Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Thursday, December 29, 2016 Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN Publisher DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor TIM TRAINOR Opinion Page Editor MARISSA WILLIAMS Regional Advertising Director MARCY ROSENBERG Circulation Manager JANNA HEIMGARTNER Business Office Manager MIKE JENSEN Production Manager OUR VIEW Cracks showing in one-party rule Republicans dominated Oregon Capitol. He will be the first Republican politics for much of our state’s to serve on the State Land Board history. That one-party rule was since Secretary of State Norma not good for Oregon, and neither is the Democrats’ one-party rule that Paulus left office in 1985. The Land Board — comprising the governor, persists today. On Friday, that domination will be state treasurer and secretary of state — oversees nearly 1.6 million broken … a bit. Dennis Richardson acres of land and related resources. of Central Point in Southern Oregon They include will be sworn in as farm and range secretary of state, lands in Eastern the first Republican Oregon, forests in elected to statewide Western Oregon, office since Sen. mineral rights and Gordon Smith was state-managed elected in 1996 and waterways. 2002. A healthy Among other things, the Land two-party system helps ensure that Board in 2017 will a broad range decide whether to of interests are proceed with the represented in the controversial sale Oregon Capitol. of the Elliott State Discussion is deeper. Forest. Issues and candidates Richardson are vetted more also will be good closely, instead of for the Oregon being approved Republican Party. or denied simply He demonstrated because of one party’s that voters AP file photo dominance. will support Dennis Richardson pumps his After all, most fist at an election night event mainstream Oregonians occupy at the Salem Convention Cen- Republicans who are experienced the broad center of and well-qualified, the political spectrum Swearing in and Oregonians and care little about Dennis Richardson will be sworn will reject party labels. That in as secretary of state. Democrats who is why Richardson are far left of won at the November When: 11 a.m. Friday. Where: State Senate Chambers, the mainstream election, although Oregon Capitol, Salem. Republican voters Who: Former Secretary of State – Richardson’s were outnumbered Phil Keisling will open the cere- opponent in this by Democrats and mony. Oregon Rep. Greg Walden case, state Labor Commissioner non-affiliated voters. will speak. Oregon Supreme Richardson vowed Court Justice David Brewer will Brad Avakian. administer the oath of office. It is worth to run the Secretary Attendance: The ceremony is remembering that of State’s Office in a open to the public and will be Richardson won nonpartisan manner, streamed online. The Richard- election with the and he appears to be son campaign expects at least 600 people to attend. support of at least heeding that pledge. two Democratic He plans to keep leaders — state most of the agency Sen. Betsy Johnson of Scappoose and department heads. For the vacant position of state elections director, he state Rep. Brad Witt of Clatskanie — and he received every newspaper is hiring Steve Trout, who held that position for a while under Democratic endorsement. Oregon’s Republican election Secretary of State Kate Brown. machinery deteriorated over the Former Secretary of State Phil years, because there were too Keisling, who was the least-partisan few viable statewide Republican Democrat elected to the office candidates to keep the campaign in recent decades, will open consultants in business. In contrast, Richardson’s swearing-in on Friday. Oregon is awash with Democratic (Fellow Democrats scorned Keisling for being even-handed in drawing the campaign consultants. Those trends contributed to Oregon’s leftward boundaries for legislative districts in swing in state politics. 1991.) Richardson’s victory gives hope Even as Dennis Richardson manages his office with a nonpartisan for a resurgence among Republicans. But the party must field experienced, hand, his conservative views and well-qualified candidates who rural perspective will influence represent mainstream Oregon. decision-making in the Oregon Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board of publisher Kathryn Brown, managing editor Daniel Wattenburger, and opinion page editor Tim Trainor. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. OTHER VIEWS The Trump matrix A nyone who tells you, with its share of truer Trumpists. Stephen perfect confidence, what a Bannon is intent on remaking the Trump administration will do GOP along nationalist lines, Jared is either bluffing or a fool. We have a Kushner and Ivanka Trump seem eager prospective Cabinet and a White House for their paterfamilias to negotiate staff, but we haven’t got the first idea with Democrats, Peter Navarro is how the two will fit together or how the girding for a trade war with China. man at the top will preside over it all. And Trump’s foreign policy choices What we can do is set up a matrix — especially Rex Tillerson at State — Ross to help assess the Trump era as it Douthat seem closer to full-Trumpist realpolitik proceeds, in which each appointment than to Reaganism-as-usual. Comment and development gets plotted along On the governance axis, the two axes. The first axis, the X-axis, president-elect’s strong-arming of the represents possibilities for Trumpist policy, private sector, his media-bashing tweets and the second, the Y-axis, scenarios for Donald his feud with the intelligence community all Trump’s approach to governance. suggest an authoritarian timeline ahead. The policy axis runs from full populism at But anyone who fears incompetence more one end to predictable conservative orthodoxy than tyranny has plenty of evidence as well. on the other. A full populist presidency would Trump’s tweets might be a sign not of an give us tariffs and trade incipient autocrat but of an wars, an infrastructure bill unstable president who will You could imagine a undermine himself at every that would have Robert Moses doing back flips, a step. He has no cushion totally incompetent huge wall and E-Verify and in popular opinion: If untouched entitlements and things go even somewhat populism, in which big tax cuts for the middle badly, his political capital Trump flies around the will go very fast indeed. class. On foreign policy it would be Henry Kissinger has plenty of hacks, country holding rallies He meets Andrew Jackson: wild cards and misfit toys détente with Russia, no while absolutely noth- occupying positions of real nation-building anywhere, responsibility — and his ing in Washington and a counterterrorism White House has already strategy that shoots, bombs had its first sex scandal! gets done. and drones first and asks Then, finally, there questions later. is the question of how In an orthodox-conservative Trump the axes interact. A populist-authoritarian presidency, on the other hand, congressional combination might seem natural, with Republicans would run domestic policy and Trump using high-profile deviations from Trump would simply sign their legislation: conservative orthodoxy to boost his popularity A repeal of Obamacare without an obvious even as he runs roughshod over republican replacement, big tax cuts for the rich, and norms. the Medicare reform of Paul Ryan’s fondest But you could also imagine an dreams. On foreign policy, it would offer authoritarian-orthodox conservative hawkishness with a dose of idealistic rhetoric combination, in which congressional — meaning brinkmanship with Vladimir Putin Republicans accept the most imperial of plus military escalation everywhere. presidencies because it’s granting them tax The second axis, the possibilities for rates and entitlement reforms they have long how Trump governs, runs from ruthless desired. authoritarianism at one end to utter chaos at Or you could imagine a totally incompetent the other. Under the authoritarian scenario, populism, in which Trump flies around the Trump would act on all his worst impulses country holding rallies while absolutely with malign efficiency. The media would be nothing in Washington gets done ... or a intimidated, Congress would be gelded, the totally incompetent populism that ultimately Trump family would enrich itself fantastically empowers conventional conservatism, because — and then, come a major terrorist attack, Trump decides that governing isn’t worth it Trump would jail or intern anyone he deemed and just lets Paul Ryan run the country. a domestic enemy. As for what we should actually hope At the other end of this axis, Trump and for — well, the center of the matrix seems his team would be too stumbling and hapless like the sweet spot for the country: A Trump to effectively oppress anyone, and the Trump presidency that is competent-enough without era would just be a rolling disaster — with the being dictatorial and that provides a populist deep state in revolt, the media circling greedily corrective to conservatism without taking us and any serious damage done by accident all the way to mercantilism or a debt crisis. rather than design. But this is Donald Trump we’re talking Trump’s transition can be charted along about, so a happy medium seems unlikely. both axes. On policy, much of his Cabinet Along one axis or the other, bet on the falls closer to the conventional conservative extremes. end, with appointees like Tom Price and Betsy ■ DeVos, who would be at home in a Ted Cruz Ross Douthat, the previous senior editor at or Marco Rubio or even Jeb! administration. The Atlantic, joined The New York Times as an On the other hand, his inner circle will have Op-Ed columnist in 2009. YOUR VIEWS Work isn’t over after votes are counted Since the presidential campaign and election, things are different across the country and here in Umatilla County. There is a silence between neighbors, a quiet uncertainty and anxiety within our communities — and a reluctance to interact on expectations, desires, and fears for the next four years. The election was unlike anything we have ever experienced in recent history. It was so divisive. Dialogue enabled intolerance of differences to openly threaten people who “are not like us.” It was different here as well. I have never seen such a lack of bumper stickers and yard signs on either side. Unfortunately, some of those that did appear were very disrespectful, reflecting the nature of the campaign. We vote our values. While I deeply believe we all share many more values than those that separate us, the choices we make also divide us. Words matter, and actions matter more. The fears that we see are more than normal post-election fears. They are guttural fears for what might happen to our country and citizens over the next several years. The choices now being made for top Administrative positions are symbolic and telling. Whoever we voted for, it is our responsibility as citizens to keep the integrity and respect of our great nation. We must pay attention. We must stay involved. We need to hold all our elected officials to this degree of integrity, and not just lay back and watch what happens. There is too much at stake for our communities, our children, and our nation. Jeff Blackwood Pendleton Perfect time to invest in culture As a very eventful 2016 draws to a close, I encourage members of our community to consider culture — and the Oregon Cultural Trust — for their end-of- year giving. During times of great change, culture helps keep us centered. Regardless of what is happening in the world, we have our culture — our music, our books and our heritage — to bring us together. Here in Oregon, we also have the unique opportunity to receive a tax credit when we support culture. Just make a donation to one of 1,400+ qualified cultural groups across the state, like our very own Happy Canyon, then match it with a gift to the Cultural Trust. Come tax time, you will receive a tax credit for your CONTACT YOUR SENATORS donation to the Cultural Trust. You double the impact of your donation for free. This is uniquely Oregon, no other state in the union rewards its citizens for investing in culture! This year, donations to the Cultural Trust had a direct impact on our community’s livability and economy. A total of 149 grants totaling $2.9 million were awarded to Oregon’s cultural nonprofits, including $8,584 to the Eastern Oregon Regional Arts Council; $12,143 to the Grande Ronde Symphony Association; $9,067 to the Union County Cultural Coalition; $7.035 to the Wallowa County Cultural Coalition; $14,562 to the Umatilla County Cultural Coalition; and $6,623 to the Confederated Tribes of Umatilla. The Cultural Trust envisions an Oregon that champions and invests in creative expression and cultural exchange, driving innovation and opportunity for all. Our mission is to lead Oregon in cultivating, growing and valuing culture as an integral part of communities. Please help us protect Oregon’s famous quality of life by supporting local cultural groups and the Oregon Cultural Trust. Our cultures make Oregon strong. Charles F. Sams III Oregon Cultural Trust board member Pendleton Ron Wyden Washington office: 221 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20510 202-224-5244 La Grande office: 541-962-7691 Jeff Merkley Washington office: 313 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 202-224-3753 Pendleton office: 541-278-1129 LETTERS POLICY The East Oregonian welcomes original letters of 400 words or less on public issues and public policies for publication in the newspaper and on our website. The newspaper reserves the right to withhold letters that address concerns about indi- vidual services and products or letters that infringe on the rights of private citizens. Submitted letters must be signed by the author and include the city of residence and a daytime phone number. The phone number will not be published. Unsigned letters will not be published. Send letters to managing editor Daniel Wattenburger, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com.