
of the country; or the unfavorable ratings of the President, the odds
are that conservatives will have our heads handed to us on a silver
platter in 2008. Unless our movement gets its act together quickly and
gets on the same page, one thing is for sure-- we are in big trouble.
No Perfect Candidate
Many conservatives are frustrated by the field of candidates
running for president--and understandably so. There is no perfect
candidate in 2008. There is no Ronald Reagan. Even the best of
conservative candidates (announced and unannounced) have political
warts. We have hawks with liberal views on social issues, recent
conservative converts with questionable policy histories, and social
conservatives with histories of personal moral failure and others just
not able to mount a viable campaign or raise money. Whether the
problems are policy, personal or political in nature, all the 2008
choices have considerable weaknesses. Folks, welcome to the fallen
world in which we live. As Francis Schaeffer used to say, "Things are
not as they ought to be..." Actually, there was one perfect
candidate-but we crucified Him 2000 years ago. Principled Pragmatism
As principled citizens how should we now respond? Whine and
complain? Protest and not vote? Let a liberal win and hope to come back
in four years? None of these options are the highest or most principled
expressions of our citizenship. As social conservatives, we should
always wrestle with how to reconcile the tension between principle and
pragmatism. If we support only what appear to be front runner
candidates, we will sell our souls to be political insiders. If we
support only the purist long shot candidates, we risk foolishly
forfeiting any realistic opportunity to affect public policy through
political change.
All The Marbles Are For the United States Supreme Court
Most of all of the great culture war issues of our day can be
directly traced to bad decisions by the United States Supreme Court.
Consider this: duly elected legislative branches of government are not
ultimately responsible for abortion on demand, legalizing same sex
marriage, protecting pornography as free speech, removing faith symbols
from the public square, and undermining private property rights.
Instead, these moral and social ills are the responsibility of
unelected, unaccountable members of the federal judiciary who refuse to
recognize their limited and restrained role as jurists and insist upon
acting as social change agents. Changing of the Guard
Between age and ailing health, most legal observers believe we
are all but certain to see two, maybe three, US Supreme Court justices
resign between 2009 and 2012. Since most of these justices are
liberals, the 5-4 majority our opponents have enjoyed could be either
dismantled or reaffirmed for the next couple of decades. In the final
analysis, the 2008 election presents us with the most significant
window of opportunity to change the direction of the court (and hence
the culture war) that will occur over the next 15-25 years. The Bottom Line
There are really only two equally important questions
conservatives should ask about the upcoming presidential election: 1)
Which candidate is most likely to pick the best judges AND 2) Which
candidate is most likely to win both the primary and general elections.
Every other issue is just window dressing. If we all stick together,
work hard to reach a consensus and use these questions to think about
the election, we might have a chance to elect a conservative who could
produce historical pro-life and pro-family victories in battles many of
us have been fighting all of our lives. But, if we all act
independently and support our favorite sounding, best looking, or even
"most conservative" candidate, well, then--did I mention? We are in big
trouble.
By John Stemberger
Monday, July 30, 2007
With the addition of the Supreme Court's newest member, Justice Samuel
Alito Jr., top row at right, the high court sits for a new group
photograph in this March 3, 2006, file photo, at the Supreme Court
Building in Washington. Seated in the front row, from left to right
are: Associate Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, Associate Justice John Paul
Stevens, Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts, Associate
Justice Antonin Scalia, and Associate Justice David Souter. Standing,
from left to right, in the top row, are: Associate Justice Stephen
Breyer, Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Associate Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, and Associate Justice Samuel Alito Jr. A new Supreme Court
term opens Monday, Oct. 2, 2006, with eyes on its leader, the newest
justice, the oldest and the man in the middle as the court takes on the
familiar issues of abortion and race among its major cases. (AP
Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)
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