Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

Don’t let a minoritea choose our government

If you harbor any doubt as to how the Republicans prefer to hold onto power in states like Wisconsin, look no further than the comment by Wisconsin State Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R):

“… high turnout elections have typically favored Democrats while low turnouts favor the GOP …”

Fitzgerald is correct … but he will never be right. It can never be right to want to govern without the consent of those being governed, to wish that democracy fails so that you can ignore the will of the majority of the people.

Republicans all over the United States, like Fitzgerald, are glad when fewer people vote because they know that most people reject their puny vision of America.

I am reminded of what happened as the result of a low-turnout midterm 4 years ago. In February 2011, Gov. Scott Walker (R-WI) fulfilled his secret promises to his campaign donors and ended collective bargaining for public employees. People protested and the Democratic state senators left the state to deny Sen. Fitzgerald a quorum. Those were heady times for small d democracy as Walker discovered that winning an election with 32% of the registered voters of a state (25% of the voting age population) did not give him a mandate. He won the election but he lacked one very important thing: the Consent of the Governed.

Specifically, this consent, from Thomas Jefferson:


“Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

It is time to stand up and be counted as one of the governed who does NOT consent to Scott Walker’s governance, one who rejects his minoritea rule.

There is no excuse to not vote today. No excuse to not take our state back from the special interests and elect a governor who cares about Wisconsin and wants to make life better for Wisconsinites. Mary Burke will have one focus: moving Wisconsin Forward.

In places all over the country, this should be a crawl-over-broken-glass-to-vote election. People have now seen up close and personal the damage that can be done at the state level by governors and legislators elected by a minoritea of voters; voters energized by selfishness promoted as good. Let’s show them what happens when voters energized by caring about the sick and the poor and the homeless … and living wages for the working class … go to the polls.

I offer a prayer of hope today, along with a candle:

A special candle with white light for illumination today. For voters in Wisconsin, Maine, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Florida … with governors races to take back our bluish states. For voters in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Illinois, Colorado, Connecticut, Arkansas, Rhode Island, Maryland … with governors races in blue states that must stay blue. For voters in Kansas, Georgia, Alaska, Arizona … with governors races in red states, in the hope that they will start a wave of people rejecting the puny vision of teaparty politics. Not a wave that will drown people but a wave that will wash away the old politics of hate and replace that with the politics of caring.

Please. Get out and vote.


11 comments

  1. Julie

    You can lead me through this wilderness where every person to make their prediction on tv this morning has said that Walker will win.

    The smell of victory for Burke?  That’s all I ask…well, on the other hand, I

    want Iowa to smell blue too.

  2. This is what needs to be fixed:

    Until young people make the connection between “not voting” and “your life will suck”, we will not take back Congress. Because the midterms elect 100% of the House and 1/3 of the Senate and you simply can’t take those “boring” elections off. Six year Senate seats filled with regressive politicians … there is no fix for that.

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