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Editor's note:
Glenn Beck is on CNN Headline News
nightly at 7 and 9 ET and also hosts
a conservative national radio talk
show.
Glenn Beck says
Democrats have ruled
many of the poorest
cities for too long,
and it's time for a
change.
NEW YORK (CNN)
-- "I think the best way of doing
good to the poor is not making them
easy in poverty but leading them or
driving them out of it."
What
hate-mongering politician would be
so politically incorrect as to
suggest that things like higher
minimum wages and more government
handouts don't actually help the
poor? I'll identify the culprit at
the end of this column, but for now,
I'm more interested in figuring out
why that statement sounds so
controversial.
Poverty is one
of the few national issues that, at
least on the surface, unites us all.
It's not a political condition; it's
a human one. After all, when's the
last time you've heard a politician
campaign on a pro-poverty platform?
But although the
problem may unite us, the solutions
don't. And perhaps nothing
illustrates that better than what's
been happening in Detroit, Michigan,
and Buffalo, New York.
According to the
U.S. Census Bureau, nearly a third
of the residents in those cities are
living beneath the
poverty line, the highest rates
among large cities in the entire
country.
No matter what
side of the political aisle you're
on, that is nothing short of
appalling. Yet if you ask people
what we should do about it, you'll
probably hear answers that
inexplicably break down right along
party lines.
Is there a
perfect answer? Probably not. But
what bothers me is that people
stubbornly stick to their solution,
even in the face of overwhelming
evidence that it's not working.
For example,
Detroit, whose mayor has been
indicted on felony charges, hasn't
elected a Republican mayor since
1961. Buffalo has been even more
stubborn. It started putting a
Democrat in office back in 1954, and
it hasn't stopped since.
Unfortunately,
those two cities may be alone at the
top of the poverty rate list, but
they're not alone in their love for
Democrats. Cincinnati, Ohio (third
on the poverty rate list), hasn't
had a Republican mayor since 1984.
Cleveland, Ohio (fourth on the
list), has been led by a Democrat
since 1989. St. Louis, Missouri
(sixth), hasn't had a Republican
since 1949, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
(eighth), since 1908, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania (ninth), since 1952 and
Newark, New Jersey (10th), since
1907.
The only two
cities in the top 10 that I didn't
mention (Miami, Florida, and El
Paso, Texas) haven't had Republicans
in office either -- just
Democrats, independents or
nonpartisans.
Over the past 50
years, the eight cities listed above
have had
Republican leadership for a
combined 36 years. The rest of the
time -- a combined 364 years --
they've been led by Democrats.
Five of the 10
cities with the highest poverty
rates (Detroit, Buffalo, St. Louis,
Milwaukee, Philadelphia and Newark)
have had a Democratic stranglehold
since at least 1961: more than 45
years. Two of the cities (Milwaukee
and Newark) have been electing
Democrats since the first Model T
rolled off the assembly line in
1908.
Two cities, 100
years, all Democrats.
If the
definition of insanity is doing the
same thing over and over again and
expecting a different result, the
asylums in those cities must be as
full as the soup kitchens.
Not too long
ago, I had the great honor of being
invited to a charity dinner hosted
by Chris Gardner. He's the guy whose
rags-to-riches life was portrayed by
Will Smith in the movie "Pursuit of
Happyness." Chris had been on my
show a few times, and I've always
admired his story and his message of
hope through personal
responsibility.
As I prepared
for the dinner and looked into
Chris' charity, I started to get
nervous. The roster was filled with
liberals, most of whom would
probably hate me. Hillary Clinton,
Mario Cuomo, Alan Alda, Kenneth Cole
and Charles Grodin were just a few
of the people I was worried about
running into.
But the question
I kept asking myself was, why? Why
can't people from wildly different
political stripes come together in
support of a common cause without
feeling alienated? Why is an issue
like poverty "owned" by one
political party?
I consider
myself a conservative, but I
consider myself an American and a
human being first. When people whom
I normally agree with screw things
up, I call them on it. Yet the
people in these cities apparently
don't. Newark keeps drinking the
Kool-Aid, electing the same people
with the same ideas, slipping down
the poverty list (along with the
"Places Never to Visit Unless it's
the Airport" list) and wondering
why.
We've talked a
lot about "change" in this country
recently, but there's a much more
important catchphrase that we've
neglected: "All politics is local."
Maybe instead of focusing so much on
who we put in charge of our country,
we should focus more on who we put
in charge of our cities.
Oh, and before I
forget. The hateful politician who
suggested that we should be
"driving" or "leading" the poor out
of poverty? It was Benjamin
Franklin.
Good thing he
never tried to run for mayor of
Newark. |