The Platte Perspective

"If there is any one secret of success, it lies in the ability to get the other person's point of view and see things from that person's angle as well as from your own."

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Local Dems leader supports GOP candidate

(Author's note: this piece is not intended to serve as an endorsement, but an example of principle over party, and should not be viewed as an indictment of the writer's personal preference towards the candidates mentioned)

With less than two weeks until Primary Day, this column could easily be dedicated to previewing a handful of interesting contests playing out in Republican and Democratic circles. But I’m confident Citizen readers will research the candidates, read The Citizen profiles on candidates, make an informed decision and show up to vote Aug. 7, so I’ll leave the prep work up to you.

Regular readers know by now I often go to painstakingly-long lengths to describe my desire for our elected leaders to make choices and decisions with good government principles behind them, not purely politics. I often have to use hypothetical situations, wishful thinking, and broad strokes of the brush to paint that picture. Last week, a tangible example was finally found.

When it comes to the competitive race in southern Platte County for County Commissioner of the 1st District, Pauli Kendrick and a handful of other long-time Democrats find themselves split between the responsibilities they have towards two different roles. As Chair of the Platte County Democratic Party, Kendrick is charged with promoting and supporting the party’s candidates and principles through thick and thin. On the other hand, her civic efforts have transcended into non-partisan activities without party labels at times as well. This includes her term as mayor of Weatherby Lake and a recent stint on the Park Hill Board of Education.

With no Democratic candidate filing to run in November, the winner of the August Republican primary between incumbent Kathy Dusenbery and challenger Beverlee Roper will go on to take office in December. As someone opposed to Dusenbery’s re-election for various reasons and a long-time Weatherby Lake neighbor of Roper’s, Kendrick decided to lend her efforts in support of Roper, whose candidacy has garnered significant support from the Republican establishment.

Despite the simple reasoning behind Kendrick’s decision, which has little to do with a shift in personal ideology, Roper’s Republican supporters have over-emphasized this as a positive indictment for their candidate’s wide-ranging appeal. This hasn’t been sitting well with local Democrats, who believe it is inappropriate for their chairperson to be involved in the race. Democratic central committee members went to great lengths voicing their displeasure with Kendrick at last week’s monthly meeting. Their argument was that as elected representatives of the Democratic Party in Platte County, no committee member should publicly support a candidate of another party, no matter who the candidate is or what the circumstances are.

After all the passionate and strong-felt opinions were expressed, the floor was open for Kendrick, who had calmly refrained from responding up to this point. Collected and composed, she delivered what I believe was one of the most well-reasoned political defenses I have heard in recent memory. She talked about the lack of cooperation between parties at the national and state levels, discussed her disapproval of the way Platte County business had been handled in recent years, and talked about the personal reasons she was supporting her candidate. It was a refreshing statement from a person who - no two ways about it - genuinely wants to see what she believed could be a positive change.

Kendrick is making a decision other Democrats might also make this August. They’re voting to have a say about the future of leaders in Platte County, in a race their party has failed to field a candidate for. As long as the local Democratic Party continues to fall short in recruiting and supporting qualified candidates like they have in recent years, it’s a dilemma their supporters will be forced to deal with more and more. Other than electoral defeat, this is one of the additional side effects of a local Republican Party whose organization and growth has outpaced Democrats in the last decade.

In the end, Kendrick and other Democrats who decide to pick up a Republican ballot instead of a Democratic ballot want to have a say in who represents Platte County at the local level. There are less than a handful of Democratic races on the state level, but they recognize the old adage that all politics are local still holds true and it makes the biggest difference in our daily lives. They aren’t doing it to compromise their political principles. Though in the absence of a candidate available from their own party, a higher standard of principles surface. They respect their right to vote and recognize that duty to country, state, and community comes before party affiliation.

Maybe if similar decisions were made more often in the course of actual governing, we’d think more highly of our elected officials.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Political discourse often reverts to childish rhetoric

The most effective way for a person to make a difference in government has always been to take on the role of an elected or public official

Having the appetite for holding public office isn’t something a lot of people want to do, so the next best way to have a positive effect on the process can simply be contributing to the conversation. This means not necessarily being the loudest voice in the room, but by promoting respectable, informed, and productive public discourse. All too many times, though, it results in the opposite, resembling more of an argument between children than an actual discussion that can bring us closer to positive results.

You remember when you were a kid or maybe you’ve witnessed your own kids try to win a petty argument, right? They might go back and forth for a short period of time, and then one side just decides they don’t want to try anymore so they throw out a line like “You’re stupid” or “You’re dumb.” The other side goes on to react with “No, you’re stupid, you’re dumb.” No matter what the argument was previously, it’s lost all credibility at this point.

When I think of political discourse in this country, frequently that same argument between children is what I’m reminded of. Legitimate discussion of the issues all too often evaporates because one side or the other decides to take the dive into name calling, stereotyping, or simply polarize the issue. It transcends Washington D.C. and is present anywhere from your local newspaper to the coffee shop to the workplace.

While kids can be excused for this type of behavior for just being kids, there’s a term for when adults act the same way in regards to their political interactions. Whether intentional or not, it goes by the name of demagoguery, a word you may have never heard of before that is just as loaded in meaning as it is in syllables. It’s the “stupid” and “dumb” of adult American politics.

It’s important to distinguish the difference between an information based talking point and an emotionally driven act of demagoguery, which can be broadly described as the use of impassioned, crude, or agitating appeals to prejudices of the public. That is, rational and intelligent reasoning is not always at its core. Its vocabulary is often a hint that you’ve wandered off the path of productive discourse. Terms like Satan, nazi, communist, marxist, welfare queen, fair share, and the war on (insert cause) seem to be a few used to turn attention away from a mature debate.

Republicans sometimes express the idea that President Barack Obama is a socialist. In return, some Democrats have accused Republicans of being racist. Both are forms of demagoguery, whose purpose is to appeal towards a certain audience in order to support a cause. The extent of the statement’s accuracy is not important. Once it is said, its purpose of rousing a sense of emotion in people has been served.

In a democratic and free society like the one we enjoy here in the United States, demagoguery is all within the scope of free speech, as it should be. It’s seen on a daily basis from our country’s top leaders all the way down to average citizens. The responsibilities we generally associate with free speech are perhaps the most intangible and unenforceable of all, so they can only be promoted by example, which should be on display first and foremost from our elected officials, who more often than not choose to be intellectually lazy, using insults instead of engaging in policy discussions.

On the other hand, we can’t really expect others to discuss the issues in a sane and logical way unless we do so ourselves. Only then will results fueled by logic and reason replace those of emotion and passion. Good government and the discourse surrounding it isn’t supposed to be exciting; it was never meant to be compacted into 30 second sound bites, split-screen television interviews, or Hollywood movies. It was meant to be approached more like long-term relationships between people, because in the end that’s all good government is: quality interactions between groups of people over time. So ask yourself, how do we achieve the best solutions to just some of the following questions facing our local, state, and federal governments?

What is the best balance between Platte County’s park tax and making sure law enforcement and road needs are also maintained? How can Missouri’s education formula be fully funded again to ensure local school boards don’t have to levy higher property taxes? Are there any bipartisan solutions Congress can adopt to address both our short-term economic and long-term debt problems?

All are legitimate questions that have so far been met with little serious debate. We may not be debating on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives or even at the County Courthouse, but a lot of those discussions stem directly from how we talk about them around our own kitchen tables with family and friends. The difference between it turning into actual policy or just another name-calling, shouting match really depends on the discussion we have first.