Not Giving Up
by Bill Sizemore
This Fall's election was a disaster in the nation and my state of
Oregon. Both houses of Congress went to the Democrats and the Oregon
Spending Limit measure failed miserably and dragged the more popular tax
cutting measure down with it. The tax cut received more votes than the
spending limit, but
still failed by a substantial margin. The Judicial Reform measure,
which
was sorely needed and should have passed handily, came up short, killed
primarily by the low Republican turn-out.
Even Term Limits, which has been on the ballot in 23 states and up until
this election had never lost a single statewide election, suffered its
first defeat, and it wasn't even close. Term Limits passed Oregon in
1992
with 70 percent of the vote, but only garnered 41 percent this year.
The most disheartening defeat of the night was the Oregon measure that
would have required parental notification before performing an abortion
on a minor. It is difficult to understand how anyone with common sense
could believe a government employee should have the authority to take
someone's minor child to an abortion clinic to undergo a major medical
procedure without the child's parents even so much as knowing that their
daughter was
pregnant, let alone undergoing an abortion.
Notwithstanding such obvious logic, after the dust had settled on
election
night, the Parental Notification measure received a disappointing 46
percent of the vote. A measure like that should have received 100
percent support, because there was not one valid reason for voting "No".
Nonetheless, emotion prevailed and the supremacy of the government over
the family was reinforced in this state.
Moving on, Oregon citizens were not the only ones placing measures on
the
ballot this year. Government bodies across the state placed dozens of
large tax increase measures on local ballots. Some of the bond measures
were as large as $100 million or more. Most of the large ones passed
and
will raise local property taxes hundreds of dollars per year. Overall,
it
was a good day for the government employee unions and one big bummer for
Oregon taxpayers.
In other races, the Republicans, who had chosen a moderate downtown
Portland lawyer as their gubernatorial nominee, hoping to win the
governor's seat for the first time in nearly three decades, suffered
another defeat. The Republican nominee raised twice as much money as
the
Democrat incumbent, and yet was creamed on election night.
Republicans also lost control of the Oregon House and on top of that
lost
additional seats in the already Democrat controlled Oregon Senate,
giving
Democrats complete control of the legislature, the governor's office and
every statewide office in Oregon with the exception of one lone U.S.
Senate seat, held by moderate Republican Gordon Smith, who is up for
re-election in 2008.
Overall, it was a night to make a sensible man give up.
So, you say, why did you title this column, "Not Giving Up", when giving
up seems to make perfectly good sense? Why not give up on voters who
apparently want and deserve the kind of government they are going to
get?
Why not quit? Because the other side wants conservatives to quit, and
who wants to give them the satisfaction? Why keep fighting? Because
whether we win or lose, it is better to make the other side play defense
and talk about our ideas instead of theirs'. They spent millions to win
their victories, and well, there's nothing wrong with allowing them to
do that.
Why not hang it up? Because hundreds of thousands of Americans and
Oregonians voted our way and deserve better government than they are
about to receive. Those people are worth fighting for.
Why not accept defeat? Because there are still plenty of worthwhile
projects to undertake, ideas that a majority of voters will support.
Besides, just because voters rejected an idea once doesn't mean they
will
reject it next time. Property tax relief was rejected four times in
Oregon before it finally passed and began saving taxpayers billions of
dollars.
There are plenty of good ideas to pursue. Here are some of the projects
we are working on for 2008:
1) We currently are collecting signatures on a measure that each
year
would allow a property owner to make up to $35,000 in improvements to
his
or her property without a building permit. Yes, the electrical portion
would have to be signed off by a licensed electrical contractor and the
owner would have to make full disclosure of all such remodeling to a
prospective buyer, but otherwise, what a blow for freedom. Think of it.
You could actually go out and nail some boards on the back of your house
(or the front for that matter) without having to ask for the
government's
permission. (This one's for you, Stu Miller.)
2) We also are collecting signatures on a measure that would end
English as a second language programs and instead require that
non-English
speaking students in public schools be immersed in English. This would
end one of the teachers union's favorite scams: Keep immigrant students
sidelined in ESL courses for six years so the district can collect
$2,650
more per year per student.
3) We are collecting signatures on a measure that would require
that
future pay raises for public school teachers be based in classroom
performance, not teacher seniority. And when lay-offs occur, the
schools
would be required to keep the best teachers, not those who have been
there
the longest. Imagine that, putting the good of the children above the
demands of the teachers union.
4) We are working on a measure to give property owners a break on
their property taxes when they turn 65. The measure phases the property
tax out gradually as seniors grow older and eliminates them entirely at
age 80. Wouldn't it be nice to actually own your property and not have
to
rent it from the government, even if you have to wait until you're 80
years old to do it. This measure is called the Senior Citizen Homestead
Exemption Act.
5) We are working on a measure to stop unauthorized union payroll
deductions for politics, and a measure to end Oregon's $80,000 income
requirement, which currently prohibits building a home on farm land
until
you have generated $80,000 in farm income for two years. Try earning
$80,000 a year in farm income on a five or ten acre parcel without
growing
marijuana.
These are all good measures and further the cause of liberty. Just
because Oregon voters were in a sour mood in 2006 does not mean they
will
be in a sour mood in two years. Two years of a Democrat controlled
state
legislature just might give some of them a brand new perspective on
life.
Besides, the Republicans were nothing to write home about, when they
were
in charge. Many of them deserved a good kick in the rear.
This is the way I look at it: I figure I am good for at least one more
election cycle. We'll wait and see how things go in two years before
thinking of giving up. Besides, it's important to keep things in
perspective. Valley Forge, the Alamo, Gettysburg, Iwo Jima, Pork Chop
Hill. Now, those were discouraging times and cost some Americans a lot
more than money and sweat. Losing a few conservative ballot measures in
2006 in a liberal state like Oregon, well, in the big picture, that's
hardly worth mentioning. You would have to be a crybaby to make a big
deal about something like that. And this is not a game for crybabies.
Anyway, we've licked our wounds for a few days now and it's time to move
along. Time waits for no one. Besides, if we won every battle, it
would
hardly be worth doing. We're just going to have to fight a little
harder
next time, and little smarter.
Bill Sizemore is the head of the Oregon Taxpayers Union and a former
Republican nominee for governor of Oregon.

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