4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, August 14, 2006 1L. I& ft our t,.,.- tFn at(du FROM THE DAILY Connecticut blues Democrats must avoid the divisiveness trap JEREMY DAVDSON Editor in Chief IMRAN SYED Editorial Page Editor JEFFREY BLOOMER Managing Editor EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT nTHE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890. 413 E. HURON ST. ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Board Members: Amanda Andrade, Emily Beam, Jared Goldberg, Theresa Kennelly, Christopher Zbrozek FROM THE DAILY Electorally speaking Primary election turnout low, ideas must live on The Aug. 8 primary election that this page had so eagerly await- ed has come and gone. But in a democracy, elections are the beginning of the political process, not the end. And so an analysis of the results and a recalibration of outlook is in order. Voter turnout; the anguishing epitome of every election in our nation, was disappoint- ing to say the least. The Washtenaw County Clerk counts a county-wide turnout of about 17.5 percent. Why then did the remaining 82.5 percent of registered voters decline the chance to vote? Individual reasons vary, ranging from utter apathy to the unfortunate lack of time, but there's no doubt more can be done to increase turnout. Given that this is a non-presidential election year, and last week's was a primary election at that, it's understandable that people would hesitate to take time off from work to vote. But the outcome of this election - especially in Ann Arbor City Council, where the primary races were fierce but the winners will cruise uncontested in the November election - will impact the day-to-day lives of Ann Arborites as significantly as any election. Why is it that in a nation that prides itself as the blazer of democracy's well-worn trail, election day is still not a national holiday? There is no logic - and certainly no service to the democratic process - in forcing people to cut school or work to vote. Further, such a policy is inevitably bound to disenfranchise poor voters more severely than those who can afford to take a day's loss of salary. And speaking of structural barriers to voting, why is the primary election in Ann Arbor held at a time when nearly a quarter of the city's usual population is absent? We understand state law sets the date of the pri- mary, but is it really so radical to ask that all elections in college towns be held when the student population is present? Sure, student turnout is paltry even when they're present (structural barriers play a role there too; is there anything suspicious to you about a ward map of the city that splits the University's Central Campus into each of the five wards?), but it takes only a handful of votes to make a difference in local elections. Just ask Jeff Meyers, whose innovative, original ideas for more public participation in city government fell but 158 votes short of salvation. And so finally we come to ideas. Many candidates had many (though some fell short), but how many of them will find their way to implementation? Winners who had exciting new ideas, like Ron Suarez in Ward 1, cannot let the cliquey nature of council dilute their promises. Transpar- ency and accountability in council, though they became cliches during the campaign, really are needed, and we hope that the forum for diverse ideas and productive debate truly expands. Those podcasts of City Council meetings that Suarez prom- ised are a good place to start. And though some worthy candidates lost, their ideas are too vital to be allowed to do the same. Meyers, for example, advocated public transportation that attracted users of choice and more representation of students of each ward at council meetings. It would be worthy of aresponsible councilman (perhaps the man who defeated Meyers, Councilman (Stephen) Kunselman), to pick up on these ideas. After all, what is a government that refuses to build on solutions proposed in the hearth of the political process? Nomi- nally democratic at best. By now, Joe Lieberman is a cau- tionary tale. While headlines across the nation were last week splashed with news of a Connecticut pri- mary turned wildly incomprehensible, the Democratic Party is now left to con- sider what the defeat of a powerful and nationally prominent Senator bodes to the future of the party. Simply put, it doesn't bode well. Ned Lamont owes his defeat of the established incumbent largely to the efforts Politi- cal Action Committees like Moveon.org. Unfortunately, these PACs sunk to the same dirty tactics the Democrats found so repre- hensible in President Bush's primary race against John McCain in 2000 and again in the anti-John Kerry Swift Boat Vets for Truth campaign of 2004. Moving to the extreme of the party, Lamont and Moveon attacked Lieberman for being too moder- ate, too compromising. Lamont attacked on one issue - the war in Iraq - and in the end, that was enough to put Lieberman's