|
Here's to You…Two
Victories in the Bag – More to Come
By Tom DeWeese
America has changed over the past decade – a lot. Many of those
changes have not been for the better. Federal and UN land grabs have
threatened private property and national sovereignty. Psychology-driven
behavior-modification programs are replacing basic academics in our
schools. Police forces look more like invading armies than the blue
knights dedicated to "Protect and Serve" the community.
Massive data banks and computer profiles threaten our privacy. Americans
are learning to fear their own government in what was once the
"land of the free and home of the brave."
Many of these scary intrusions have happened on the Republican watch,
as three congresses controlled by them have freely supported and passed
legislation to implement most of these programs. Conservatives have
watched in horror as Republican congresses have capitulated, surrendered
and whined over their own inability to stop the Clinton juggernaut. All
the while the Republican leadership told us they had to act like
Democrats because otherwise Clinton wouldn’t sign their legislation
into law. It’s been a sad and frustrating commentary.
I once wrote in an article addressed to the Republican Congress
entitled, Why the Right Mistrusts You, "Just once it would
be nice to hear the other side complain that it dare not move forward
with its agenda because ‘we’ll never get it passed by the Republican
Congress." "Then," I said, "we would know that the
Republicans had finally started fighting back." That day may have
finally arrived.
In the month of October, alone, Republicans have stood their ground,
done the right thing – and won. Twice. These victories were
huge. In fact, in my thirty years of fighting for limited government,
individual liberty and a foreign policy that was in America’s
interest, I have never participated in such important victories.
First, was the surprise victory to repeal the establishment of a
national identification card. The American Policy Center ran a
relentless campaign to expose and stop its implementation. The fact is
the national ID was already federal law, having been passed in 1996 as
the infamous section 656b of the Illegal Immigration Reform and
Immigration Responsibility Act. The same section was also passed in the
1996 Welfare Reform Act.
Section 656b was quietly slipped into both of those bills without
hearings and without debate. No Congress would have passed such bills if
it was known that the laws would lead to the establishment of a national
ID. Yet, the bills were passed and states were ordered to redesign
drivers’ licenses to comply with new federal guidelines, specifically
using the social security number as a central identifying number that
would tie all known computer records and federal data banks together.
Without an approved driver’s license, Americans would not be able to
open a bank account, get on an airplane, obtain federal medical services
or buy a gun. The deadline for implementation was October 1, 2000.
But in a surprise move, Alabama Senator Richard Shelby quietly placed
a provision to repeal section 656b in the Senate version of the1999
Transportation
Appropriations Bill. Meanwhile, the House passed its own
Transportation Appropriations Bill, but it only contained language to
withhold funding of the national ID card. That language would not have
killed it.
Both bills then went into a "conference committee" where
House and Senate members had to seek compromise on the different
language. That’s when APC and a whole coalition of freedom fighters
jumped into action. We generated a flood of phone calls and letters to
Capitol Hill, demanding that the Senate’s "repeal" language
remain in the Bill.
Your phone calls and letters made the difference by helping Senator
Shelby and others hold firm. Together, we destroyed the apparatus to
impose a national ID card. President Clinton even signed the repeal into
law. So Big Brother lost and the forces of freedom won this round.
Second, for the first time in history, the U.S. Congress refused to
ratify an arms - control treaty. On Wednesday, October 14, the Senate
voted overwhelmingly to defeat the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT).
The vote was seen as a huge defeat for Bill Clinton who was the first
world leader to sign the treaty and who pleaded with Senate Majority
Leader Trent Lott to delay the vote. Lott refused and the Republicans
held together to vote it down.
Conservatives have long fought such treaties because we believe them
to be a device to reduce U.S. security while strengthening our enemies.
In the past, The United States signed onto almost any arms treaty
proposed, even though it was clear such a move was against our national
interest. But today, with Red China on the move and with rogue nations
acquiring nuclear capabilities, the Senate argued that this treaty would
do nothing to stop nuclear arms – it would only weaken American
strength.
For one of the first times since World War II, the United States
Congress made a positive move in favor of the interests of the United
States. An astonishing victory for the forces of freedom.
In two vital votes, Republicans have learned that they can do the
right thing, stand up to Bill Clinton and win. Perhaps a backbone is
beginning to emerge in the halls of Congress. In fact, with less than
two months to go in this final year of the Twentieth Century, I would
consider it a very good legislative session if we could now stop
Clinton’s new federalism Executive Order #13132 and keep U.S. troops
in Panama. Hang in there and fight – it can still happen.
|