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Op-Ed: Legendary Senator Shames Today’s GOP Frauds

Op-Ed: One ⁣of History’s Greatest Senators Puts Today’s ‌Republican Frauds ‌to Shame

Contrary to‌ popular belief, the⁤ biggest‌ fraud in American politics is not Rep. George Santos. Nor ‌is ‌it the not-so-Native ⁢American Sen. ⁤Elizabeth Warren. Nor is it ⁣Sen. Richard ⁢“Stolen Valor” Blumenthal.

It is not even President Joe Biden, whose fabulism stretches so far ​back that Johnny Carson ‍joked about it.

The biggest‍ frauds in American politics are ‌the 27 ​“Republican” members​ of Congress who⁤ voted​ for the obscene $1.66 trillion omnibus spending bill last December, 16 of whom still “serve.”

In stark ⁤contrast ​to their example is the memory of

Sen. Robert A. Taft

, who ⁤died 70 years ⁢ago on‍ July 31.

Among the⁤ few outstanding American statesmen and the fewer whose greatness was contemporaneously acknowledged, Taft’s destiny seemed preordained. ⁤First in his class in high school,‌ college (Yale) and law school (Harvard), Taft was⁣ the scion of a great American political dynasty and the son of the only ⁢man to hold the offices⁤ of U.S. president and chief ​justice of the ​U.S. ‌Supreme‍ Court.

Leaving no branch of⁢ government unmastered⁤ by his family, Taft scaled ⁢the legislative ladder. In the Ohio⁢ Legislature, he led⁣ efforts ⁢to ⁢reform the state’s ​antiquated tax code, opposed ⁤prohibition and the Ku Klux Klan, and rose‍ to become speaker of the ⁢lower house before⁣ graduating to the state Senate.

But it was as a U.S. senator that Taft became‍ one for the ages.

Elected in 1938, Taft immediately became renowned for his intelligence, parliamentary skill, and principled opposition to ⁣government ⁣intervention at home and abroad.

Impervious to ⁢interest​ groups, Taft never broke an agreement,​ especially with his constituents. He was always ​the man they ‍voted ​for. Taft‌ eschewed political‍ deception and courageously adhered to his principles,⁢ garnering universal respect.

Senate chronicler ‍Allen Drury called Taft one of the Senate’s ‌“strongest and ablest men” and modeled on Taft the virtuous⁢ lawmakers in his ‍Pulitzer Prize-winning novel “Advise and Consent” (1959).

Fresh off winning‌ the 1948 World Series, liberal baseball owner Bill Veeck was asked to run against Taft in 1950.⁣ Veeck declined out of his admiration for the senator, describing him as‍ “one guy who knew⁣ how to ⁤say⁣ no, a rare talent in politics.”

And⁢ John F. Kennedy, who served briefly with Taft on the Senate Labor Committee, included ‌him as the final senator profiled in his Pulitzer Prize-winning history “Profiles in Courage” (1956).

Highlighted by Kennedy was Taft’s principled opposition to the Nuremberg trials as an ex post ‌facto expression of revenge by the victorious Allies. Taft’s stance netted⁤ no votes and may have even⁢ cost him the 1948 GOP presidential nomination, but such was Taft’s adamantine ‌integrity. His opposition ⁢to the⁤ internment ⁣of ⁣Japanese-Americans also won him few plaudits.

Yet seven decades after his death, Taft’s legacy looms large.

Making the most of the‌ few years of Republican control⁤ of the‌ Senate during his ‌tenure, Taft expertly won such bipartisan support‌ for his⁢ crowning legislative achievement that when it was vetoed by President Harry Truman, Congress overrode the veto. Today, the Taft-Hartley ​Act remains the basic federal ‌labor ⁣law. ⁢A key provision allows states to adopt ⁢the “right to work”⁤ laws that‍ are in force in a majority of states, including such labor union strongholds as West Virginia and, until this year, Michigan.

But nowhere has ‌Taftian⁢ thinking been more relevant than where it has been most sorely missed — post-Cold War American ‌foreign policy.

Taft opposed‌ American ‍participation in⁢ the UN ⁢and NATO and counseled against American involvement in land wars in both Asia and Europe. If the reasons for Taft’s foreign policy views were not obvious then,⁢ they are now.

One purported admirer of Taft’s was​ Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, who ⁤went so far as to occupy Taft’s Capitol Hill offices and trade desks with Sen. Al Franken on ⁤the Senate floor so he could have the one that belonged to⁣ Taft.⁣ Unfortunately, that is where the similarities end.

Not ⁣only did Portman vote for ​the omnibus bill on⁣ his way⁢ out the door, but voters could not keep‍ track ⁤of his vacillating positions. During his career ‌in Congress, ‌Portman supported a ⁢federal definition of ‌marriage, ​then took the position that⁣ marriage should be defined ‍by the states, then re-endorsed a federal definition of marriage, albeit a different definition⁣ than the‌ one he‍ started with.

It is safe to assume that‍ there ⁣will be no Capitol Hill monuments to Portman like the monument and carillon that stand in​ Taft’s honor.

Not long after his death,‌ a Senate committee named Taft one of the five greatest​ senators ⁣in history. Seventy years later, that assessment still holds.

The post Op-Ed: One of History’s Greatest Senators Puts‍ Today’s⁢ Republican Frauds⁤ to Shame appeared first on ⁣ The Western ⁣Journal.



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