By Kevin D. Williamson
Tuesday, November 10, 2020
Hi. Me again.
I know — I’d hoped we wouldn’t be having this
conversation, too! But here we are, in a Senate runoff race in Georgia. I’m
sure you’re tired of the electioneering — I’m tired of it, too! My family is
sick of it. I’m tired of the sound of my own voice, to be honest. But I think
this is important, so, if you will, hear me out.
The presidential election has come and gone. That brought
out a lot of passions — more heat than light, to be sure, but also record
participation in the election. Some people say high turnout is bad for my
party. I say: If high turnout is bad for my party, then my party has some work
to do. And it does. We all know that.
Before November 3, nobody actually talked very much about
what we stand for as Senate candidates. Not really. We talked about whether we
were for Trump or against Trump. Georgians had some pretty strong feelings
about that. But that’s not the beginning and the end of it for Georgia. You
know it, and I know it. There’s more on the line than that.
I’ve talked about my agenda before, and I hope it makes
sense to you. I’d like to see lower taxes and less regulation in order to help
businesses, particularly small businesses and the energy sector. That’s not
just something to do with the GDP numbers in the annual economic reports. The
best social program is a good job with good pay and good benefits. Nothing works
as well as work. Prior to the pandemic, we had the lowest unemployment
rate in 50 years, with a growing economy that truly worked for everybody. Black
and Hispanic workers were employed at the highest rates on record. We’ve done
some useful things to offset the economic effects of the coronavirus, and
there’s a lot more to do. That’s going to be a bipartisan effort, which means
compromise. If we want that high-employment economy back, if we want to see
those job and wage figures moving in the right direction, then we’re going to have
to work something out. And I think I am better suited to doing that than my
opponent is.
But the economy isn’t everything. We need
criminal-justice-reform measures, from de-escalation training for police
officers to better tracking of police misconduct. We need more reforms like the
First Step Act, which
ends mandatory minimums for first-time nonviolent drug offenses. I want to
give Georgia families more choices about how to educate their children, better
protections for patients with preexisting medical conditions, and a more
reasonable approach to prescription-drug pricing. We need to do a better job
for our veterans and active-duty military, something of particular interest
here in Georgia. I think most of us, Republicans and Democrats alike, agree about
that.
Campaign rhetoric can get pretty overheated, especially
when there’s a presidential election. Let me leave you with this thought: I
don’t think my opponent is a Marxist radical. He may talk a little crazy from
time to time, but that’s politics: Talking crazy happens. I’ve probably done it
myself. I don’t think he’s an America-hating traitor. What I do think is that
he’s a member of a political party dominated by career politicians who have
values that are not Georgia’s values and interests that are not Georgia’s
interests, with leaders from California and New York who want to use the
coronavirus pandemic as an excuse to bail out their own spendthrift cities and
states with Georgia’s money, rather than facing the music and making hard
choices and being responsible.
I think that a Democratic majority in the Senate will
pull the Biden administration to the left, while a Republican majority in the
Senate will pull Biden to the center, toward where most Georgians are, toward
our values, toward the common-sense policies that are so desperately needed in
these extraordinary times.
This isn’t the time for an ideological crusade. I expect
to disagree with the Biden administration on many things, but I also look
forward to working with the new president on a renewed national effort to beat
this epidemic and get our economy — and life! — back on track. This is the
challenge of our time. We did not choose it, but we must rise to it. And that
means not wasting a lot of time on crazy stuff like trying to make the District
of Columbia into a state just to create two new Democratic Senate seats or
blowing up the Supreme Court.
I think we can do better on health care, but a
government-run monopoly is not right for us. I think we can do better with our
police, but defunding our police departments is crazy, and hamstringing good,
proactive law enforcement endangers the most vulnerable communities in our
state. I welcome and celebrate immigrants, but want an orderly, lawful
immigration system in which everybody follows the same rules and the interests
of our low-wage workers are considered. I support our public schools, but I
think they need to do a better job, especially in those communities where
families just don’t have the money to send their kids to private schools or
move into better-performing school districts — neither of which they should
ever have to do simply to get a decent education for their kids.
And I didn’t vote for Joe Biden, but I know most voters
in Georgia did, as did most voters in the country. Talk of “mandates” is a
media parlor game, but it would be a mistake — a tragedy — to destroy any
opportunity for intelligent, bipartisan, consensus initiatives, especially in
response to the ongoing national coronavirus emergency. It would be a mistake
for Democrats to take this opportunity to launch a new culture war in
Washington, as my opponent seems to want to do and many of his party’s leaders
certainly want to do.
A one-party government in Washington riding roughshod
over Georgia’s interests is the last thing we need right now. We need an effort
that is truly national but at the same time respects the different interests
and priorities of the different states and regions, because Georgia really is
different from California or New Jersey. Washington doesn’t always seem to know
that, but you and I know it. My opponent knows it, too, but I don’t think he
has what it takes to stand up to Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi when they
decide that Georgia taxpayers need to bail out Democratic special-interest
groups in New York and San Francisco.
I’m not a vote for Chuck Schumer. I’m a vote for Georgia.
I’ve already shown that. I’ll stand on my record — and you can compare it to my
opponent’s record and see for yourself. If you give me your vote, I’ll keep
being a voice for Georgia, for its priorities, and for its people. My agenda is
not just the economy but prosperity with purpose. If there is a silver lining
to the pandemic, it is that we have been reminded that we have neglected some
basic things for far too long and grown complacent, but that we remain, despite
our differences, one nation under God.
I thank you for your time and ask you for your support.
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