Editor of the American Conservative endorses Kerry.

"George W. Bush has come to embody a politics that is antithetical to almost any kind of thoughtful conservatism, " says Scott McConnell. Read more here.


"George W. Bush has come to embody a politics that is antithetical to almost any kind of thoughtful conservatism, " says Scott McConnell. Read more here.
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These Errol Morris ads, featuring ordinary people who are Republican Switchers, inspired this blog; I've linked to them previously via moveon.org. At Morris's site, however, you'll find the television ads organized by topic. He's searching for a 527 nonprofit to pay to broadcast them. He also has two different sizes of the print ad that you can photocopy and post or distribute. Those would be great for canvassers to photocopy and pass out in the days ahead.
Please forward to all voters you know in Ohio--and ask them to forward it to others in the state. "Often people vote from habit or party loyalty. I believe that in this election of 2004 there are greater considerations and all voters should ask themselves: Are we better off than four years ago? Are we safer? Is our economy stronger? To me the answers are clear. That is why I support John Kerry for president." So says Republican former General Assemblyman of Ohio John A. Galbraith. And then there's Retired Republican judge Robert L. Black, who will support Kerry because "The record of this incumbent president is a history not only of repeated violations of the key principles underlying our democracy, but of the core values of the Christian faith to which he claims commitment." (Thanks to the folks at www.democraticunderground.com for notice of this Switcher.)

The lifelong Republican son of Republican President Dwight D. (Ike) Eisenhower has left the Republican Party to become an Independent. Eisenhower is endorsing Kerry because of Bush's maverick decision to go to war and his fiscal irresponsibility. "Senator Kerry... is courageous, sober, competent, and concerned with fighting the dangers associated with the widening socio-economic gap in this country, " Eisenhower said.
Find more Switchers here, including a link to a long article in Esquire by Ron Reagan Jr., pictured here with his family. (Click to enlarge image.)

Marshall Wittmann, a former aide to Republican Senator John McCain has a long and thoughtful essay about choosing Kerry over Bush. An excerpt: " I am an independent McCainiac who hopes to revive the Bull Moose tradition of Theodore Roosevelt, and I support the Kerry-Edwards agenda. Don't get me wrong -- this Bull Moose is not completely in agreement with the Democratic donkey. But the Bush administration has betrayed the effort to create a new politics of national greatness in the aftermath of 9/11."
In the first of a series from Mother Jones on prominent conservatives who have become Bush critics, Clyde Prestowitz, counselor to Ronald Reagan's secretary of commerce, says this and much more: "I think that we are less safe today than we were three or four years ago. And I’ll tell you something else: I have recently had discussions with several former national security advisors -- people who were national security officials in former Republican administrations -- who have told me they feel the same way. They fear that the administration’s policies are further endangering and undermining the security of the United States."

This is a very powerful statement from William Milliken, Republican former Governor of Michigan (1969-83). An excerpt: "My Republican Party is the party of Gerald R. Ford, Michigan's only president, who reached across partisan lines to become a unifying force during a time of great turmoil in our nation's history. This president has pursued policies pandering to the extreme right wing across a wide variety of issues and has exacerbated the polarization and the strident, uncivil tone of much of what passes for political discourse in this country today."
Two longtime prominent Republicans from Kentucky prefer Kerry. Writes Ballard Morton from Kentucky: "For nearly 50 years, I considered myself a Republican. I usually voted for Republicans, and I voted for George W. Bush in 2000. I have deep family roots in the Republican Party. My father, Thruston Morton, served as a Republican U. S. senator from Kentucky and also served as national chairman of the Republican Party. My uncle, Rogers Morton, also served as national chairman of the Republican Party, served as a Republican in the U. S. House of Representatives, and served in the cabinet under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. I cannot in good conscience vote for President Bush in this election."
Ballard's aunt, the Republican Congressman's widow, concurs.
Longtime, staunchly conservative columnist Charley Reese (just Google him) will vote for Kerry:"I will swallow a lot of petty policy differences...to get a man in the White House with brains enough not to blow up the world and us with it. Go to Kerry's Web site...You'll find that there is a great deal more to Kerry than the GOP attack dogs would have you believe."

