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Dendahl Jolts GOP
From: LibertyWatch@rlc.org (LibertyWatch@rlc.org)
Monday, August 20, 2001
Dendahl Jolts GOP
Again
By Michael Coleman
Journal Staff Writer
New Mexico Republican Party Chairman John Dendahl is
showing some libertarian stripes, and it's making
some of his fellow Republicans nervous.
This month, the outspoken party boss joined the
advisory board of the Republican
Liberty Caucus, a 10-year-old political
action group
that recruits GOP candidates with libertarian
leanings.
The organization supports, among other possibly
controversial views, abolishing the Department of
Education, eliminating farm and Medicare subsidies
and shifting the responsibility for drug laws from
the federal government to local communities.
Libertarians generally believe in maximum personal
freedom and a minimum of government intervention.
Dendahl had to defend himself as party chairman
earlier this year when he voiced support for drug
legalization at a public rally with Gov. Gary
Johnson, who also supports legalization.
Unpopular views
Republicans in New Mexico's congressional
delegation asked Dendahl to resign, saying that a
chairman shouldn't promote a view opposed by so many
in his party.
But in May, after Dendahl assured his party that he
would not use his post publicly to condone drug
legalization, he won re-election.
State Rep. Ron Godbey, an Albuquerque Republican who
ran against Dendahl in May's party chairman
election, said last week that Dendahl is skirting
dangerously close to breaking his vow by joining the
Republican Liberty Caucus.
Godbey said he was "stunned" that Dendahl
would align himself with a movement espousing drug
law changes so soon after his run-in with party
leaders on the same issue.
"There are a number of issues this group has
taken up that are contrary to the Republican
Party," Godbey said. "It's clearly out of
the mainstream of the Republican Party."
Dendahl said in an interview that his involvement
with the caucus won't put him at odds with his party
or present a conflict for him as a member of the
Republican National Committee. If it does, he said
he will resign from the group.
"If it becomes clear that my trying to help the
Republican Liberty Caucus comes in conflict with the
RNC, I would step aside," said Dendahl, who is
candid about his agreement with many libertarian
positions.
Republican Minority Whip Earlene Roberts,
R-Lovington, said Dendahl should focus on his duties
as chairman and maintained that the
Liberty Caucus holds views many state Republicans
oppose.
"He can't represent my views when he's in this
group," she said.
Involvement no problem
But other party leaders, including Republican
National Committeeman Mickey Barnett, state party
vice chairman Stevan Pearce, and House Minority
Leader Ted Hobbs, R-Albuquerque, said Dendahl's
involvement in a GOP fringe group is no problem.
"John has a right to make his own moves,"
Hobbs said. "He doesn't have to ask permission
from anyone."
State and national GOP bylaws do not bar state
chairmen from joining other political action groups,
several party members said.
U.S. Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., and U.S. Rep.
Heather Wilson, R-N.M., through their spokesmen,
declined to comment on Dendahl's
new role.
U.S. Rep. Joe Skeen, a Republican sheep farmer from
Picacho, would be wary of any group that wants to
eliminate farm subsidies or relax federal drug laws,
said Skeen spokeswoman Selma Sierra.
"It's interesting that John is getting involved
in this," Sierra said. "You can't tell
John what groups to join, but he can't be advocating
positions contrary to the positions of the
Republican Party."
Dendahl said he would not support eliminating
federal subsidies for farmers, who help fuel New
Mexico's economy. The caucus also supports
abolishing the U.S. departments of Commerce and
Health and Human Services, with which Dendahl said
he generally agrees.
Chuck Muth, national chairman of the Liberty Caucus,
said he asked Dendahl to join the group as a bridge
among the RNC, the White
House and the caucus.
'A great liaison'
"He's highly respected at the RNC and will
make a great liaison from our organization to our
parent organization," Muth said.
Muth of Las Vegas, Nev., also stressed that drug
reform is not a high priority for the group. The
caucus' mission statement says that it
"supports alternatives to the war on
drugs" and that "matters such as drugs
should be handled at the state or personal
level," as opposed to the U.S. government.
"It's not as big an issue with us as it is the
Libertarian Party," Muth said.
RNC spokesman Rudy Fernandez said the committee
welcomes Dendahl's role in the Liberty Caucus.
"There is nothing wrong, in our view, with
Chairman Dendahl being involved with them,"
Fernandez said. "The Republican Party is big
enough to encompass a number of views."
In fact, the group could help Republicans convince
more potential Libertarians to stick with the GOP,
Fernandez said.
Libertarian candidates have been blamed, or
credited, for siphoning votes from GOP candidates in
key races.
Some contend that President Bush might have beaten
Democrat Al Gore in New Mexico's presidential
contest last year if Libertarian candidate Harry
Brown hadn't been in the race. Bush lost New Mexico
to Gore by 366 votes. Brown captured 2,085 votes in
the state's presidential contest.
Grover Norquist, a Washington-based Republican
political adviser, said the Liberty Caucus can help
Republicans build the party with young people who
might find Libertarians appealing.
The Liberty Caucus "answers a very real
concern," Norquist said in a telephone
interview. "Caucuses are helpful in bringing
new people into the parties through different
doors."
The caucus, according to its Web site, has chapters
in 15 states and the District of Columbia.
The Liberty Caucus aggressively recruits
Libertarian-leaning Republicans to run in GOP
primary races against incumbents who
don't hold the caucus' views, Muth said.
Dendahl, who said he has been criticized - he says
unfairly - for meddling in state GOP primary
elections in the past, promised that
he won't use his position in the caucus to groom
candidates for New Mexico primary elections. And he
hopes that the group won't
use his name to recruit Libertarian-leaning
candidates in the primaries.
"I would have a problem with that,"
Dendahl said.
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Copyright 2001 Albuquerque Journal
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