<font size="6"><b>What would Lincoln say about today's GOP?</b></font><div class="text-article-title padding-lr ">
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<div class="author">By <span class="author-name">Augustin Stucker, Special to HLN</span></div><div class="timestamp">updated 7:41 AM EDT, Fri April 27, 2012</div> </div>
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<div class="text-article-need-to-know">NEED TO KNOW</div>
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<div class="item-list"><ul><li class="first">Author Augustin Stucker says there are political parallels between 2012 and 1860</li><li class="last">Stucker says Abraham Lincoln wouldn't even recognize his Republican Party</li>
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<p><em>Editor's Note: Augustin Stucker has been studying
President Abraham Lincoln for most of his life. He believes there are a
number of comparisons that can be made between today's politics and the
era of Lincoln. In his new book, "<a href="http://astucker.com/index.html" target="_blank">Lincoln & Davis</a>," <span>Stucker says the stark political events of their era are being replayed across today’s America.</span></em></p>
<p>If Abraham Lincoln were alive today he might not even recognize the Republican Party.</p>
<p>When Lincoln first joined the GOP it was led by men -- then
considered radicals -- whose primary agenda was to free the slaves.
Lincoln guided it towards being a moderate progressive party with a wide
appeal to the majority of Americans, which helped him win the 1860
presidential election. Of course, he was also inadvertently aided by the
1860 Democrats splitting when conservative Southern Democrats attempted
to hijack their party in demanding slavery be allowed to expand
nationwide.</p>
<p>In observing the Democrats’ split, Lincoln became very aware of the
dangers of a group seizing control of an entire party. When Radical
Republicans frequently attempted to strong-arm Lincoln into following
their policies alone and demonized conservative Republicans, Lincoln
made it very clear he and the party were responsible to <em>all </em>Americans: </p>
<p>“The radicals and conservatives, each agree with me in some things,
and disagree in others... I do not question their right... I hold
whoever commands... responsible to me, and not to either radicals or
conservatives," Lincoln said, according to Don E. Fehrenbacher, author
of "Abraham Lincoln Speeches and Writings 1859-1865."</p>
<p>He refused to bow to anyone’s threats, telling an aide, “I will not
do anything contrary to my convictions to please these men, earnest and
powerful as they may be," according to the book "Inside Lincoln’s White
House: The Complete Civil War Diary of John Hay."</p>
<p><strong>What he might say about today's GOP</strong></p>
<p>Lincoln might warn today’s Republicans to avoid making similar
mistakes as the Democrats in 1860. He would acknowledge the conservative
Tea Party movement and listen to them -- “It is my duty to hear all,"
he said, according Fehrenbacher.</p>
<p>At the same time, as the Republicans unite behind Mitt Romney,
Lincoln would caution against allowing the conservatives to upset the
apple cart come convention time. Polls show the majority of Americans
disagree with the Tea Party ideals, and Lincoln knew it is the majority
to whom politicians are responsible.</p>
<p>Lincoln would also be appalled by all modern legislative assaults on
human and civil rights. He would equate all recent attempts by various
states ranging from denying civil rights for gays, to telling women what
they could or could not do with their bodies, and repudiation of equal
pay for equal work, as ill-disguised attempts to subjugate minorities
and women.</p>
<p>Any form of subjugation was intolerable to Lincoln.</p>
<p>Prior to the Civil War, he warned Southern Democrats of their attitudes in promoting and maintaining slavery. </p>
<p>“[They] deny his manhood; deny, or dwarf to insignificance, the wrong
of his bondage; so far as possible, crush all sympathy for him, and
cultivate and execute hatred and disgust against him and call the
indefinite outspreading of his bondage ‘a sacred right of
self-government,'" Lincoln said, according to Fehrenbacher. </p>
<p>Further, Lincoln said of any black slave woman, it was “her natural
right to eat the bread she earns with her own hands without asking leave
of any one else, she is my equal, and the equal of all others." He
would consider any limitation on civil rights, human rights, or
legislation subjecting any citizen to “second-class” status just as
loathsome today as it was then.</p>
<p>Finally, Lincoln would advise Republicans to start working <em>with </em>each
other instead of engaging in endless bickering, as well as returning to
the negotiating table with the Democrats. Lincoln knew successful
American politics has always involved compromise, starting with the
Founding Fathers creating the Constitution. And certainly Lincoln would
testify if <em>he </em>could successfully negotiate and comprise in the
midst of the greatest internal crisis our country has ever faced, so
can and should the leaders of today’s Republican Party.</p>
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</div><br>-- <br>Art Deco (Wayne A. Fox)<br><a href="mailto:art.deco.studios@gmail.com" target="_blank">art.deco.studios@gmail.com</a><br>