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Politics : Clinton's Scandals: Is this corruption the worst ever? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dwight E. Karlsen who wrote (4051)9/6/1998 9:34:00 PM
From: pz  Respond to of 13994
 
Thanks Bill!

GOP Boasts of Democratic Switchers

By RON FOURNIER AP Political Writer

ATLANTA (AP) -- Thumbing a well-worn Bible displayed like a
trophy on his Senate desk, Sonny Perdue says he didn't
abandon the Democratic Party -- ''it abandoned me, by God.''

President pro tem of the Georgia Senate, a lifelong Democrat
at the height of his political career, Perdue announced April 13
that he would forever be Republican. He was the 367th
Democratic officeholder to switch parties since President
Clinton took office. The 367 range from local politicians to
members of Congress.


Proudly and frequently updated, the Republican National
Committee's party-switching list is now 374 ex-Democrats long
-- and growing.

''These people have been awakened to the fact that their party
isn't what it claims to be,'' RNC chairman Jim Nicholson said.
''Their party remains the party of big government.''

Interviews by The Associated Press with dozens of party
switchers in 19 states reveals that ideology and anti-Clinton
sentiment are not always what turn Democrats into
Republicans. It often is a matter of political survival. Some
switchers are fueled by greed or anger. And many finally
decide to shed outdated traditions, no longer calling
themselves Democrats just because granddaddy did. It can be
a huge mistake: the change has derailed more than one
political career.

But when examined collectively, the explosion of party
switchers gives Republicans reason to believe they are
solidifying their newfound majorities.

''Things are moving dramatically in our favor,'' said Rep. John
Linder, R-Ga., who is in charge of adding to the GOP's House
majority. ''There was a tremendous upheaval in the early
1990s ... and whatever happens in this election is not going to
much change it.''

Democrats acknowledge that an increasingly conservative
American electorate has helped Republicans make numerical
gains, but they believe the influx eventually will help create a
more extreme GOP.

''The country is changing political attitudes. Across the South,
a number of people have switched for survival or a comfort
level,'' said Colorado Gov. Roy Romer, chairman of the
Democratic National Committee. ''But the continued move of
the Republican Party from right to far-right is going to cause a
considerable loss of moderate Republicans, once moderate
Republicans realize where there party now is.''

------<

For scores of politicians, especially in the South, leaving the
Democratic Party was like breaking an old habit. Their families
have been Democratic since the Civil War, when the GOP was
the Party of Lincoln and Union invaders.Though they clung to
theirDemocratic roots for years, allegiances began to wane in
the civil rights era.

''I was raised in organized labor. My father worked at a lumber
mill. I attended political meetings and rallies with my parents,''
said Larry Dolezal, a county commissioner in Montana. ''It was
a very difficult, soul-searching decision for me.''

Perdue grew up in a Democratic Georgia. ''Those of us who
were compliant children, we did as our parents did -- we voted
Democratic,'' he said. ''But over time our national party and our
values stopped jibing.''

By ''our values,'' Perdue said he meant low taxes, little welfare,
family-friendly policies. In the opinions of many Southern men,
those values come in only one color: white.

''I think race plays a factor in this,'' Perdue said.

It's a point that normally goes unspoken, but some former
Democrats believe the party of their forefathers caters to
minorities, not them.

Gathered beneath a cloud of cigarette smoke at the Golden
Glaze Donut shop in Byram, Miss., a group of white men are
chatting with a Republican congressional candidate when a
black woman opens the door. Her kind could never get elected
by whites, one man says.

''Black might get donuts in here, but never votes,'' whispers
74-year-old John Garner. Somebody chuckles. Would a white
Democrat do any better among white voters in this southwest
Mississippi town?

''He's still a Democrat,'' Garner said, waving away a whisp of
smoke. ''Can't trust 'em anymore.''

Breaking generations of tradition, these white men -- all former
Democrats -- now support the state's Republican governor, two
Republican senators and the mostly-GOP House delegation.

Ninety-one of the party switchers come from Texas, 52 from
Alabama and 39 from Florida. Of the 374 new Republicans,
285 live in states that once belonged to the Confederacy.

Democrats can only hope that as Republicans gain strength in
rural America -- especially in the South -- their party can
advance in growing suburban districts.

------



To: Dwight E. Karlsen who wrote (4051)9/6/1998 10:42:00 PM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 13994
 
Add Moran to the vast right wing Democrat conspiracy. JLA