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Letter to Congress: change in rhetoric important for upcoming election

None of us shrank from partisan debates while in Congress or from the partisan contests getting there. During our time in Congress, partisans on the other side may have been our opponents on some bills and our adversaries on some issues. They were not, however, the enemy.

We often had heated debates over policy, but we avoided challenging the motives or good will of those on the other side. At least as often as debates formed on partisan lines, we found ourselves with allies from the other side of the aisle, aligned against some similarly diverse and bipartisan group who viewed things in a different way. An adversary one day could – and did – easily become an ally the next. All of us shared an overriding concern in common: we were in office to solve the problems facing Americans at home and America abroad.

Today, the problems we face as a nation – challenges to our position in the global economy, challenges to our role defending democracy around the world, challenges from terrorists seeking to do us great harm, challenges of a faltering economy, challenges in education, energy, immigration, climate, health and countless other areas – are as great as any this country has faced in our lifetimes.

Sadly, faced with those challenges, our political system has not shown itself to be up to the task.

Congress appears gripped by zero-sum game partisanship. The goal often seems to be more to devastate the other side (the enemy, no longer the honorable adversary) than to find common ground to solve problems, much less to have a spirited but civil debate about how to do so.

The divisive and mean-spirited way debate often occurs inside Congress is encouraged and repeated outside: on cable news shows, in blogs and in rallies. Members who far exceed the bounds of normal and respectful discourse are not viewed with shame but are lionized, treated as celebrities, rewarded with cable television appearances, and enlisted as magnets for campaign fund-raisers.

Meanwhile, lawmakers who try to address problems and find workable solutions across party lines find themselves denigrated by an angry fringe of partisans, people unhappy that their representatives would even deign to work with the enemy. When bipartisan ideas are advanced, they are met by partisan derision.

In a politically diverse but ultimately centrist nation, it is axiomatic that the country’s major problems are going to have to be solved through compromises worked out between the parties. That’s especially the case for the problems that require tough solutions – like convincing taxpayers to endure some short-term pain for the promise of long-term fiscal stability. That will require partisans on both sides to give ground on some of their cherished beliefs, to lose some traction on a “wedge issue” that can be used in campaigns against the other side, in order to find the broad coalition necessary to make a policy work.

Both parties share in the blame for this sorry state of affairs. Still, without action by both parties to work together to address the problems that face our country through serious, respectful and civil discussion and debate, the prognosis for our politics – and with it our economic health and our security – is grim.

As partisan veterans, we join together to advocate a change in approach- a change in rhetoric and tone that can lead to a focus on problem-solving. This needs to begin now, especially as we head into the heat of the 2010 campaign.

We are wary of campaign promises that are not always within a candidate’s ability to deliver. But, we know there is one on which each candidate and eventual Member of the 112th Congress can make good – for the institution and for the Nation: to conduct campaigns for Congress with decency and respect toward opponents, to be truthful in presenting information about self and opponents, to engage in good faith debate about the issues and each other’s record, to refrain from personal attack, and if elected, to behave in office according to these same principles, recognizing that all Members endeavor honorably to serve the Nation and their constituents and to advance honestly held beliefs about what is best for the country, and that all must eventually reconcile their differences in the national interest.

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The above letter was signed by the following former members of Congress.


James
Abourezk (S. Dakota)
Bill
Alexander (Arkansas)
Jim
Bacchus (Florida)
Skip
Bafalis (Florida)
Mike
Barnes (Maryland)
Jim
Bates (California)
Berkley
Bedell (Iowa)
Helen
Delich Bentley (Maryland)
Jim
Blanchard (Michigan)
Sherwood
Boehlert (New York)
Lindy
Boggs (Louisiana)
Bill
Brock (Tennessee)
William
Brodhead (Michigan)
Glen
Browder (Alabama)
Jack
Buechner (Missouri)
Bill
D. Burlison (Missouri)
Yvonne
Brathwaite Burke (California)
Bev
Byron (Maryland)
Bo
Callaway (Georgia)
Bill
Carney (New York)
Bob
Carr (Michigan)
Dick
Chrysler (Michigan)
Bill
Clinger (Pennsylvania)
John
B. Conlan (Arizona)
E.
Thomas Coleman (Missouri)
George
“Buddy” Darden (Georgia)
Lawrence
DeNardis (Connecticut)
Tom
Downey (New York)
Bob
Edgar (Pennsylvania)
Jack Edwards (Alabama)
Mickey
Edwards (Oklahoma)
Karan
English (Arizona)
Phil
English (Pennsylvania)
Ben
Erdreich (Alabama)
Dave
Evans (Indiana)
Victor
Fazio (California)
Geraldine
A. Ferraro (New York)
Michael
P. Forbes (New York)
Harold
Ford Sr. (Tennessee)
Bill
Frenzel (Minnesota)
Lou Frey (Florida)
Martin Frost (Texas)
Don
Fuqua (Florida)
Robert
“Bob” Garcia (New York)
Dan
Glickman (Kansas)
Frank
J. Guarini (New Jersey)
Gil
Gutknecht (Minnesota)
Chuck
Hagel (Nebraska)
John Paul Hammerschmidt (Arkansas)
Orval Hansen (Idaho)
Michael J. Harrington (Massachusetts)  

