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“Ideas matter,”
said Margaret
Thatcher on her
march to become
Britain’s Prime
Minister in the
late 1970’s. For
some of us, that
was not very
long ago. We can
recall the
steely
confidence she
maintained in
the face of long
odds and the
advice to avoid
alienating
voters by
presenting clear
thoughts about
what needed to
be done to
reverse the
downward spiral
her country had
seemed unable to
end.
Mrs. Thatcher
understood that,
in a democracy,
what excites
voters and makes
them activists
is the chance to
support
candidates who
have clearly
articulated
ideas about
policies that
will improve
their lives,
their
communities and
their country.
People don’t get
involved in
politics because
of the thrill of
knocking on
doors, asking
people for
money, or
attending
precinct
meetings. They
get involved to
help elect
candidates who
will implement
policies they
believe will
solve problems.
It is wrong to
consider this a
selfish act. My
experience shows
me those who are
most involved in
politics and
political
campaigns are
individuals who
care deeply
about their
community, state
and nation. They
understand that
what government
does and does
not do makes a
difference; and
they understand
that the ideas
surrounding
campaigns
direct, or
should direct,
what elected
officials do in
office.
Nothing focuses
the mind so much
as a defeat. In
victory, there
is a tendency to
think everything
is great, that
our approach is
right on target.
When we lose,
unless we want
to repeat the
experience, we
rethink things.
We examine what
is right and
what is wrong.
While the
Republican
defeat in 2006
was predictable,
that defeat
requires our
party and its
leaders to
carefully review
what happened
and why. As
always, we must
start with
policy issues.
“Be For What
You’re For”
After President
George H. W.
Bush lost his
bid for
re-election in
1992, I was
elected Chairman
of the
Republican
National
Committee (RNC).
Before and after
being elected
Chairman, I said
many times that
Americans had
not changed
their minds
about the
policies they
had voted for in
1980, 1984 and
1988; rather
they had changed
their minds
about us.
Millions of our
voters had
decided by 1992
that we were not
adhering to the
principles and
policies they
had voted for in
the previous
three national
elections.
From my first
day as Chairman
of the RNC, I
was determined
to restore the
Republican Party
to its rightful
position as the
“party of
ideas.” It was
one of the four
promises I made
in that campaign
(the others were
to bring back
our small donor
base, rebuild
self-reliant
state parties,
and assure the
GOP was on the
cutting edge of
communications
technology.)
There was not a
shred of doubt
in my mind the
victories won by
Ronald Reagan in
1980 and 1984,
as well as that
of George H. W.
Bush in 1988,
were the result
of Americans
sharing with us
a common vision
about what was
needed for our
country – lower
taxes, limited
government, and
a strong
national
defense. Voters
wanted results
on important
issues, and they
knew good
policies would
produce those
results. Reagan
proved them
right.
As he often
said, “Good
policy is good
politics.”
One of the first
things I did at
the RNC in 1993
was to send out
a letter to
280,000
Republican
leaders and
donors. We
specifically
told the
recipients,
“Don’t send
money.” Instead,
we asked them to
complete a long
questionnaire
that seriously
explored various
options on
critical public
policy issues.
It took about an
hour to complete
the survey, yet
more than 80,000
took the time to
do just that. It
was a powerful
affirmation of
how central
ideas are to
political
participation
and involvement.
The results of
the survey
weren’t
surprising. They
confirmed the
GOP is the
center-right
party of the
United States,
but it is a
broad, diverse
party. Yes,
we’re the
conservative
party, and the
Democrats are
the liberal
party; but you
don’t have to
agree with Haley
Barbour on
everything to be
a good
Republican.
Recognizing that
Republicans
earnestly wanted
a platform to
debate and
refine policy
ideas on
critical issues,
we formed the
National Policy
Forum (NPF). It
helped the GOP
regain the
position as the
party of ideas.
Similarly and
not
coincidentally,
the historic
1994 Republican
victory was a
victory for
ideas. “The
Contract with
America” was an
agenda of ten
policy
proposals, all
positive. The
“Contract” never
mentioned Bill
Clinton or the
Democrats. It
was an
unprecedented –
and many thought
risky – effort
to nationalize a
midterm election
as a positive
referendum on an
alternative
policy platform
offered by the
minority party.
The result was
the greatest
midterm majority
sweep of the
20th century.
Belief in the
power of ideas
and good policy
shaped my
campaign for
Governor of
Mississippi as
well, and it has
directed my work
in office.
Throughout the
campaign I
talked about the
problems facing
our state, and I
offered policy
solutions for
those problems.
In the campaign
we called it
“Haley’s Plan.”
When I was
elected,
“Haley’s Plan”
became the
governing
agenda. Despite
having Democrat
majorities in
both houses of
the Legislature,
“Haley’s Plan”
has largely been
enacted in the
last three
years.
