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May 22, 2013
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In Defense of the Undecided VoterPosted on Oct 25, 2012By David Sirota A confession: I recently received my Colorado ballot but, even though my state will play a key role in the presidential election, I still haven’t voted. Yes, I’m one of the oft-ridiculed undecideds, and here’s why: I am a left-leaner who previously voted for Barack Obama with clear eyes. Having looked at his record, I knew he was no progressive, much less a Marxist, as his conservative detractors claim. He has always been a thumb-to-the-wind politician who shrouds corporate-backed policies in the veneer of altruistic liberalism. But I voted for him because in 2008 he presented the best opportunity for change. Sadly, that opportunity was missed. Obama betrayed many of his campaign promises, not merely by turning over his economic policymaking to corporate-connected insiders, but, as the Washington Post this week documents, by additionally championing more-extreme versions of the Bush-era civil liberties and national security policies that he once criticized from his platform as a venerated “constitutional lawyer.” Now, four years later, Obama and Democratic Party-affiliated media outlets are demanding that voters ignore this record, or at least believe that a President Mitt Romney will automatically make things worse. For liberals, that belief certainly has some merit. On economics, Romney proposes punitive trickle-down policies to reward the wealthy “makers” with new tax cuts and punish impoverished “takers” with cuts to public services. Likewise on social issues, he stands against same-sex marriage and a woman’s right to choose an abortion. Advertisement Based on the last four years, we know that when pushing his Romney-like priorities, President Obama in his second term would face almost no serious opposition from Democratic-aligned organizations, media outlets, politicians and activists. Those forces have repeatedly proven they put party over principle. Indeed, just like first-term Obama passed extreme civil liberties policies and a national version of Romney’s insurance-industry-coddling health care bill without much liberal pushback, second-term Obama would be able to freely legislate those priorities upon which he and Republicans agree. Worse, fellow Democratic politicians would see Obama’s electoral success as further proof that they, too, can support those conservative initiatives without fear of losing liberal voters’ support in the future. By contrast, we know from George W. Bush’s second term that a President Romney will likely face a massive organized opposition. Why? Because the same Democratic apparatus that gives Obama a pass will suddenly see a partisan self-interest in frustrating the Republican president. This, of course, is not to encourage liberal votes for Romney. After all, I’m floating just one possible—though likely—scenario. Additionally, the reason I still lean toward Obama (or a third-party candidate) is because, as mentioned above, Romney is decidedly worse than the current president on a few critical issues. Sure, like the pundits, you can smugly ridicule us undecided voters as stupid - but with the stakes so high, the rubes are those who make such an impossible choice out to be so simple.
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