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This is an op-ed written by the former Republican governor of Minnesota and the state Republican Party's most honored elder statesman.
Why this Republican ex-governor will be voting for Kerry
Elmer L. Andersen
October 13, 2004
Star Tribune
of Minneapolis-St. Paul
Throughout my tenure and beyond as the 30th governor of this state, I have been
steadfastly aligned -- and until recently, proudly so -- with the Minnesota
Republican Party.
It dismays me, therefore, to have to publicly disagree with the national
Republican agenda and the national Republican candidate but, this year, I must.
The two "Say No to Bush" signs in my yard say it all.
The present Republican president has led us into an unjustified war -- based on
misguided and blatantly false misrepresentations of the threat of weapons of
mass destruction. The terror seat was Afghanistan. Iraq had no connection to
these acts of terror and was not a serious threat to the United States, as this
president claimed, and there was no relation, it's now obvious, to any serious
weaponry. Although Saddam Hussein is a frightful tyrant, he posed no threat to
the United States when we entered the war. George W. Bush's arrogant actions to
jump into Iraq when he had no plan how to get out have alienated the United
States from our most trusted allies and weakened us immeasurably around the
world.
Also, if there as well had been proper and careful coordination of services and
intelligence on Sept. 11, 2001, that horrific disaster might also have been
averted. But it was a separate event from this brutal mess of a war, and the
disingenuous linking of the wholly unrelated situation in Iraq to 9/11 by this
administration is not supported by the facts.
Sen. John Kerry was correct when he said that seemingly it is only Bush and Dick
Cheney who still believe their own spin. Both men spew outright untruths with
evangelistic fervor. For Bush -- a man who chose to have his father help him
duck service in the military during the Vietnam War -- to disparage and cast
doubt on the medals Kerry won bravely and legitimately in the conflict of battle
is a travesty.
For Cheney to tell the hand-picked, like-minded Republican crowds in Des Moines
last month that to vote for John Kerry could mean another attack like that of
9/11 is reprehensible. Moreover, such false statements encourage more terrorist
attacks rather than prevent them.
A far smaller transgression, but one typical of his stop-at-nothing tactics, was
Cheney's assertion in last Wednesday's vice-presidential debate that he'd never
met Sen. John Edwards until that night. The next day -- and the media must stay
ever-vigilant at fact-checking the lies of this ticket -- news reports, to the
contrary, showed four video clips of Edwards and Cheney sitting next to each
other during the past five years.
In both presidential debates, Kerry has shown himself to be of far superior
intellect and character than Bush. He speaks honestly to the American people,
his ethics are unimpeachable and, clearly, with 20 respected years in the
Senate, he has far better credentials to lead the country than did Bush when he
was elected four years ago. And a far greater depth of understanding of domestic
and foreign affairs to do it now.
Not that the sitting president has ever really been at the helm.
I am more fearful for the state of this nation than I have ever been -- because
this country is in the hands of an evil man: Dick Cheney. It is eminently clear
that it is he who is running the country, not George W. Bush.
Bush's phony posturing as cocksure leader of the free world -- symbolized by his
victory symbol on the aircraft carrier and "mission accomplished"
statement -- leave me speechless. The mission had barely been started, let alone
finished, and 18 months later it still rages on. His ongoing
"no-regrets," no-mistakes stance and untruths on the war -- as well as
on the floundering economy and Bush administration joblessness -- also
disappoint and worry me.
Liberal Republicans of my era and mind-set used to have a humane and reasonable
platform. We advocated the importance of higher education, health care for all,
programs for children at risk, energy conservation and environmental protection.
Today, Bush and Cheney give us clever public relations names for programs --
need I say "No Child Left Behind? -- but a lack of funding to support them.
Early childhood education programs and overall health care are woefully
underfunded. We have not only the largest number ever of medically uninsured in
this nation, our infant mortality rates, once among the lowest in the world,
have worsened to 27th.
As taxes for the wealthy are being cut, jobs are being outsourced if not lost
and children are homeless and uninsured, this administration is running up the
biggest deficit in U.S. history -- bound to be a terrible burden for future
generations.
This imperialistic, stubborn adherence to wrongful policies and known untruths
by the Cheney-Bush administration -- and that's the accurate order -- has simply
become more than I can stand.
Although I am a longtime Republican, it is time to make a statement, and it is
this: Vote for Kerry-Edwards, I implore you, on Nov. 2.
Elmer L. Andersen was Minnesota's governor from 1961 to 1963.