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Listening to America

#1312 Elections Matter

Listening to America

Listening to America

Society & Culture, History

4.61.1K Ratings

🗓️ 13 November 2018

⏱️ 61 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"You have a population of 330 million. This is a way that the whole system is designed to distill their will." — Clay S. Jenkinson

The results of the 2018 midterm elections are what we try to sort out this week: what it means, what it implies, and how it fits into Jefferson's view of the United States. Jefferson said it is necessary to give, as well as take, in a government like ours, and we wonder if if we do a good enough job at that. Both parties claimed victory after the November 6th election, and maybe that's true, maybe that isn't, but Jefferson's view is that it was kind of what you would expect for a midterm election, no matter who was president. Jefferson also said that conscience is the only clue which will eternally guide us. He loved the idea that people would participate in self-government. The number of people who voted in the 2018 election was through the roof. Unprecedented. Record setting. Jefferson would be so pleased. In 1824, Jefferson wrote to Edward Livingston: "A government held together by the bands of reason only, requires much compromise of opinion; that things even salutary should not be crammed down the throats of dissenting brethren, especially when they may be put into a form to be willingly swallowed, and that a great deal of indulgence is necessary to strengthen habits of harmony and fraternity."

Find this episode, along with recommended reading, on the blog. Support the show by joining the 1776 Club or by donating to the Thomas Jefferson Hour, Inc. You can learn more about our Cultural Tours & Retreats with Clay S. Jenkinson at jeffersonhour.com/tours. Thomas Jefferson is interpreted by Clay S. Jenkinson.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Good Day Podcast

0:03.4

Podcast listeners and have you voted

0:06.8

Welcome to this this week's Thomas Jefferson Hour podcast

0:10.3

I voted I did too I voted 7.04 a.m. I was about 8 8 o'clock I have my little white

0:18.5

Optimus Club of Bismarck I have voted sticker did, but you had to show ID?

0:24.0

Of course.

0:25.0

And then they asked me questions.

0:26.0

They did to me, too.

0:28.0

So that's all, that's the new North Dakota election law.

0:30.0

Yeah, it's funny because you know North Dakota is the only state in the union where you don't have to pre-register.

0:35.0

That's my understanding.

0:37.0

Right, but we have recently moved in the direction of voter ID and more stringent voter identification systems more questions at the polls.

0:46.1

And as you know, Native Americans felt that they were being actively disenfranchised by some of the recent changes.

0:54.4

I think you'd have to be pretty naive to not think that they were.

0:59.0

I'm just saying that these, I'll just say it's straight out voter identification laws are inevitably

1:06.4

attempts to squelch voter participation.

1:10.1

Suppress it, yeah.

1:11.1

And they are suppressive.

1:12.1

I don't think it's any stretch to say that the legislation passed by the Republican-held

1:17.2

legislature in North Dakota designed this law to make it more difficult for American

1:22.1

Indians to vote and part of the reason for that

1:24.2

is that the Democratic candidate for Senate last election won by less than 3,000 votes and

...

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