I believe good
policy is good
politics. I
always tell
candidates and
office holders:
“The best thing
is to be for
what you’re for.
Don’t try to be
for what’s
popular; be for
what you really
believe is
right.”
Set
Priorities and
Keep Your Word
Leaders don’t
give into
pollsters or
advisers who
counsel ways to
evade. Instead,
you should trust
yourself and
trust the
voters. Voters
don’t expect any
candidate to
agree with them
100% of the
time. But voters
do expect you to
keep your word.
Even those who
disagree with
you on an issue
will respect
your leadership
and recognize
your
trustworthiness
when you do what
you said you
were going to
do.
In the 2003
campaign, voters
consistently
heard me repeat
policy themes:
comprehensive
tort reform to
end lawsuit
abuse in
Mississippi; an
honest balanced
budget without
raising
anybody’s taxes;
and education as
the number one
economic
development
issue, with a
new emphasis on
workforce
development and
job training.
Our state had
suffered a net
loss of 38,300
jobs during my
predecessor’s
term, and I
recognized
people elected
me to turn that
around. I saw
those three
issues as
central to
achieving that.
Tort reform was
a bloody fight
in the House,
where the
Speaker and the
Chairman of the
Judiciary
Committee were
strongly opposed
to my ideas for
reforming the
civil justice
system. After a
month-long
battle,
including a
Special Session
I called for the
sole purpose of
passing the tort
reform bill that
the Senate had
already passed
three times in
Regular Session,
the House
leadership
allowed the bill
to get to the
floor. By large
majorities,
Mississippi
passed what the
Heritage
Foundation
called “the most
comprehensive
tort reform bill
any state has
passed.”
New emphasis on
workforce
development and
job training was
much easier, as
it received
overwhelming
bipartisan
support in both
houses. Two
other priorities
clashed in the
first half of my
term: getting
the budget
balanced and
funding
education.
The year I was
elected
governor, state
government had a
$720 million
budget
shortfall, with
a General Fund
budget of only
$3.6 billion.
The gap had been
made up by a
variety of
gimmicks, but it
was clear that
our state wasn’t
going to dig out
of this worst
financial mess
at least since
the Depression
without tough
decisions.
Of course, many
in the
Legislature plus
their
editorialist
allies preferred
raising taxes to
controlling
spending. I knew
raising taxes is
the enemy of
controlling
spending. As I
had said many
times during the
campaign, “We’re
not in a $720
million budget
hole because we
tax too little;
it’s because we
spend too much.”
The tax increase
argument never
took hold, so we
began two years
of tough choices
in spending.
Education
spending went
up, and we
funded two
consecutive 8%
teacher pay
increases – the
two largest in
history. But the
education
leaders didn’t
get as much as
they wanted. We
did, however,
get spending
under control,
and in two
years, that $720
million
shortfall became
a $70 million
surplus. And
this year’s
surplus will be
larger. This was
achieved without
raising
anybody’s taxes.
A big part of
this was our
economic
turnaround.
After losing
more than 38,000
jobs the
previous four
years, we’ve
gained a net of
more than 30,000
in these three
years – despite
Katrina, which
caused 70,000
people to lose
their jobs.
Not only are
more people
working, but
incomes are up
substantially,
as well. More
taxpayers and
more taxable
income mean more
state revenue.
State tax
collections will
increase by more
than 35% over
these four
years.
At the same
time, we’ve kept
spending under
control. In the
last fiscal
year, state
spending
increased less
than 1%!
Let me emphasize
that we didn’t
control spending
by shortchanging
our priorities.
While the
education
community didn’t
get everything
it wanted, in
the four years
of my term as
governor state
spending for
K-12 schools
will have
increased by
25%, or nearly
$480 million –
the largest
increase in K-12
spending in any
four year period
under any
governor in
Mississippi
history.
Spending for
higher
education, our
universities and
community
colleges will go
up more than
one-fourth,
while funding of
workplace
development and
job training has
doubled. We’ve
also prioritized
state law
enforcement. As
in most states,
drug crime is
the major crime
problem in
Mississippi.
With strong
bipartisan
support, we’ve
taken a
multifaceted
approach to
attacking crime.
Our Legislature
has made the raw
ingredients for
crystal meth
harder to
purchase. We
have increased
the number of
state troopers
and narcotics
agents. We are
running our
correction
system at a
significantly
lower cost per
prisoner, while
expanding
alternative
punishment
programs.
This year I’ve
asked that
mandatory prison
time be
lengthened for
both committing
a crime with a
gun and for a
felon being
caught in
illegal
possession of a
gun. This way,
we can attack
gun crime
without
infringing on
law-abiding
citizens’constitutional
rights to keep
and bear arms.
In the process,
we’ve stayed
faithful to the
policies laid
out in the
campaign in
2003.
