Yes, West Virginia, there is a difference!!
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Is there really a difference? "There's not a dime's worth of difference; both political parties are alike." "I vote for the person, not the party." "If I'm anything, I'm independent." |
A lot of Americans feel this way today and certainly, the voters' instinct for electing the right candidate at the right time, regardless of party, has proven itself time and again.
Few would question the importance or power of the Independent vote in deciding closely contested elections. And it is true that both parties are alike in many respects.
However, to ignore a
candidate's party affiliation is to miss out on one of the great advantages
of the two-party system. The very reason that a candidate is listed as
a Republican or a Democrat is that he or she subscribes to the
basic political philosophy for which that party stands...
and there is a difference!
Republicans
believe that peace and freedom can be protected only if America maintains a
defense force strong enough to deter any aggressor. Republicans turn away
from the paternalism of the 50's and encourage other nations to shoulder
responsibility for their own problems. Republicans oppose unnecessary
intervention in the internal affairs of other nations and stress helping our
friends around the globe develop the skills and strengths necessary to
protect themselves.
The
Democratic Party has vacillated between extreme isolationism, intervention
and confrontation tactics in cases like Vietnam, Cuba and Korea. This
inconsistent foreign policy has confused our allies and encouraged our
potential enemies.
Government and the Governed
Republicans
believe that government should be limited to doing for people those things
which they cannot do for themselves. The right to determine individual
destiny should lie in the hands of the individual. Similarly, Republicans
believe governmental power and resources should be kept as close to the
people, though their state and community leaders, rather than centralized in
distant big government.
Recent
Democrat administrations have pushed for more and more centralized power in
Washington, with secondary consideration for the rights of individual
citizens and communities. This has led to increasingly more federal
controls and regimentation, often in the hands of unelected bureaucrats,
causing a severe erosion of local government across the country.
Foreign Policy
Republicans
believe that peace and freedom can be protected only if America maintains a
defense force strong enough to deter any aggressor. Republicans turn away
from the paternalism of the 50's and encourage other nations to shoulder
responsibility for their own problems. Republicans oppose unnecessary
intervention in the internal affairs of other nations and stress helping our
friends around the globe develop the skills and strengths necessary to
protect themselves.
The
Democratic Party has vacillated between extreme isolationism, intervention
and confrontation tactics in cases like Vietnam, Cuba and Korea. This
inconsistent foreign policy has confused our allies and encouraged our
potential enemies.
Economic Policies
Republicans
believe in the competitive free-enterprise system. Individuals must be free
to use their talents. This is the key to personal and national prosperity.
Republicans believe that the only limits to an individual's opportunity to
succeed are the limits of his own initiative and enterprise.
Democrats
say that the economy is too complicated to be left to free enterprise alone,
and therefore must be subjected to ever-increasing controls by the federal
government. They say that we are "entering an era of limitations" and
therefore must lower our individual economic expectations.
Government Spending and Taxes
Republicans
constantly strive to cut governmental spending and to eliminate costly,
overlapping and unnecessary governmental programs. Because Republicans
believe that the individual should control his and government's pocketbook,
they believe that tax increases should be voted upon by the people.
The
Democrat view is that the federal government knows how and where to spend
money for local needs better than elected community leaders, and federal
bureaucrats should continue to control the flow of funds to the states and
localities and dictate how the taxpayers money will be spent.
The Future
America has prospered under the two-party system because one party has
always served to check the excesses of the other. Often, both parties agree
on the problems, less often do they agree on the solutions. The root of
most of their differences is perspective:
Republicans
believe in solutions, which are decided upon and implemented by the people
themselves, through their locally elected representatives. Republicans
believe that the solution to American's problems lies in the greatness of
the American people.
Democrats
tend to stress a powerful, centralized bureaucracy aimed at solving local
and national problems from the top down - a method which, after 40 years of
trial, is a proven failure.
Yes, there is a difference!!



