Hagel in 2008!

The discussion topic of ‘what makes a moderate’ over on Sonicrusk got me to thinking about the various Republicans I admire.  It’s a list that grows larger or shorter depending on what I happen to witness on CSPAN in a given week.  Some I’ll love one week hate the next, but for the most part they’re people I’ve come to respect quite a bit.    They’re the ones who sound the least like Ken Mehlman I suppose.  The ones who don’t approach every piece of legislation like an industry lobbyist, and don’t get up on the House or Senate floor to create a sound byte, but instead to engage in honest political debate.  Using this standard, I’d rather see Trent Lott running the show than Bill Frist, and a military veteran or ‘elder statesman’ will always make more sense to me than hollow shills like Rick Santorum or James Inhofe.   

There is one though that beats out all the rest in my mind, and in fact is someone I would vote for in the 2008 presidential campaign if Republicans were smart enough to nominate him.  Chuck Hagel from Nebraska.  Above and beyond his history and accomplishments, his military service, his honesty, his belief that a person’s religion is their own business…it’s the idea that government can be run well if the right leaders step up and get it done!    ‘Competent Governance’ is the phrase that Hagel believes in 100%, yet a concept that Republicans have been running and governing the opposite for well over a decade now.  Think about how many years we’ve had to listen to the leaders of this party drone on and on about how government isn’t the answer to anything?  That the private sector is the only option, deficits don’t matter, and remaining in power is the only goal.    

Responsibility being relevant based only on political or financial cost benefit, as we all got to see during Katrina, when apparently the attacks of 9/11 couldn’t even convince these people that they actually had a job to do.  Increasing gaps between upper and middle class, federal tax dollars in versus money spent, insured and uninsured, student test results compared with the rest of the world nor the rising number of earmarks and corruption charges are going to convince them to spin less and work more anytime soon.    Hagel rejects every piece of this current GOP strategy when it comes to the actual work, and isn’t about to pander to voters who only want to hear that government is the enemy.  Our current President is as anti-government as they come, and quite predictably his performance has matched that sentiment.  More inclined to invoke the memory of 9/11 than bring up education, heath care or federal spending, in 2000 and 2004 Americans unwittingly elected a public relations team with zero interest in actually governing.  A group of people who’d never fought in a war, yet were dead set on sending hundreds of thousands into Iraq the first chance they could.   

Hagel not only believes that government can work, but he’s a war veteran, twice wounded, infantry.  During the Reagan administration he served as the second in command of the VA.  When shameful cuts to VA funding made it through the budget, he spoke out and later resigned in protest.  Now a Senator, you’d be hard pressed to find a Republican colleague who’d push back harder on the current administration’s budget, which incidentally includes cuts to the VA even though the war continues.        The religious-right isn’t going to convince this man to turn back the hands of time, kill science or push abstinence over contraception in third world countries.  Likewise, the military industrial complex isn’t going to feast on wasted billions producing equipment and weapons systems we haven’t needed for 30 years.  Most importantly for me though, the life of a soldier will once again be a sacred factor in deciding whether or not to wage war across the world.    

And it’s this part of his philosophy that draws me to him as opposed to McCain (the only other Republican I could see myself voting for in 2008).  While McCain tends to lean towards military intervention rather than diplomacy, Hagel’s position is to reach for the olive branch before the M-16.  Well before the invasion of Iraq, he stated that we lacked an understanding of their culture, and that without proper planning, a civil war would ensue.  He advocated reaching out to Iran and Cuba back then as well.     Wisdom like this back when the country was in lock step with whatever Bush wanted to do…that’s a true leader!  The idea that government CAN work is also the temperament of a true leader.    Mark my words.  If Hagel becomes the nominee, things are going to change here at deadissue, and for at least a campaign, we might all agree on something.  I’m keeping my fingers crossed!

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4 Responses to Hagel in 2008!

  1. Wisenheimer says:

    I’ve liked Hagel too, even when others scoff. This guy really saw military service. I read (I think in Newsweek) about how he was on patrol. The guy in front of the squad tripped a wire and was “blown to smithereens.” So, if the Republicans are smart, they will seriously consider Hagel over Frist.

  2. Chris Austin says:

    Other scoff because he’s for real. If Frist is nominated, the Dems take the White House. I wouldn’t be crying over that of course, but Kerry and Clinton have been maneuvering instead of saying what needs to be said about Iraq. Clinton especially could and should have backed Murtha…hell, a lot of Dems should have backed Murtha, but too many of them think they’re going to win the nomination. Basically putting themselves above the people dying over there. That’s how I see it.

    Hagel would do a good job…and it would be nice to see a Republican president that actually knew what time it was after Bush. Long haul as I see it, American politics will be going on forever, but once we get a real leader in the office, we might turn things around.

    If it’s a democrat, it’ll be the same thing as when Bill Clinton was in there…no matter what they do, the echo chamber will make life miserable. I figure that as long as Congress swing back to the Dems, a Republican like Hagel could make it work.

    At least we’d be able to get back to stem cell research, diplomacy and fiscal discipline. Bush and this GOP congress have gone back on the conservative values that got them elected, many of which I embrace. None of them want to stick their neck out, and the country is falling behind. Last year with Delay, Frist and their pandering to the religious-right…I can’t take any more of that.

    I’ve heard enough about religion for one decade. It’s bogging us down. The issue is Iraq and no matter how bad it goes, nothing changes. Politics are keeping the troops over there, and it’s high time we got the hell out. No bases, no permanent security force…get the American flag out of that region altogether and focus on the situation here.

    I want to see nationalized health care, and military money we don’t need to spend on things we’ll never need (Navy and Air Force budgets can be sliced by 25% each right off the bat), and pump that money into the schools…after school programs, tutoring, etc.

  3. Paul says:

    John McCain all the way !!!

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