In this story from CNN, Russell E. Train, who ran the Enviornmental Protection Agency under Presidents Nixon and Ford, "accused Bush of weakening the Clean Air Act and said the president's record falls short of those set by former Republican presidents, from Theodore Roosevelt, who advocated creating national parks and forests, to George H.W. Bush, who supported revised standards for clean air. " Train supported George W's father, George H. W. Bush in 1988. (Thanks to this blogger for linking to Republican Switchers and for the links to the Train and Anderson stories.)

In this story from Minnesota, (registration required) former Governor Elmer L. Anderson (1961-63) explains his vote for Kerry: "As taxes for the wealthy are being cut, jobs are being outsourced if not lost and children are homeless and uninsured, this administration is running up the biggest deficit in U.S. history -- bound to be a terrible burden for future generations.
This imperialistic, stubborn adherence to wrongful policies and known untruths by the Cheney-Bush administration -- and that's the accurate order -- has simply become more than I can stand.
Although I am a longtime Republican, it is time to make a statement, and it is this: Vote for Kerry-Edwards, I implore you, on Nov. 2. "
Former Congressman Pete McCloskey, a Republican, explains why he is voting for Kerry in a video clip from this Web site (Swift Boats and Swing Votes) and in this PDF of a recent column from the San Jose Mercury News. An excerpt from the 9/10/04 column: "In truth, John Kerry and John Edwards come far closer to the Republicanism of Teddy Roosevelt, Earl Warren, Barry Goldwater, George Bush the elder and, yes, even Richard Nixon, than does the present incumbent." (Thanks to Mainstreet Moms Oppose Bush at www.themmob.com for this PDF and for linking to "Republican Switchers" and other sites that will help you convince conservatives to vote for Kerry. Click on "links." Also, Mainstream Moms lists several "bite size" actions you can take to promote a Kerry presidency!)

I found this page by reviewing my visitor stats and the searches that brought people to this site. The page came up first in someone's Google search for ("Republicans" "voted for Bush" "voting for Kerry") while my site, Republican Switchers, came up second. The quote in the headline is one of several in the story from disaffected Republicans.
Says William Saleten on Slate: "I'm no huge fan of John Kerry....But the alternative is a president who sees one side of every issue, no matter how many sides it has."

This article from The Washington Post (registration required) features another Kerry supporter, Kevin Phillips, a former Republican strategist who longs to go back the Republican party of Dwight Eisenhower. According to the article, Eisenhower "was a politician who embraced a top marginal tax rate of 90 percent, who warned of the abuses of the military-industrial complex and who -- in Phillips's telling -- had little use for the country club Republican set." Phillips is the author of one of the many popular books that are critical of Bush: American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune, and the Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush.
Watch and hear why these real people, who voted for Bush in 2000, are voting for Kerry in 2004. The ads were created by famous director Errol Morris for moveon.org. Download a print ad showing the Republican Switchers here. Copy and share it with the Republicans you love!
I received an e-mail from RepublicansForHumility.com. William Frey, M.D., who "strongly supported" Bush in 2000, is the site's editor. As he wrote, "This site is designed by and primarily aimed at conservatives and Republicans. It is about the betrayal of traditional, conservative limited-government values, and the use of misleading rhetoric, by the Bush / Cheney administration. It has been well received and is relevant for Americans across the political spectrum.

Republicans Against Bush Meetup. Meetup is an organization that uses the Internet to gather, in real time and in real places (i.e., restaurants, libraries), people with similar interests --- whether it be knitting, rock climbing, politics, or hundreds more subjects and hobbies. See if there's a Republicans Against Bush Meetup in your community. If you're an undecided Republican, it might help you make up your mind. If you know and love an undecided Republican, offer to go with him or her to a meeting near you.
Another Republican for Kerry tells some interesting stories on his site. One post is about a lifelong Republican and Marine Mom, Nina: "Now she's fighting for a better commander in chief who can make sound judgments and wise decisions. 'I'm a registered Republican, and I'm voting for John Kerry because I believe with all my heart that he cares. I know he's the most qualified to clean up this mess. And I don't believe for a moment that under John Kerry, a Marine going to war would ever have to stop and buy himself a helmet that can mean the difference between life and death." Also see his recommended action steps for persuading others to vote for Kerry.
Download the Republicans for Kerry-Edwards toolkit, courtesy of the special section for Republicans on the Kerry site: republicans.johnkerry.com. And then sign up as a Republican for Kerry-Edwards.