It’s funny, in a way, to see how differently people on the party fringes can see the same instance–say, the decision by the Arkansas Supreme Court to keep the abortion amendment off the November ballot. Those of us in the middle (the independent, unaffiliated, centrists, pragmatic … however you want to term it), who outnumber both of the two main camps, can only laugh at times to keep our sanity.
Sanity was clinging by a thread by the way the court conducted itself in this case, stretching to make its ruling, when it could have offered a cure period to at least give the appearance of fairness. Instead, it stank of hyperpartisanship run amok.
Partisan politics are why I so often despair for our nation. The hyperpartisan on both sides are the loudest, but they don’t speak for the majority. That needs to end if we have any hope to survive as a country pledged to the ideals of our founders. If those of us in the center (that’s center left to center right) don’t speak up for decency, the rule of law, and fairness, we’ll have abandoned our ideals simply because we don’t want to make waves.
Sure, there have been campaigns in past centuries that were especially nasty, but this year so much of it seems tied up in meanness and pettiness that’s no better than playground bullying. (I mean, seriously, making fun of a boy for loving his dad … why is this even a strategy?)
I know of many within a certain party who don’t echo the divisive sentiments of its leaders, and of even more who left the party because they could no longer stomach what it has become. The other party often puts forward ideas that might sound good in theory (and some that are, or at least sound, more than a little wacky), but paying for them would cost several arms and legs.
Both major parties have been catering of late far too much to those on their fringes, forgetting that most of us out here don’t hold extreme views and just want our government to work.
For government to work, though, it’ll take determination. It’ll take candidates who are open and honest about what they hope to achieve, and who have more than bumper-sticker slogans in their quivers. It’ll take voters who are willing to look beyond party labels and do the research for themselves to figure out which candidates offer the best chance toward success. It’ll take all of us getting past the whole winners-and-losers paradigm.
We once had public servants, not performance artists, on Capitol Hill. I know I bring them up a lot, but Dale Bumpers and John Paul Hammerschmidt weren’t merely politicians. Sure, they could stump for their parties with the best of them, but ideology wasn’t what drove them. It was doing the best for those they served–not just the people who voted for them–to make government work for the bulk of the people. Reaching across the aisle, cooperation, compromise–that was what made things function more or less as they should.
There have always been political performance artists, but it wasn’t until the past several decades that we began to let them get out of control. Once extremists were kept in check by those of us in the center, and didn’t have a lot of success getting into office, or staying there, but now, with extremism held in such esteem by some, aided by gerrymandering, 24/7 media and social media, we can’t seem to rid ourselves of them.
So what do we do? Do we just say, “the heck with it,” and keep voting for the same people who got us into this situation? Lord, I hope not.
For those of us in the center, it’s more important than ever that we vote. I didn’t vote for a long time because I didn’t want to give the appearance of favoritism, but that was wrong. If the centrists, the bulk of the electorate, vote, we can start to move the needle back to an era of working together for the best outcome for the most people, and weed out those whose sole purpose is to sow discord.
We know that few things are straightforward black and white; most are various shades of gray, with nuance and human nature to be considered, and that’s being ignored or made into culture-war fodder. We pay more attention to what’s going on than some think, but we don’t exercise our vote enough.
Sitting on the sidelines isn’t going to cut it anymore. We need to make sure that candidates are willing to listen and talk honestly with voters of all sorts, not just those who support their views. If they play continually to their base, they’re the only people they intend to serve.
Neither of the main party presidential candidates has been completely truthful, but only one has been more consistently dishonest. Neither is innocent of making fun of the other side, but one has been more consistently mean-spirited.
We should be proud of our votes, but that can be hard. For me, it comes down to a couple of questions: Who more clearly shows a willingness to work for all the people, and to govern responsibly? Is governing more important than saying you won?
I know my answers. How about you?
Assistant Editor Brenda Looper is editor of the Voices page. Email her at [email protected]. Read her blog at blooper0223.wordpress.com.
Source link : http://www.bing.com/news/apiclick.aspx?ref=FexRss&aid=&tid=66cf0ffe0eaa47179e5c9644c482dd63&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.arkansasonline.com%2Fnews%2F2024%2Faug%2F28%2Fcenter-on-stage%2F&c=17742358084431806272&mkt=en-us
Author :
Publish date : 2024-08-27 21:14:00
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.