It was posted yesterday at WBEN, and it’s also posted to his Kemp Partners website. It reveals the kind of man, politician, Republican, and American Kemp was.
Not one to equate the newly-elected Obama to Hitler, Stalin or others, he wrote:
You see, real leadership is not just seeing the realities of what we are temporarily faced with, but seeing the possibilities and potential that can be realized by lifting up peoples’ vision of what they can be.
When President-elect Obama quoted Abraham Lincoln on the night of his election, he was acknowledging the transcendent qualities of vision and leadership that are always present, but often overlooked and neglected by pettiness, partisanship and petulance. As president, I believe Barack Obama can help lift us out of a narrow view of America into the ultimate vision of an America where, if you’re born to be a mezzo-soprano or a master carpenter, nothing stands in your way of realizing your God-given potential.
Both Obama in his Chicago speech, and McCain in his marvelous concession speech, rose to this historic occasion by celebrating the things that unite us irrespective of our political party, our race or our socio-economic background.
My advice for you all is to understand that unity for our nation doesn’t require uniformity or unanimity; it does require putting the good of our people ahead of what’s good for mere political or personal advantage.
The party of Lincoln, (i.e., the GOP), needs to rethink and revisit its historic roots as a party of emancipation, liberation, civil rights and equality of opportunity for all. On the other hand, the party of Franklin Roosevelt, John Kennedy and now Obama must put forth an agenda that understands that getting American growing again will require both Keynesian and classical incentive-oriented (supply-side) economic ideas. But there’s time for political and economic advice in a later column (or two)…
…President-elect Obama talks of Abraham Lincoln’s view of our nation as an “unfinished work.” Well, isn’t that equally true of all of us? Therefore let all of us strive to help him be a successful president, so as to help make America an even greater nation.
That’s what America is supposed to be about – disagreements without the jump to Hitlerspace.
The letter reminds of us a time when politics was more concerned with ideas rather than personal attacks. Hopefully we can get back to that.
Jack Kemp was a great man and he will be missed.
We were all filled with hope on inauguration day.
It would be interesting to read what Mr. Kemp thought of the new policies after the first 60 days transpired.
Similar to jumping to Hitlerspace is jumping to McVeighspace. A recent jumper to there is former Deputy County Executive Bruce Fisher who a few days ago compared some small town opponents of a proposed Erie County planning board to Tim McVeigh: