Another person has gone 'independent'
Ohio billionaire and longtime Republican donor Les Wexner says he is officially done with the party, and was prompted to leave after former President Barack Obama visited the state.
Wexner, the CEO of retail conglomerate L Brands, which owns Victoria’s Secret and Bath & Body Works, announced at a leadership summit in Columbus on Thursday that he “won’t support this nonsense in the Republican Party” anymore, The Columbus Dispatch reported.
The announcement, made at a panel discussion, came the same day Obama visited Columbus before heading to a rally in Cleveland to support Democrat Richard Cordray’s run for governor.
“I was struck by the genuineness of the man; his candor, humility and empathy for others,” Wexner said of Obama.
Wexner said he’s been telling lawmakers that he is now an independent.
“I just decided I’m no longer a Republican,” he said.
Last year, following a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, Wexner condemned the racists in a speech to his employees. He said Trump’s tepid response to the violence ― in which a white supremacist killed counterprotester Heather Heyer ― made him feel “dirty” and “ashamed,” the Dispatch reported.
In a speech in Illinois earlier this month, Obama also called out Trump’s lukewarm response to the violence, in which the current president said there were “very fine people” on both sides.
“How hard is it to say Nazis are bad?” Obama said.
Wexner has long donated to Republican causes, including cutting a check to Jeb Bush for $500,000 in 2015 during Bush’s presidential run. The billionaire philanthropist has also donated $2.8 million to With Honor, a super PAC that endorses both Republican and Democratic candidates.
During the panel discussion Thursday, former Columbus Mayor Michael B. Coleman praised Wexner for standing up to his former party, the Dispatch reported.
“If you don’t think things are right, open your mouth,” Wexner responded.
http://www.yahoo.com/news/gop-donor-les-wexner-announces-191322407.html
This article inspired two questions for me. One is the make up in the US of political membership. The first thing to come up was regarding a gallup poll and asking what others 'consider' themself to be (which may or may not be how they are registered)
the results show that Most are independent, 43 percent, while republicans and democrats represent only 28 and 27 percent respectively.
http://news.gallup.com/poll/15370/party-affiliation.aspx
The second question is how strongly party registration or affiliation does or should impact an individual citizen's vote. IF we vote mostly and fairly in blind support of party instead of candidate, why have elections? Why not just assume we should give it to the party with the majority registration? Would that give 'independent' candidates a better shot?
obviously, that would not be a good suggestion, because even with independents having a majority, our college repeatedly sends its votes to democrat or republican candidates? So Im left to think that the labels are mostly for the candidates and their colleagues to impose an expectation of blind 'loyalty' to each other in the face of the public.
I dont think the party system is a problem. I do think the culture of 'us verse them' that it encourages is damaging though. I think maybe people look more at what the label is than who the person is or what the issue is, and they pick a side.
In political discussions, it seems to almost always be more about being for or against someone or something that is either a 'republican' thing or a 'democrat' thing, instead of actually debating the support or opposition of that SPECIFIC someone or that SPECIFIC thing.
There seems to be a tendency, if one is democrat, to label a person or an action as something opposable, not on the merits of that something, but by association of it being republican.
and the same is Certainly and very visibly true on the republican side, when one is republican, how they also label a person or action as opposable, not on the merits of that something, but by association of it being demoratic.
So, I say all that as a prelude to the questions:
Can we continue with a party system and find a way for people to not encourage this kind of party blindness?
or should we vote only for candidates and dispose of the party labels?
And if we did. How would we decide the 'majorities' in Congress?
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