
Bill Schubart, a retired businessman, is a regular columnist for VTDigger.
A friend from California recently asked me about two televised electoral charts sheโd seen showing Vermontโs electoral voting response. She pointed out that the presidential chart was blue, mottled here and there with red specks, while the gubernatorial chart was the inverse, largely red with small blue islands clustered around the larger towns.
I acknowledged the irony of Vermont voting solidly Democratic while also voting overwhelmingly for our Republican governor, Phil Scott, who himself voted for the Biden-Harris ticket.
โYou need to understand Vermont,โ I replied, trying to summon a credible explanation, adding, โWe vote for people, not parties.โ
โSo, youโre different from the rest of the nation?โ she challenged.
โWell, yes, somewhat,โ I parried.
Then I feigned an upcoming Zoom meeting and promised to call her back.
Although Iโve lived in Vermont since 1947, my political sensibilities werenโt really honed until the late 1960s and the election of Democrat Phil Hoff, which ended a century of Republican governors in Vermont. The first governor I got to work with was in fact a Republican, Deane Davis, whom I got to know when I served as chair of the Vermont Council on the Arts in the early โ70s.
โRepublicanโ in those days was a term universally deserving of respect. It denoted someone who believed in a social safety net, caring for those who could not care for themselves and in protecting the environment against predatory development. Act 250 was the most progressive environmental legislation in the country, passed in 1970 during Republican Deane Davisโ administration and with the support of a Republican legislature.
Vermont Republicans of that time believed in the balance expressed in Vermontโs motto, โFreedom and Unity,โ paying equal attention to personal freedom and the responsibilities it demands and the well-being of family and community, on which everyoneโs well-being depends.
These days when Iโm asked to name Vermontโs most effective governors, I see a look of confusion when I mention the mix of Phil Hoff, Dick Snelling, Deane Davis, Madeleine Kunin and Phil Scott. Perhaps thatโs because Iโm viewed as liberal and my list does not conform to party affiliation. My criteria โ right or wrong โ are principled and competent leadership rather than political ideology, humility, and the ability to delegate.
No leader is perfect, but good ones know their own limitations. They know they donโt have all the answers and enlist the best managers they can find, regardless of their politics. They also know how to derive consensus and act decisively on it.
A good example is Gov. Scottโs leadership on the Covid-19 crisis. Among the state governors, Scott is an exemplar, both in his humility and in his leadership. But in each case, leadership depends on a responsible citizenry. During the pandemic, most (but not all) Vermonters have been willing to follow scientifically based preventive measures.
The steeper challenge is managing the present while planning for an uncertain future. Gov. Scott has proven to be an excellent crisis manager. His skills preemptively managing a rapidly evolving future, however, are yet to be proven.
My own family was relatively liberal. My paternal grandfather worked for the FDR administration. My youthful naivete and two years at UVM pushed me left. Then in 1963, I saw the rapid-fire assassinations of President Kennedy, presidential candidate Bobby Kennedy, and civil rights hero Martin Luther King. In an escape fantasy, I left for Woodstock with friends, only to read a year later about the Ohio National Guard firing 67 rounds in 13 seconds at demonstrating students at Kent State, killing four and wounding nine unarmed students. That radicalized me, like many others my age.
But my introduction to political discourse took place in the basement of Gillenโs Department Store on Main Street in my hometown of Morrisville, where Fred Westphal held court, selling shoes and classical LPs. I was in junior high and loved classical music. Fred, who was a family friend, installed a โhifiโ in an unused closet in our living room. When I was alone, I would turn it up and listen to a recording Iโd saved up to buy, while standing on a chair and conducting an imaginary orchestra. And then Iโd return to Gillenโs basement to hear more music, delivered with a conservative diatribe.
Fredโs hero was Cecil Rhodes, once prime minister of the Cape Colony in Africa and the man after whom the Rhodes Scholarships were named until recently. I teased Fred about his racist and ultraconservative hero, asking him why he didnโt just move to Rhodesia. His answer was, โIf I could figure out how to bring my Mercedes, I would.โ
In an 1877 letter, Rhodes wrote that โthe Anglo-Saxon race was the first race in the world.โ My friendship with later-to-become Vermont state Sen. Fred Westphal was a profound lesson in how to talk and be friends with someone whose ideas you revile, a social discipline we would do well to pursue today.
Since then, Iโve worked with governors and legislators of both parties on a variety of cultural, political, civic and economic issues and still do today.
In my time participating in and observing the Vermont political scene, Iโve come to understand that the politics of Vermont donโt necessarily resemble what they are in the rest of the country. By and large, we understand that progress is incremental and demands compromise, which we still have the capacity to forge, although it will require lots more as we confront the daunting issues we face, such as hunger, housing, education and health care.
Many commentators of both stripes would have us believe that weโre seeing the onset of a civil war nationally. In reality, there remains much that binds us, especially within the tightly woven social fabric of our smaller communities, as well as the neighborhoods in our cities.
What connects us is not the stuff of headlines. Most Vermonters remain unimpressed with ideological posturing; they want to see openness, constructive leadership, and change, as we have seen in our past.
Vermont is not drowning in its own politics. We still judge political aspirants by their character, accomplishments and prospects. Like many Vermonters, Iโve voted for Republicans, Democrats, Progressives and independents over the years.
Iโm heartened that most of us still believe in the potential for good government to materially improve our lives. We may disagree on the means but not on the goal.
From the Bennington Banner Oct. 30, 1971, โWhoโd ever believe it?โ
Sen. Fred Westphal of Lamoille County is by his own admission the most conservative of all candidates seeking the U.S. House seat vacated by Sen. Robert Stafford.
Westphal opposes welfare, thinks day care centers are a lot of foolishness, views revenue sharing as a โcruel hoax,โ hates Communist China and thinks itโs insane for the president to go there. He likes the seniority system in Congress, โthe more senior the better,โ and thinks the country might be better off if congressmen spent less rather than more time in Washington.
On this basis, wouldnโt you be able to predict his reaction to โyouth culture,โ more familiarly known as โthose darn hippiesโ?
But Westphal isnโt always predictable and he said in an interview in Vermont Sunday News last week that he occasionally picks up โsome of these hippie typesโ in his travels around Vermont.
โIโm absolutely surprised at how much we have in common. Iโm surprised that they view most of the problems the same as I do. I know a lot of them surprised people with my bumper sticker on their cars, and some of them volunteered to help in my campaign,โ said Westphal.
And he added, โI disagree with those who go for the drug culture, a small percentage, but thereโs a lot of subcultures in the hippie movement, so that when you get acquainted with them, you find theyโre pretty puritanical; maybe thatโs why weโre in so much agreement.โ
Now thatโs what we call bridging the generation gap, Or, between people like Westphal at least willing to listen, and his young audiences willing to discuss their ideas honestly, is there really so much of a gap after all?
