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Compromise for the common good

Jim Elliott | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 6 months AGO
by Jim Elliott
| July 14, 2019 2:00 AM

Representative Justin Amash, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, may be the most principled man in American politics. Unfortunately, he is most likely going to wind up in the ash bin of principled politicians, most of whom sacrifice their career and their influence for the small pleasure of being able to sleep well at night. Amash recently left the Republican Party to become an Independent.

He believed that unquestioning loyalty to a political party had led to Congress ceding its Constitutional powers to the Executive branch and that political parties represented only their own interests, and not those of the American people. He was the lone Republican who publicly stated that the president had committed impeachable offenses; that his party’s silence on that was unconscionable, and a dereliction of duty. In 2015 Amash was one of the founders of the Freedom Caucus, a group of conservative members of the Republican House.

A principled person is someone who is doing no more nor no less than standing up for what they believe in, no matter what the consequences. It may be seen as brave or foolish, and what they believe in may be noble or crazy, but people of principle put their money where their mouth is.

Believing in compromise to get things done for the common good is also a principle, and one that invites the anger of others who have either different principles or none at all.

We have a political system which more and more rewards intolerance over progress, stagnation over action, loyalty to party over common good, inflexible doctrine over common sense. Ronald Reagan said, “The person who agrees with you 80 percent of the time is a friend and ally; not a 20 percent traitor.” Reagan’s landmark 1981 tax cut legislation was supported by many Democrats, and he touted its passage as a bi-partisan victory.

In the 2018 election 43 seats held by Republicans were won by Democrats (Republicans won three Democratic seats) which gave Democrats control of the House. There were also significant political changes in seats already held by Democrats where moderates were replaced by firebrands such as Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. These last were the more liberal of the Democrats elected and it didn’t take them long to make a statement. Unfortunately, the statement they made was to chide moderate Democrats for not espousing liberal ideas. Even a casual look at the election results shows that about 30 of the Democrats who won in Republican districts were moderates, not liberals. To be more clear, they ran as moderates and were elected by a moderate constituency. The Democrats needed to take over 23 Republican seats to gain control of the House, they did 17 seats better than that, and it was because of the moderates who won that they did so. To denigrate someone for sharing the political beliefs of the people they represent is foolish. To denigrate someone for helping put you in a legislative majority is just plain stupid.

This was a lesson apparently lost on the freshman liberals. They might not like moderates, they might not like compromise, but they sure as hell wouldn’t like being in the minority which is where they would be if the people they criticized hadn’t won.

In short, you don’t call people who agree with you 80 percent of the time traitors.

Jim Elliott served 16 years in the Montana Legislature and four years as chairman of the Montana Democratic Party. He lives in Trout Creek.

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ARTICLES BY JIM ELLIOTT

July 14, 2019 2 a.m.

Compromise for the common good

Representative Justin Amash, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, may be the most principled man in American politics. Unfortunately, he is most likely going to wind up in the ash bin of principled politicians, most of whom sacrifice their career and their influence for the small pleasure of being able to sleep well at night. Amash recently left the Republican Party to become an Independent.

January 27, 2019 2:53 p.m.

America's working people finally get attention

If you want to get the attention of the powers that be, you have to do something radical to call attention to yourself. A couple of years ago working-class Americans did that by electing Donald Trump as president. It’s no surprise, anybody with eyes could have seen it coming, and maybe they did, but they didn’t do anything about it. From 2010 to 2013 the Association of Democratic State Chairs was regularly called to task by the Chair of the Wyoming Democrats for paying attention to every minority but working-class Americans. The Democrats didn’t want to hear it, but they have now.

May 18, 2019 5:24 p.m.

Free lunch, not free enterprise

I suppose I shouldn’t be any more surprised than most taxpaying Americans to discover that I paid more in income taxes in 2018 than the behemoth retailer Amazon.com; but then I didn’t have a net profit of $11.2 billion, either. Nor did I get anything close to Amazon’s $128 million tax refund for 2018. This is the second consecutive year that Amazon has not paid federal income taxes. In 2017 it paid no taxes on an income of $5.6 billion. All this from the April 11, 2019 “Fortune” magazine which reported on research done by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy.