Let’s start with the obvious—a tyrant sits in the White House. The very thing our Founders feared most is here. Throw in the fact that one of our two major political parties is a real and direct threat to democracy and the rule of law. These are unprecedented, dangerous times in America. I know it. You know it. There are even Republicans who know it.
Anyone who cares about the Constitution cannot sit by and watch as fundamental American values—the rule of law, democracy, pluralism—are attacked. Daily. To defeat my former party and defend democracy, we must do something different. We must assemble a broad coalition of moderates, progressives, and, yes, even conservatives.
We’ve never been here before. Of course we’ve always fought about and debated policy—how best to pay for healthcare, whether taxes should be raised or cut, and how best to deal with immigration. But we’ve never before fought about actually remaining a democracy or abiding by the Constitution and the rule of law. Now we are.
We didn’t choose this fight, but it’s the fight in front of us. Nothing is more important than this. Unprecedented? Sure, but that means we must act in unprecedented ways. It means that those of us who would defend democracy and the rule of law must put aside, for as long as it takes, our particular policy differences and formally lock arms for this higher cause. This is the fight of our times.
Without freedom, democracy, and the rule of law, America ceases to be. And currently, only the Democratic Party is on the side of all three of these core American values. There isn’t a third party coming to the rescue any time soon. Right now, the Democratic Party is democracy’s lone defender and best hope.
Secondly, I’ve changed. Oh, I’m still the same passionate TEA partier who went to Congress in 2010 to fight against our out-of-control debt and fight for a more efficient government. I’m still a border hawk, an unabashed gun rights advocate, and an unyielding defender of free speech. But I’m not the same guy as I was 15 years ago, or even eight years ago.
I’ve opened my eyes and listened to people who don’t think like me. And by doing so, I gained a greater understanding of and appreciation for LGBTQ issues, structural racism, the need for empathetic immigration reform, the dangers of climate change, and the role government must play to help care for the neediest and most vulnerable among us.
Most importantly, I’ve changed how I behave as a public figure. I went to Congress on a mission to get our debt under control and to shake up the political establishment. I was passionate about my cause—so passionate that I said and did things I regret, so passionate that I became, way more than I’m proud of, a divisive political asshole. That’s no longer who I am.
After Trump’s first election, I woke up. Seven years ago, I came out publicly against Trump. Five years ago, I left the Republican Party. I’m still a conservative, but I’m not a conservative jerk. For the past seven years, I’ve been on a mission to help heal the divide in this country—the divide I helped to create.
Decency, tolerance, understanding, empathy...I now get how vital these all are to our politics, and there’s only one political party these days that values and practices these traits—the Democratic Party. Donald Trump is the worst of us, and, sadly, the rest of the Republican Party emulates his cruelty, dishonesty, and authoritarianism. We’re better than what we’ve seen every day these past four months. America is better than this. As a former Republican, I know that cruelty sells. Well, it’s time for decency to sell.
Finally, I’m joining the Democratic Party because we are in a FIGHT for the soul of America. For democracy and the rule of law to persevere, Democrats must succeed. I want to help. I want to help Democrats win. And to win, Democrats must fight. I mean really fight. I’ll say it one more time: Democrats must FIGHT.
Take it from a former Republican fighter. Republicans fight to the death to win politically, and they’ve always believed Democrats won’t. I’ve been a fighter my whole life, and if there’s ever been a moment when Americans are crying out for a Democratic Party with some fight, it’s now.
Campaigning last year to defeat Trump, I would hear the same critique from working-class and middle-class voters every single day in every battleground state I was in: “Yes, Joe, I know Trump is an asshole, but Democrats are elites who look down on me and don’t understand my life.” To save our country, Democrats must connect with these “common sense, tolerant, get shit done” voters in the middle. That’s where I’ve been these past seven years.
