Posted by
tekende on Thursday, November 15, 2007 11:57:20 AM
I have not yet decided who I'm voting for in the Republican primaries. It's a difficult decision. Well, a couple of them are easy to eliminate--I won't be voting for Giuliani: the man is practically the walking definition of RINO (well, most Republicans are nowadays, it seems); McCain's out too: McCain-Feingold showed a complete disregard for the First Amendment, and even after years of McCain being in the public eye the only value of his I'm relatively sure of is his pro-war stance. I admire the man for a number of reasons, but presidential material he is not.
No, they're the easy ones. Where I run into trouble is with Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, and Ron Paul. Being a libertarian, my instinct is to favor Paul, and for the most part I do. Lower taxes, dismantling the Department of Education, etc.? Hell yes, I'm there. The man says nearly all the right things and has the voting record to back it all up. My sole problem with Dr. Paul is the Iraq issue. His stated policy of non-interventionism strikes many thrilling chords within me, don't get me wrong. I love that.
But the current situation is that the US is at war right now, and this is a war we need to win. And I don't know what Dr. Paul actually plans to do about that. The best policy in my view would be to give this thing our all and do what it takes to win and get things in Iraq settled as best and as quickly as we can. Then begin a non-interventionist policy. Withdrawal is not such a great idea. We simply cannot afford to lose in Iraq. We cannot let Islam see that they can wear us out.
As for Romney and Huckabee...I'm not as excited about either of them. And part of the reason for that is that I have yet to see any real key differences between the two policy-wise. There's a lot of mudslinging going on in the blogosphere against both of them, and I don't know who to believe. I've seen more anti-Romney material than anti-Huckabee, though--claims that Romney is hiding behind his religion, and that he's a liberal in disguise. There are those saying that he enacted a number of very liberal programs and laws while governing Massachusetts, and then there are those who say he didn't, or that he just couldn't muster the votes to stop those policies.
If the allegations of RomneyCare, pro-abortion* and pro-gay programs** are true, my vote likely won't be going to Romney. I still don't know enough about Huckabee to give a verdict yet.
But these are most of my concerns. I'm not focusing on the Democrats right now; I already know none of them are getting my vote. I'm trying to work out who's the best choice on the Republican side. And "most likely to win" is not a qualification in my mind--if it were I'd be voting for Giuliani. I don't care who's most able to stand up to Hillary and I'm through with that sort of thinking. I'm voting on principles this time. Sadly, that may mean staying away from the polls when the actual election day arrives. If my choice is between Giuliani and Clinton, why bother voting? They're just two sides of the same coin.
*While not my chief concern, abortion is a big issue with me. It's not a matter of choice, it's a matter of murder. Justify it all you want, it's killing a human being. It's a common libertarian stance to be pro-choice, but I don't see what's libertarian about ignoring the rights of infants.
**I don't care much either way about homosexuality; in the past, I was very against gay marriage. Now? I don't care. I really don't. But I'm not favorable to actively pro-homosexual agenda. Let them be, let them do what they want, fine. I'm all for tolerance (in most cases). But I'm not for forced acceptance.