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"The preservation of the sacred fire of liberty and the destiny of the republican model of government are justly considered... deeply, ...finally, staked on the experiment entrusted to the hands of the American people." - George Washington, First Inaugural Address


The Year Of Political "Retreads"

by Christopher G. Adamo

In October of 1991, Clarence Thomas was confirmed as a Supreme Court justice, amid a storm of controversy over Anita Hill's accusations of "sexual harassment." Feminists, outraged over the Thomas confirmation, promised to change the face of America by proclaiming 1992 as the "Year of the Woman" in politics. However, reality turned out to be far less impressive than the rhetoric... the most notable example being Senator Carol Mosley Braun of Illinois. After only one term of Senator Braun's antics, the embarrassed population of Illinois mended their ways and sent her packing. The great, hoped-for trend, by which Democrats had sought to fill their ranks with fire-breathing pro-abortion Amazons, eventually fizzled. We can only hope that a similar fate will befall their newest effort at seizing power... by recycling political "has beens."

In New Jersey, that title of distinction goes to retired Senator Frank Lautenburg, whose unimpressive career ended with a whimper in 1998. Now it seems that Lautenburg has recognized his duty to carry on in the discredited footsteps of Democrat Senator Bob Torricelli. As the burden of Torricelli's scandals continued to grow in scope, it became obvious that reelection was becoming an impossibility. So, Torricelli simply withdrew from the race.

Certain individuals (this writer included) naively hoped that these events signaled a turn-around in the declining standards of American politics. Sadly, such a presumption proved to be mistaken. Democrat leaders had no intention of forfeiting that Senate seat, and thus decided to play a political "shell game" by replacing Torricelli with Lautenburg after legal deadlines prohibiting such action had passed. Clearly, they would not have taken such a risk, had there been even the slightest chance that the New Jersey Supreme Court might compel them to abide by well-defined New Jersey statutes. The only possible conclusion is that Democrat operatives knew beforehand exactly what the Court would do. Enough said.

On the heels of that fiasco came the shock of last week's Minnesota plane crash that took the lives of Senator Paul Wellstone, his wife and daughter, along with four others. Tragic as this event undoubtedly was to friends and family, still more tragic is the manner in which the Democrat Party is shamelessly exploiting the situation in hopes of gaining politically from it. When Mel Carnahan of Missouri died in similar accident just prior to Election Day in 2000, that state's liberal political machine managed to turn the event into a referendum on sympathy for the deceased candidate. Having been behind in the polls at the time of his death, Carnahan nevertheless won the election... posthumously. Motivated by the utmost degree of honor and graciousness, losing candidate John Ashcroft chose not to contest either the fraudulent nature of the election or Missouri's many instances of underhanded activity on Election Day. Subsequently, Missouri Governor Roger Wilson simply appointed Carnahan's wife to serve in his place.

Unfortunately, Senator Carnahan's inept performance, in her husband's stead, is proving to be an embarrassment. In Minnesota, the situation is complicated by the fact that Mrs. Wellstone also died in the crash, thus preventing anyone from conferring her husband's office on her. But Minnesota's Democrats ingeniously surmounted these obstacles while still being able to fully exploit the emotional benefits of the situation.

Though political strategists recognized former Vice-President Walter Mondale as the most viable last-minute substitute candidate, the choice is being promoted as a personal request from Wellstone's survivors. Thus, Mondale can assert the merits of his own background (though only in Minnesota would such a record as Mondale's be regarded as something to brag about). Meanwhile, any attack on Mondale's record by Republican candidate Norm Coleman will immediately be portrayed by Democrats and the media as heartless cruelty against the grieving Wellstone family. Coleman, you see, has a moral obligation to assuage their mourning by allowing them to handpick the state's next senator.

Just as New Jersey voters need to decide whether they intend for future generations to be subjugated to the whims of a panel of dictators (an apt description of the New Jersey Supreme Court), the people of Minnesota need to determine whether their Senator will be determined on the basis of issues or emotion.


Growing up during the turbulent decades of the ‘60's and ‘70's, Christopher  Adamo saw, to his dismay, the nation's moral foundations being destroyed  before his very eyes. But even then he was a staunch Conservative at heart,  and rejected outright the tenets of America's counterculture revolution.

 After a hitch in the Air Force, where he specialized in airborne  electro- optical systems, he pursued a career in the field of aerospace,  working for major defense contractors in California, Florida, and Colorado. But his career plans abruptly changed during the industry-wide downsizing that followed the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.

Presently he is working in the field of industrial instrumentation in the state of Wyoming. Concurrently, he has become involved in that state's political process, attending state GOP conventions as a delegate, and serving as a member of the Wyoming Republican Central Committee. He has also aided in the candidacies of local legislators and state senators, as well as a U.S. Senator and Congresswoman.

From 1993 to 1996, he edited and wrote for “The Wyoming Christian”, the state newsletter for Christian Coalition of Wyoming. During that period, he developed an acute awareness of the harm being done to Conservatism by liberal activists within the Republican Party as well as the Democrats. This remains a favorite theme of his articles, which now appear as a regular feature on GOPUSA.


© Copyright 2002-04 Chris Adamo