formidable career in limbo. What this bodes then speaks to more than the future of the Democratic Party - it tells of the entire nation's political climate. More and more, politicians win by making the fringe of their party the base of their elections, but representative government wasn't made for ideologues unwilling to compromise. For example, take Lamont. Assum- ing the anti-war campaigner makes it to Washington (and, understand, that's a big assumption), as a freshman senator, he will hold not a fraction of the power Lieberman would have had. No matter how deep his conviction against the reprehensible war may go, he cannot end it alone. The people of Connecticut will have someone speaking for them on this issue, but without a strong voice, how far will that message go? And while the war in Iraq remains without question an enduring political ill, while the issue demands a resolu- tion because it plays a large role in our nation's problems at home and abroad, it is ultimately but one issue. What the Democrats have won in anti-war rheto- ric, they have lost disproportionately in power. Lieberman is a social liberal, and his long tenure in the Senate has won him friends across the aisle and the ability to pass progressive legislation. The price of this one plank may mean a great blow to the rest of the Democratic platform. The Democrats are° admittedly at the disadvantage, with a minority in both houses and facing increasing pressure from their base to resist being bulldozed by the Republicans. But the solution cannot be to elect fresh faces angry and untainted by that particular smear of compromise that comes from any productive career in Washington. Nor can they continue this progression to make the war in Iraq a lit- mus test for politicians, lest they risk losing more of their most powerful allies. From preliminary polls, it appears that Lieber- man the independent has a strong chance of re-election. And where would that leave the Democrats, having betrayed one of their most-respected leaders, only to have him reclaim the seat but this time, without any party obligations? Primarily, Republicans are the ones who q have been guilty of this in the past, and they too must understand the dangers of pushing too far and too passionately from the center. True, both parties have to hold fast to their core values, but they also need to recognize that representative govern- ment comes with certain logistic realities. Neither party can survive, much less gov- ern, as a one-issue malcontent. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Israel's actions cannot lead ing a real cease-fire, one based on mutual accept- ability rather than constant exercise of force. to sustainable cease-fTre Noah Link LSA senior LIVE ON YOUR FEET JO IN 0UN'T ..ISRAELI WARPLANES AGAIN ...AND HEZO LAH CONTINUES TO STRUCK TARGETS IN LEBANON... FIRE SCORES OF ROCKETS AS A HUMANITARIAN DISASTER tNFOLDS... SIGH... fl To THE DAILY: In his column, Jared Goldberg declares, "This is Hezbollah's war" (The repetition of history, 07/31/06). In fact, Israel was already planning a war against Lebanon at least a year ago in col- laboration with Washington, as professor Juan Cole revealed on his website (wwwjuancole.com, 07/23/06). The current violence was calculated long before terrorists launched any attack. Sound familiar? (Hint: Iraq.) Even with the excuse of self defense, there is no justification for the scope of Israel's aggression in Lebanon. Let's not kid ourselves: No other nation could maintain our approval while recklessly bombing civilians, international peacekeepers and medical relief teams. Razing to the ground any areas of resis- tance to Israel may be an immediate, if brutal, way to protect its cities from rocket attacks, but it will not lead to a "sustainable cease-fire." As the situation worsens, support for Hezbol- lah and violent resistance only increases, provid- ing an outlet for frustration and rage against U.S. and Israeli policy to builda "new Middle East."We would do better to support friends and family in Israel by condemning the current war andnegotiat- College newspapers have 'unique and valuable edge' To THE DAILY: I'm glad the Michigan Daily has criticized the sale of the Florida State University student news- paper to the Gannett-owned Tallahassee Demo- crat (Corporate Joumalism, 08/07/06). Anybody 4 who's ever worked for or read a good, independent college newspaper recognizes the unique role they serve. At their best, college papers strive to be professional without committing all the weasly sins of big papers. The college press goes out of bounds sometimes, but that's whatgives it a unique and valuable edge. * Sometimes it even attacks the established city daily, an impossibility I think now in Tallahassee. It's too bad the collegiate press has been turned into a demographic commodity. But please don't sell out while you're still in college. There will be plenty of time for that later. P.J. Bednarski New York City