One more finally: I’m becoming a Democrat because I’m pissed off. I’m pissed off at the ignorant, lying madman in the White House who’s using his position to only enrich himself and his fat cat friends, while middle-class folks and small business owners and get screwed by his chaos. I’m pissed off at all of his GOP enablers, my former colleagues, who’ve abandoned what’s right to remain in power. I’m pissed off that he and his enablers have lied repeatedly to his voters year after year, and these good folks who’ve been lied to are gonna feel real pain—and Trump and his GOP enablers don’t give a damn. I’m pissed because the opposition party, the Democratic Party, should be every bit as righteously pissed off as me. And I’m pissed off because I love this country, and this country is so much better than what we’ve seen the past almost five months.
Yes, according to today’s political labels, I’m a “conservative.” I used to be a conservative Republican. The Republican Party is no longer conservative, it’s authoritarian. I’m still a conservative, so now I’m a conservative Democrat. And look, here’s the thing. We’re gonna need a HUGE tent to defeat this Republican Party. We’re gonna need a Democratic tent big enough to hold both a conservative like Joe Walsh and a progressive like Alexandria Ocasio Cortez. I want to help build that big tent because I want to win, and...Trump’s Republican Party must lose.
From the TEA Party to the Democratic Party, all in the past 15 years. What a wild, crazy, unprecedented political journey it’s been. My constant thread on this journey, my lodestar, has always been my reverence for freedom, democracy, and the rule of law. Along the way, I’ve rediscovered my reverence for decency and tolerance, for pluralism. Only one of America’s two major political parties today is squarely on the side of decency, tolerance, pluralism, freedom, democracy, and the rule of law—the Democratic Party. So I join that party. I proudly and humbly join the Democratic Party.
Now let’s fight! Let’s fight like we’ve never fought before.
Be brave."
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Source:Joe Walsh perhaps when he was campaigning for Kamala Harris last year. |
From Joe Walsh
At risk of being the contrarian here: Joe Walsh, even when he was in the U.S. House of Representatives, wasn't the so-called "Tea Party gangbanger" that he literally labeled himself as. From reading up on his career in Congress, it was really fiscal and economic policy that drove his politics. He was interested in balancing the Federal budget, reducing the national debt, opposition to government health care and assistance for people to buy their own health insurance.
Here is the real Joe Walsh as a Tea Party member of Congress:
"Outspoken and Conservative:
Walsh was a vocal critic of government spending, taxes, and what he perceived as excessive government intervention. He often expressed these views in a passionate and sometimes confrontational manner.
Advocate for Budget Cuts:
Walsh was a strong advocate for reducing government debt through budget cuts. He believed that these cuts were necessary to ensure long-term economic growth and fiscal stability.
Support for Border Security:
He was also a proponent of strengthening border security, often expressing concerns about illegal immigration and advocating for increased enforcement measures.
Anti-Establishment Rhetoric:
Walsh often used anti-establishment rhetoric, criticizing the political establishment and advocating for a more grassroots approach to governance.
Not Always Prudent:
Walsh's outspokenness and sometimes provocative statements led to controversy and criticism, even from within his own party. He was known for making statements that were considered inaccurate or irresponsible.
Elected as a Tea Party Candidate:
In 2010, Walsh was elected to Congress as a Tea Party-backed candidate, representing the 8th Congressional District in Illinois...
Sure, Joe Walsh was very conservative, 10-15 years ago and still is today. But the modern "Republican Party", has almost zero interest in any of the issues that former Representative Walsh once pushed, when he was in the House. They're really just about themselves now and staying in power. Which is why The New Democrat calls the modern "Republican Party" the Seinfeld Party, because they're about nothing other than themselves and simply holding onto power and keeping Democrats out-of-power, and eliminating whatever checks that still remain on their Dear Leader Donald Trump's executive power.
So my point here, is the Democratic Party has always had a center-right-wing in it. Hell, it had a far-right-wing in it up until the 1980s or so, before the Dixiecrats became Republicans. And Mr. Walsh might be to the right of the Joe Biden's, Bill Clinton's, John F. Kennedy's, Henry Jackson's, and other Liberal Democrats, the so-called New Democrats. But there's a place in this party for him.
It's the MAGA people that don't belong in the Democratic Party. Not so much Conservatives, or the real Liberals (that The New Democrats likes to say) because those folks have always had a home here. You don't believe me? Just ask the Socialists who are always trying to primary establishment Democrats.
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