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Republicans Must Have Vision to Help All Americans

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Republicans don't care.

Or at least that's the perception of us. President Barack Obama's convincing re-election in November despite a climate of high unemployment, stagnant economic growth and waning American influence around the globe has caused a great deal of soul-searching for the Republican Party.

One of the conclusions some of us have come to is that our problem is not the message or the messengers but our own detachment from the needs of struggling working families and our lack of vision and policies that address them.

I was struck reading a recent article in which our presidential nominee, after his loss and after volunteering at a local homeless shelter, said, "(The people there) are used to being ignored, I guess — mostly by people like me."

I think this is a word picture for Republican leaders in general. What do we need to do to reposition the party, connect with Americans and address what Peggy Noonan so astutely observed — that it's not that "they" don't like us but that "they" don't think we like them?

This week, conservatives will gather at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington and begin the complex process of developing a bold conservative vision that will resonate with all Americans.

My own experience during the 2012 campaign has shaped my view on the way forward. Throughout the campaign, I kept in mind my family and the coal country we came from, the needs of the people I grew up with on VA grounds and the inner city of Philadelphia I represented for 12 years.

I tried to provide a vision for hardworking families I came across during my campaign. Middle America is hurting. But I didn't always keep this in mind in a personal way. I remember being chastised by my staff when, during the second South Carolina debate, none of us expressed sympathy toward the unemployed woman who asked us how we would address her health insurance needs. We talked policy, but did we really care about her?

I believe that the conservative approach that focuses on family, community, the private sector and a limited role of government provides the better framework to develop policies that will address the realities of millions of struggling families. But we have to be much more intentional in applying them.

Sure, extending unemployment benefits to two years may seem compassionate, but after two years, individuals are much less employable, and their futures are less bright.

Instead of ideas that focus on strengthening families and communities, addressing the appalling conditions in our public schools or creating a business environment that attracts new enterprises and job creation, the president has focused on climate change, gay marriage and gun control.

The way forward is getting back to our basic principles — but applied to the challenges we face today. We must not be the party of plutocrats, country clubbers and corporate interests. We must focus on ways to deliver our vision for hope and opportunity for working Americans. Here's what I mean:

We must represent and create opportunity for all Americans — but especially struggling families yearning for a secure future, single moms who face tremendous challenges and immigrant families who must work doubly hard to get ahead in this world.

We must be the champions for working taxpayers and families and promote policies focused on real health care choices and building assets through savings incentives, homeownership and expanded job opportunities through manufacturing incentives.

We must continue to be proponents of fundamental human rights and human dignity by affirming the right to life for the unborn, disabled and aging, as well as protecting freedom of conscience and religion and freedom of speech and association.

We must be advocates for vulnerable at-risk children through programs that strengthen marriage, fatherhood, vibrant supportive communities, quality health care and educational options.

We must empower parents with real educational options for their children, options that promote excellence and opportunity.

We must be advocates for local problem-solving efforts and organizations and social entrepreneurs rather than federal prescriptions and mandates to every challenge.

We must reduce poverty and help struggling families through faith-based, civic and local and state partnerships. Our vision is not to put people on food stamps and Medicaid but to provide a path to a better future.

We haven't shown America that we have the tools to put the rungs back on the opportunity ladder — the ladder up — to achieve the American dream. That must change.

I'm not convinced we can rely on the establishment of the Republican Party or today's elected leaders in Congress to get us back. And it's not about moving to the left; it's about appealing to working Americans with a vision that represents opportunity and a better life and offering real solutions to their problems.

Rick Santorum is a co-founder of Patriot Voices and the author of "American Patriots: Answering the Call to Freedom." To find out more about Rick Santorum and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

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Comments

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Sir;... Not to discount your views entirely; but government should never be something that does for people, and should always be the means by which they do something for themselves... If they have a flat tire and find their spare is flat too, and even the jack is frozen up rusted, and the tire iron does not fit their lug nuts, is government supposed to stand by with a tow truck??? The means by which people could correct government were always difficult to handle... The Amendment process is tilted toward those who resist change... And what most needs change were the ideological principals most people fully accept, even in this day, while they are destroying the country... Most people would whole heartedly accept the rights of property though they do not like the effect of money on politics; but the Supreme Court was correct in seeing that influence as an extension of the right of property... The thing is that the Supreme Court has been right in regard to property rights before, and wrong against the people in the way those rights were interpreted... Dred Scott was good law, but terrible politics because the people realized by then in what sense the extension of slavery injured them...
If you have ever had the mange, or shingles you know the way your body can be tortured by causes unseen, and it is no less tortured because no cause certain can be found... We are at that stage where illness is obvious, and we cannot say with certainty the cause, and people are given to cite all manor of causes from magic, to fate, to enemies within, or without, or faction...
Let me offer an opinion without pointing the finger of blame... Government has been made a static situation rather than a dynamic process...People would stand a better chance of getting blood from a stone than the water of life out of government... It has been made more unresponsive to the people when it was created to be unresponsive to the people... I am certain that what those in government most hate about office is their constant need to answer to and serve the population, but they will not diivide their offices, and multiply the representatives to better serve the people... House districts are divided to deny representation, and we see a republican house in office even against a democratic tide... They can claim a mandate, but it is one of party making, and against the will of the people... In a dynamic process, people could make the government serve them, and static, they can only resist government, and fight to make it serve them...
Though the people who wrote the constitution did want the forces of industry and the people of property to be able to resist the popular tides, that situation has for a long time been has grown worse until those who must bear the cost of government get the least from it...Wealth protected from taxation, and having every advantage of government and law has not served this people, and it really does not help to start a new homeless shelter or soup kitchen... The situation we have arrived at legally, and constitutionally demands that legality and constitutionality be swept away for a time, and for democracy to resume its sway...
It may be inevitable that the rich and the able will always run society but that does not have to mean the ruin of society... Democracy, real democracy is little form and all relationship... Democracy is dynamic and what we have now is the denial of democracy...The shoe ought to be on the other foot...
It takes a great deal to change society, as much in fact as it takes to change a single individual many times multiplied... The ability to change the constiution ought to be held by those who seek change...It should take only one third of the people seeking change to have change, and it should take two thirds resisting, and that would mean that at least two thirds of the population are served well enough to want no change...Now; an extreme minority can resist change, and since change is so foreign to our natures as individuals, and we are all conservative, such resistence has always the advantage so that government cannot grow, cannot mondernize, and cannot adapt...
Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Wed Mar 13, 2013 7:55 AM
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