Gary Hart (Colorado)
Dennis
Hertel (Michigan)
George
Hochbrueckner (New York)
Marjorie
S. Holt (Maryland)
Darlene
Hooley (Oregon)
Joan
Kelly Horn (Missouri)
Amo Houghton (New York)
Jerry
Huckaby (Louisiana)
William
“Bill” H. Hudnut III (Indiana)
William
J. Hughes (New Jersey)
Earl
Hutto (Florida)
Ed
Jenkins (Georgia)
John
Jenrette (South Carolina)
James R. Jones (Oklahoma)
William
J. Keating (Ohio)
Barbara B. Kennelly (Connecticut)
Martha
Keys (Kansas)
Herb
Klein (New Jersey)
Scott Klug (Wisconsin)
Ray
Kogovsek (Colorado)
Jim
Kolbe (Arizona)
John
J. LaFalce (New York)
H.
Martin Lancaster (North Carolina)
Larry LaRocco (Idaho)
Jim
Leach (Iowa)
Jim
Ross Lightfoot (Iowa)
Jim
Lloyd (California)
Ken
Lucas (Oklahoma)
Bill
Luther (Minnesota)
Andrew
Maguire (New Jersey)
Marjorie
Margolies (Pennsylvania)
Dawson
Mathis (Georgia)
Romano
L. Mazzoli (Kentucky)
Mike
McCormack (Washington)
Matt McHugh (New York)
C.
Thomas McMillen (Maryland)
Michael
R. McNulty (New York)
Daniel
A. Mica (Florida)
Bob
Michel (Illinois)
Enid
Greene Mickelsen (Utah)
Ab
Mikva (Illinois)
Dan
Miller (Florida)
Jim
Moody (Wisconsin)
Connie Morella (Maryland)
Bruce
A. Morrison (Connecticut)
Lucien
N. Nedzi (Michigan)
George
R. Nethercutt, Jr. (Washington)
Mary
Rose Oakar (Ohio)
Bob
Packwood (Oregon)
Jerry
M. Patterson (California)
Douglas
“Pete” Peterson (Florida)
David
D. Phelps (Illinois)
John Porter (Pennsylvania)
Albert
H. Quie (Minnesota)
Tom
Railsback (Illinois)
Jay Rhodes (Arizona)
Marty
Russo (Illinois)
Martin
Olav Sabo (Minnesota)
Jim
Santini (Nevada)
Ron Sarasin (Connecticut)
Tom Sawyer (Ohio)
Lynn
Schenk (California)
Patricia
Schroeder (Colorado)
John
J. H. “Joe” Schwarz (Michigan)
Robert
N. Shamansky (Ohio)
E.
Clay Shaw (Florida)
David Skaggs (Colorado)
Jim Slattery (Kansas)
Lawrence J. Smith (Florida)
Nick
Smith (Michigan)
Peter
Smith (Vermont)
Richard
H. Stallings (Idaho)
Richard
Swett (New Hampshire)
Jim
Symington (Missouri)
Tom
Tauke (Iowa)
Esteban
Edward Torres (California)
Robert
A. Underwood (Guam)
Pat
Williams (Montana)
Tim
Wirth (Colorado)
Lester
L. Wolff (New York)
Howard
Wolpe (Michigan)
Albert
R. Wynn (Maryland)
Leo
C. Zeferetti (New York)

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