Can
we really take another year of nasty rhetoric and nonsense proposals?
By Martha Burk
DonkeyHotey / Flickr |
We’re officially just under a year away from Election Day
2016.
We’ve already been bombarded for months with red-hot anti-tax,
anti-woman, anti-immigrant, and anti-poor rhetoric from a fool’s dozen
Republican candidates. Can we really take another 12 months of this?
Here are some bright ideas for moving the country forward from
the GOP’s finest.
Carson’s undoubtedly counting on God to take care of that. Time
to start squirreling away some grain in those pyramids, kids.
Second-place candidate Donald “yuge blowhard” Trump has no
appetite for details. That wall he wants to build to keep immigrants out? The
Mexican government would pay the bill, he says. If it refuses, Trump probably
assumes he can fire Mexico’s president.
I suppose he thinks governing is no different from a reality
show. Too bad Trump’s racist comments about Mexicans got him fired from his own reality show.
As for the other so-called top-tier candidates — meaning they
have between 5 and 10 percent support — Jeb Bush is throwing tantrums because
the electorate associates his name with his kid brother, who got us into a war
we’ve yet to get out of. Yet Jeb’s still standing by George W., who wants to keep boots on the ground in Iraq as long as thereis an
Iraq.
Marco Rubio, meanwhile, can’t be bothered to show up for his job
as senator — he’smissed more votes than anyone else in the chamber. But he
wants us to believe he’ll do better if he’s promoted to the White House.
Let’s hope female voters — the majority of the electorate —
don’t give him the chance.
Rubio opposes abortion rights, even in the case of rape — “legitimate” or not. Even so, he clearly believes birth control
isn’t the answer. The Florida Republican introduced a bill allowing any corporation to deny
contraception coverage in its insurance plan as long as the company leaders
cite a religious objection. This provision would apply even if they’ve never
darkened the door of a church.
So, will Senator Ted Cruz ride in to save the day? Could be.
The Texan lawmaker wants to do away with the IRS, and a majority of Republican voters
might think that’s a great idea. Paying less taxes would mean there’d be less
government messing up their lives. Good thinking. A Kickstarter campaign will
probably do just fine to keep the fire department open.
And who needs police anyway? Or highways? Or those border
patrols Cruz loves?
So there you have it. Even when the field thins out as the
wannabes fall away, we’re stuck with a gaggle of these so-called leading
candidates at least through next spring.
It’s enough to make you want to hibernate until it’s all over.
Martha
Burk is the director of the Corporate Accountability Project for the National
Council of Women’s Organizations (NCWO) and the author of the book Your
Voice, Your Vote: The Savvy Woman’s Guide to Power, Politics, and the Change We
Need. Follow Martha on Twitter@MarthaBurk. Distributed by OtherWords.org.