Ready for a march: Health care debate paves way for conservative populist revolt

By • on August 18, 2009


Published Tuesday, August 18, 2009 in the Beaufort Gazette

By Tom Davis

There will be a march in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 12 to protest recent federal government actions — runaway spending, unsustainable borrowing, trillions of dollars in debt being passed on to future generations, attempts to nationalize health care and enact a ruinous cap-and-trade bill, the bailouts — and I will participate alongside thousands of other South Carolinians.

America’s tradition should always be one of expanding individual liberty, but in recent years, we have seen our federal government veer dramatically from the principles on which it — and this nation — was founded. And what we have seen in the past 200 days has been shocking. Our elected leaders seem hell-bent on deforming the relationship between the citizen and the state.

I’m glad to see senators and congressmen so shaken by the raw town-hall meetings held in recent days to debate the proposal to nationalize health care (one-sixth of our nation’s economy). These politicians are not used to dealing with outraged individuals who have finally had enough, and their education on how far the policies now being pushed in Washington have drifted from the American mainstream is long overdue.

The politicians in Washington tell us this anger is not genuine, that it is being whipped up by special interest groups. They’re wrong. I know that they’re wrong because I hear that anger at the community forums I regularly hold in Beaufort County. Folks from all over our county — from Hilton Head Island to Bluffton, from Port Royal to Beaufort to Fripp Island — are furious. They realize something that makes America unique in the world is being lost.

Actually, it’s those politicians who are beholden to the special interest groups. They have the usual suspects on board — the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the American Hospital Association, America’s Health Insurance Plans and the AARP, which is leaning toward an endorsement. But what they don’t have are the people those groups say they represent.

Look at the AARP. It has kind words for a health care plan that would cut several hundred billion dollars over 10 years from Medicare, even though that plan is opposed by seniors more than any other age group. My constituents in Sun City, who speak eloquently and intelligently against the plan, are a far more authentic voice for seniors than the leadership of the AARP busy selling them out.

And as members of Congress are discovering during their recess, cutting deals with the special interest groups’ lobbyists to cram nationalized health care down the throats of Americans will not be enough — not when they’re facing a genuine grassroots revolt by people who are being ignored by everyone who is supposed to be representing them.

The populism we are now witnessing has long been part of American politics. And while liberal intellectuals preach the virtues of populism when their leaders direct it against “the malefactors of great wealth,” they cry foul when it is turned against the aggrandizing of federal power.

The stakes now are very high, and Mark Steyn puts it well: “When governments annex a huge chunk of the economy, they also annex a huge chunk of individual liberty. You fundamentally change the relationship between the citizen and the state into something closer to that of junkie and pusher — and you make it very difficult ever to change back. Americans face a choice: They can rediscover the animating principles of the American idea — of limited government, a self-reliant citizenry and the opportunities to exploit your talents to the fullest — or they can join most of the rest of the Western world in terminal decline. To rekindle the spark of liberty once it dies is very difficult.”

Those of us heading to Washington, D.C., on Sept. 12 seek to remind our elected federal officials of those “animating principles of the American idea.” Of course, they might well decide to continue “annexing all the responsibilities of adulthood” (Steyn again). But if they do, the flames of the conservative populist revolt will burn even brighter, and there will be hell to pay come election time.

Tom Davis is the South Carolina state senator for Beaufort County.

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8 Responses to “Ready for a march: Health care debate paves way for conservative populist revolt”

  1. David J. Krauser says:

    Senator, I know it is very difficult to resist the temptations of special insterest groups. I have been in public service all my life as a Superintendent of Schools and can appreciate the pressure on you to confirm. All I ask that you stay true to your vision for America and resist the temptation of money and potential glory.
    Respectfully,
    Dave Krauser, Chair, GBAC, Sun City, Bluffton, SC

  2. Tom, i sincerely enjoyed your talk this moring the the beaufort County Board of Realtors and meeting you afterwards.
    I have been a life-long Republican and the only Democrat I have ever voted for was Joe Rilley, when I lived in Charleston. I think Tommy Hartnet voted for him too!
    In my opinion the National Republican Party has demonstrated just how inept they are. They had controll of all 3 branches of Governmnet and got nothing done. The Democrats played them like a Strativarious. Having said that,
    I resent a Rookie President who is more interested in getting something done fast rather than getting it done right! I resent a President who claims to know more about healthcare than my Doctor. I resent a President who would suggest that a Physician would chose to take out a child’s tonsils becuase he would make more money. Angry, you bet. I am 70 years old and I will be damned if I want the government deciding my health choices.
    Why would I want the Federal Government making these decissions. Look what they have done with the Postal Service, Medicare and Social Security.
    The federal Governmnet is not up to the challange!
    I was impressed with Lindsay Grahams handling of the Supreme Court Justice hearings. At least he understood the futility of voting against her.
    Tom, again it was a pleasure meeting you and if I can ever be of help to you, do not hesitate to call on me.
    Best regards,
    Harry Waddington
    Sorry I was so long winded!

  3. Alysoun Eversole says:

    I could not agree more. Great article.

  4. Jeff Norkus says:

    Tom, Americans do not want to be forced to pay for abortion on demand, they do not want a government committee to edict health care rationing for seniors, and they do not believe that the government can be more efficient than the private sector. We certainly must not allow ultra-liberal elites to push us into socialized medicine in this nation.

    -Jeff

  5. George Fromme says:

    Thank you for the message. I really think that all of us have to voice our opinion concerning the Health care reform. The march on Washington is really the right thing to do. I hope we have 3-5,000,000 people show up and have Washington shut down–it needs to be shut down. Besides the politicians, we need to shut down the staffs and other agencies that are making the interpretations and decisions about the laws that have been passed.
    we need a whole sale peaceful revolution.
    Thanks again for your hard work

  6. Ken Stovall says:

    Senator Davis:
    I read about the march on Washington on Sept. 12 in my Orangeburg paper The Times and Democrat. Please tell me more about this event. I would like to gather support across the state for this event.
    Ken Stovall
    akatovall@aol.com

  7. Ken Stovall says:

    Please tell me more about this Sept 12 event. It appears thast my 1st msg did not go thru.
    Ken
    skstovall@aol.com

  8. I am over sixty and totally agree with what you are doing. I am extremely concerned on what kind of country we are going to leave to my granchildren who are now getting ready for college. Will there even be jobs for them?

    The Health Reform, as it stands, is going to hurt us all. I wish people would read between the lines. I don’t understand how people can follow like sheep without seeing through all this!

    This is a president that talks and says nothing! He can’t even asnwer a question when asked. Everything we believe in in this country seems to be undermined from the health care to the cia.

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