|
One of my
best friends
is a retired
clergyman.
When he was
in seminary,
a professor
told him
that he
could wander
around
theologically
wherever he
pleased, as
long as he
chained
himself to
the rock on
which was
written the
word
“Resurrection.”
Some words
are like
that,
abiding and
meaningful,
words like
love,
kindness,
friendship,
integrity,
and we
should chain
ourselves to
them as we
go through
life.
The current
problem is
that many
Republicans
have chained
themselves
to a number
of words
that they
use as
incantations,
somehow
believing
their
repetition
will
guarantee
them victory
or protect
them from
defeat.
Instead,
whether you
agree with
the words or
not, their
constant use
— without
intellectual
challenge or
support —
deprives us
of the
political
depth and
vitality
that gives a
party
strength and
confidence.
Today’s
Republican
stump speech
is the
political
equivalent
of a
PowerPoint
presentation.
Here is a
typical
Republican
congressional
candidate’s
speech in
PowerPoint
form:
• Reagan
Republican
•
Hillary
zinger
(laughter
and
applause)
•
Washington’s
wasteful
spending
•
Limited
government
• Our
troops
(standing
ovation)
•
Pro-life/family
values/sanctity
of
marriage
•
Greatest
country
in the
world
Sometimes,
when I hear
Republican
speeches
larded with
the
knee-jerk,
base-tested
words, it
reminds me
of the worn
Henny
Youngman
story about
the group of
comedians
who had a
numbered
list of the
world’s best
jokes. One
of them
would say,
“Number 17”
and all the
others would
double over
laughing
hysterically.
Today a
Republican
candidate
will call
out “Number
8” and
expect the
audience to
react with
applause and
knowing
validation.
But is that
the basis
for a
political
party?
These
commonly
invoked
words have
lost the
power they
once had.
This
certainly
doesn’t mean
there aren’t
words with
power.
Democrats
rightfully
should be
afraid of
the words,
“driver
licenses for
illegal
aliens.”
But you
cannot
sustain a
party on
wedge words
alone or on
the tired,
tried and
true old
favorites.
Times
change.
Take the
popular and
much-used
words,
“Reagan
Republican.”
I hear
candidates
running
around
saying they
are Reagan
Republicans,
meaning,
among other
things, that
they are
optimists,
because as
everyone
knows RR was
an
optimist.
But he had a
darker
Armageddon
side that
tempered his
blind
optimism and
made him
more
intellectually
interesting.
He was not
the
Republican
version of
Hubert
Humphrey,
the Happy
Warrior.
Reagan had a
seasoned and
developed
political
philosophy
that was
based on far
more than a
buoyant
heart.
Or consider
“Washington’s
wasteful
spending.”
When it
comes to
Republicans
reining in
spending on
pork, they
are Profiles
in
Porridge.
Backbones of
oatmeal. To
mean
something,
words must
have some
credibility
behind
them. Let’s
face it, we
have lost
our
credibility
on fiscal
prudence.
The majority
of
Republicans
in the
Congress
prefer
earmarks
over the
earnestness
of real
convictions.
They have
spent their
children’s
inheritance,
which they
bemoan as if
they were
not involved
in the
plunder, and
they have
also spent
their
party’s own
political
inheritance,
which had
been earned
over the
decades.
“Limited
government”
should be a
Republican
strength,
but we have
lost
credibility.
Can someone
tell me what
we
Republicans
were doing
in the
middle of
the Terri
Schiavo
case? Talk
about
government
sticking its
nose in the
middle of a
private
family
decision.
It appears
we abandon
the core
principle of
limited
government
if it
involves one
of our
powerful
constituencies.
Anyway, you
get the
point. We
Republicans
have kept
repeating
the same
words long
after we
abandoned
them. The
voters
finally
noticed.
So, the road
back is
about more
than using
or finding
the right
words; it is
about
regaining
the
credibility
behind those
words,
whether they
are old or
new.
It is also
about
changing the
tone that
Republican
words have
acquired
over the
years.
Psychological/physiological
research
shows that a
soft voice
relaxes the
body of the
listener.
In fact,
therapists
sometimes
use an
established
technique
called
guided
imagery,
where a
soothing
voice leads
the
individual
to a
different
inner time
and place to
encourage
reflection.
Parties and
politicians
have voices,
too.
If someone
wants to be
a real
Reagan
Republican,
he should
listen to
the tone of
Reagan’s
voice. It
could be
firm,
absolutely,
but its
natural tone
was relaxed
and
reassuring.
The power of
his tone
came not
just from
the warm,
golden-honeyed
radio
announcer’s
physical
voice but
from an
underlying
reasonableness
and
approachability.
As one of
his
speechwriters,
I would
sometimes
write a line
that I
thought he
would
deliver with
force, and
he would
surprise me
by
delivering
it softly.
I would feel
disappointed
that he did
not go for
the applause
line; it
took me
years to
understand
why he
didn’t.
Sometimes
those
applauding
are not the
ones you
want to
reach.
His famous
question in
the 1980
presidential
race, “Are
you better
off today
than you
were four
years ago?”
is both
subtler and
stronger
than a
pedestrian
applause
line like,
“My fellow
Republicans,
this country
is worse off
after four
years of the
Carter
Administration
and it is
time for
them to
go!”
Which tone
is more
reasonable,
more
inclusive,
more
thoughtful?
What is the
voice of
Republicans
today? Is
it firm,
reasonable
and
reassuring
or is it a
more
strident
voice with
harsher
words but
weaker
will? The
Republican
voice
certainly is
not more
strident
than the
Democratic
voice, but
that is
faint
praise.
My instincts
tell me that
a change in
tone could
liberate the
Republican
Party, free
us from the
straitjacket
of
increasingly
empty words
and begin to
rebuild a
connection
to the
voters.
This party
needs to
relax and
breathe. It
needs to
take some
risks. It
needs to
actively
encourage a
greater
range of
views and to
take
confidence
in that
variety.
The
Republican
Party will
be on the
path to
renewal when
it puts away
the worn-out
buzzwords
aimed at a
shrinking
base and
decides to
develop the
confident,
credible,
reassuring
attitude
necessary to
reestablish
our
political
integrity
and energy.
If we get
the tone
right, the
words will
follow.
RF
Landon
Parvin is a
ghostwriter
for
political
and
corporate
leaders. |