Policies
Based on
Principle
This year, I
will run for
re-election. And
I will run on my
record. I’ll run
a campaign of
“promises made
and promises
kept.” And,
critically, I
can campaign on
the results
these policies
accomplished:
rising incomes
and job creation
instead of job
disintegration;
record increases
in support for
education at all
levels coupled
with the most
comprehensive
education reform
package in a
quarter century;
still falling
liability
premium rates in
the wake of tort
reform and an
end to
physicians
leaving our
state over
lawsuit abuse;
improved and
expanded
workforce
development and
job training
programs; and a
budget in the
black without
raising
anybody’s taxes.
Good things are
happening in
Mississippi, and
good policy is
key to the
turnaround. I
believe voters
will reward that
at the ballot
box just as I
believe
politicians pay
a price for not
staying true to
their policy
promises. My own
view is that the
GOP losses in
2006 are at
least partially
attributable to
our voters’ view
that Republicans
had strayed from
the policies we
had campaigned
on during and
since 1994.
Complaints about
excessive
spending and
bigger
government were
heard in every
precinct where
Republican
voters gathered.
Corruption and
scandal also
made voters feel
betrayed. Both
took a toll at
the ballot box.
Of course, long
wars are
unpopular in
America, and the
Democrats’
ability to make
many voters see
the 2006 midterm
election as a
referendum on
Iraq was the
biggest factor
last November.
The good news is
the Democrats
didn’t offer the
electorate any
alternative
policies. Even
on Iraq, the
Democrats either
couldn’t agree
or feared their
alternatives
would be
unpopular. The
Democrat
messages were
simply, “It’s
time for a
change,” and,
“We’re not the
Republicans.”
Despite the
six-year itch,
an extremely
unpopular war,
the President’s
low job approval
and the GOP
base’s
unhappiness over
excess spending
and scandal, the
Republican loss
was about
average, and we
start off far
ahead of where
we were after
the 1992
election. We
have 49 Senators
(versus 43 after
1992); 202
Members in the
House (versus
174 after 1992);
and 22 Governors
(versus 17 after
1992). Plus we
know the
American people
haven’t bought
into the
Democrats’
governing
agenda. The
Democrats
haven’t offered
one!
So what do we
need to get back
in the majority?
The key is the
same as always.
We must give
voters something
to be for –
superior ideas
for public
policy about the
issues that
count. Spin has
to take a
backseat to
substance. Our
biggest
advantage in
doing this is
that most
Americans agree
with Republicans
on most issues.
Our ideas of
individual
freedom and
personal
responsibility
trump Democrats’
belief in
government
control and
government
responsibility.
Lower taxes for
all are
preferred to
government’s
taking more and
more of what
people work for
and earn.
Just go down the
list, and you’ll
find most
Americans agree
with basic
Republican
policy and
principle on
most issues.
More Americans
are
center-right,
which is why the
Left has tried
to banish the
word “liberal”
from the
lexicon.
Obviously, not
everybody agrees
with the
Republicans on
everything,
because we don’t
agree with each
other on
everything. Ours
is a large,
diverse,
broad-based
party, and it
would be silly
to think that in
a party which
can win a
majority of
governors,
senators, and
congressmen six
elections in a
row, everybody
would agree on
everything.
My wife of 35
years and I
don’t agree on
everything! Yet,
our values,
principles and
policies are
what unite us as
Republicans. We
agree on a whole
lot more than we
disagree on, and
we must
emphasize those
things that
unite us.
Moreover, we
must improve
these policies
and constantly
update them and
their
implementation.
Just as the
issues change
over time, we
can’t stand
still. Our
fundamental
values and
principles are
extremely
adaptable to the
changing issue
set because they
are tethered to
such a strong,
durable
foundation. It
stands the test
of time.
A corollary to
building your
party and
political
support on
policy is to not
only admit but
also to value
that not every
good Republican
will agree with
you on every
issue. As my old
boss Ronald
Reagan used to
say, “A fella
who agrees with
you 80% of the
time is your
friend and ally,
not some 20%
turncoat.” Amen.
So, for me, I
look forward to
a lively,
inclusive debate
on how to best
solve the
problems facing
Americans. Good
policy proposals
will be refined
and polished;
some will be old
ideas, updated
for the issue as
it confronts us
today. Others
may seem new to
us, as when
Reagan embraced
supply-side
economics. But
they should all
be rooted in the
values and
principles that
bind us together
as Republicans.
Then, if we
articulate these
effectively,
most Americans
will agree with
us, and we’ll
soon be back in
the majority.
And, if we
continue to
adhere to those
policies and
principles, we
will stay in the
majority for a
long time.
Because ideas
matter.
RF
Haley R.
Barbour was
elected Governor
of Mississippi
in 2003. From
1993 to 1997, he
served as
Chairman of the
Republican
National
Committee. |