Go ahead, call us cowards. Wimps. Spineless. Dispassionate. Detached. We’ll deny all of the above and stick to the following position like a political bumper sticker on rusting chrome: The Garden Island won’t endorse any of the local candidates hoping
Go ahead, call us cowards. Wimps. Spineless. Dispassionate. Detached.
We’ll
deny all of the above and stick to the following position like a political
bumper sticker on rusting chrome: The Garden Island won’t endorse any of the
local candidates hoping to be elected by Kauians in the general election Nov.
7.
Newspaper endorsements of politicians is a time-honored (well, at least
around a long time) tradition. TGI would rather break from that tradition and
make no endorsements in the island races. None. ‘Ole. Zilch.
The reason is
not because we lack opinions about the candidates for Kaua’i County Council and
the island’s seats with the Legislature, the state Board of Education and the
Office of Hawaiian Affairs. We have thoughts on all of them, from the
frontrunners to the barely-above-water. We just don’t feel our opinions should
or do matter much to the outcome of Decision 2000.
If we, the rest of the
news media and the candidates themselves do our election-related jobs right,
voters will have enough information to make informed choices on election day.
It’s true that journalists get to know candidates in ways that most voters
don’t. Who among the voting public has or makes the time to interview each
candidate? That wouldn’t happen, anyway, since there aren’t enough hours during
a campaign for candidates to go one-on-one with each voter. So reporters and
editors become the indirect link most of the time between candidates and the
masses. It’s a responsibility we take seriously. But in the end, who says our
perceptions and analysis of candidates is any better than what voters can
deduce from the information we convey? Depending on who we endorsed, whole
blocs of people wouldn’t believe us, anyway. Conservatives would see proof of
the media’s liberal bias, and liberals would think we’d lost our
minds.
Naturally, people who generally suspect the media has favorite
candidates and covers them more congenially will think this next part is
hypocritical. But here goes: TGI’s role is to help educate voters on the people
who would be their elected leaders.
Trying to sway those decisions doesn’t
fit that role.
If we felt strongly that the public couldn’t do without a
candidate or candidates, or if we were equally convinced that the populace
would be better off without a particular voteseeker, we’d say so. But this
year, there just isn’t enough reason to get revved up over any candidates, one
way or the other.
The choice is yours.
TGI editor Pat Jenkins can
be reached at 245-3681 (ext. 227) and pjenkins@pulitzer.net