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Letter to Woody Jenkins
Dear Mr. Jenkins:
As you know,
in 1995 Louisiana became the first and only non-initiative state
to limit legislators' terms by constitutional amendment. It
was the first break for the voter since before Huey Long. With majorities
of 80% in the state Senate and 90% in the House, our amendment bill
sailed through the Legislature. Citizens for Term Limits is proud
to have had a role in that sea-change for Louisiana.
With the primary
election only some four months away, we learned that a "no"
vote on term limits in the Legislature could be political suicide.
Only a few of those who ignored this compelling wisdom survived
their reelection bids and those were special cases.
The message
was clear that term limitation is a powerful campaign issue. The
following year, in the national election, Mr. Jenkins,
you, who had been a member of that legislature, and who knew
better, defied that penetrating lesson, and it cost you your
bid for the U. S. Senate. The unanticipated but costly effects
of this defiance are being felt by us all, even now, more
than five years later.
We believe
your actions have had devastating consequences, for the following
reasons:
First
When a candidate runs for public office he has an obligation to
his supporters, his organization, to his contributors and voters,
as well as his party, to do his level best to win for them. But
you were trying to have it both ways. You opposed term limits, as
will be seen, including congressional limits. But rather than admit
this, you took a different tack. You campaigned for term limits
for federal judges!
Golly, Mr.
Jenkins, it all sounded so great when you said it fast, but
the issue was congressional term limits, and most folks knew
it. You were campaigning on a phony issue, and you knew it.
How regrettable.
Second Sadly,
your heart has never been with term limitation. As you and I both
know, the 1995 Louisiana House of Representatives did not record
floor debate only votes. Taking advantage of this, you
would speak against our term limits bill when you knew your
words would evaporate, then cast your vote for it, thus keeping
your record "clean," at a time when your vote was not
critical to us anyway.
Lamentably,
you lost your Senate race by 5,788 votes, despite running
behind your opponent by 100,000 in New Orleans, where you claimed
winning votes had been stolen from you. For you to have won,
you needed less than 3,000 additional votes out of 1,700,000 cast.
That is less than two-tenths of 1%, or less than one vote in each
of Louisiana's 3883 precincts. You cried foul to the Republican-controlled
U. S. Senate as well as to Louisiana authorities, but were turned
down in each case for lack of evidence. You could have easily won
those necessary additional votes, and more, if you had run a strong
and forthright campaign for congressional term limits and signed
our pledge to work for term limits in the Congress instead,
you chose to stonewall us, refusing adamantly to respond to our
attempts to communicate with you. You were on the wrong side
of a hugely popular issue when it made no sense and did you
no good to be there.
Third
It was a reaffirmation of our case this year when New Orleans' popular
mayor, Marc Morial, failed in his campaign to amend away the term
limits in that city's charter, so Morial could continue in office.
His amendment was defeated by a 60-40 margin, even after Morial
had spent a million dollars to get it passed. Why is this significant?
Because it proves that a term limits campaign by you in your Senate
race could likely have gleaned the necessary votes right there in
New Orleans, the very place from which you claimed votes were stolen
from you. Term limitation is more popular even than Morial, and
certainly more popular than you were, Mr. Jenkins.
Term limits
are overwhelmingly popular across Louisiana, where a respected Werthlin
poll had shown they were supported by 86% of voters. Mr. Jenkins,
bless your heart, you were trying to swim upstream against a powerful
current.
Mr. Jenkins,
you would be sitting in the U. S. Senate today, but for your own
doublespeak. You must know this by now, Mr. Jenkins, and I'm
sure it must hurt. Whoever was advising you then did you no favors.
You failed to keep faith with your campaign. You attempted to conceal
your antipathy for term limitation. Recent events have confirmed
that you could have gained the necessary votes to win, probably
just from New Orleans, not to mention the rest of the state, had
you campaigned honestly for congressional term limits.
Today, less
than six years later, the effect of your missteps on the Senate
party alignment is obvious and staggering. If we can
assume your loyalty to the Republican party, the Republicans
would still hold a one-vote majority in the Senate. Actually
a two-vote majority, because Senator Jim Jeffords would then have
had no motivation to change his affiliation.
The President's
senior staff appointments and second-level cabinet appointments,
as well as his judicial appointments, would have been ratified
by the Senate months ago, instead of being left in limbo by
the elitist liberals.
And Tom Daschle
would be just another unsuccessful obstructionist.
Upon seemingly unimportant matters of character can hinge changes
in history, felt only years later.
"Those
who would treat politics and morality apart will never understand
the one or the other." Viscount Morley of Blackburn
Sincerely,
Rense Johnson, Chairman
Citizens for Term Limits
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