Artur Davis, a former Democratic congressman who
switched party lines earlier this year, says he’s bullish about
the prospect of a Romney presidency.
“There are about 10 million people who voted for Barack Obama
four years ago that don’t plan to do it now,” Davis told the
audience at the Newsmaker Breakfast hosted by The American
Spectator and Americans for Tax Reform this morning.
He explained his disillusion with the Obama administration.
“For most of us, we look at what Democrats said they’d do 4
years ago — they said they’d give us a country that’s one thing;
we’re getting a different country,” Davis said. “When is the last
time an administration has come into office with such clearly
defined, articulated priorities and seen every one of them fail or
become an albatross or outright disappear in the course of one
term?”
In contrast, Davis likened the Tea Party to the conservative
wave that brought Ronald Reagan to power in 1980, and he said
center-right activists have done a good job “taking their case to
ordinary rank-and-file people and making arguments they find
comprehensible and understandable.”
“It’s an incredibly effective run that the right has made in the
last several years,” he said. “It’s a reflection of smart,
intuitive, strategic decisions.”
However, despite his party switch, there remain aspects of the
Republican approach with which Davis disagrees. For instance, he
said conservatives who criticize illegal immigration on social
grounds — that it’s changing the American social fabric — have
the wrong approach. Instead, he argued that it’s an economic issue
“when you have 13.5 million people who are undocumented, who crowd
the workforce,” and sometimes a moral one.
“It’s not altruism that motivates corporate America to hire
illegal immigrants,” Davis said. “It is exploitation.”
In that respect — taking the left’s “moral” argument and
turning it on its head — the former Congressman echoed Arthur
Brooks, president of the American Enterprise Institute, who spoke
at the Newsmaker luncheon last month and advocated for the
importance of moral arguments to defending capitalism, as discussed
in his new book,
The Road to Freedom: How to Win the Fight for Free
Enterprise.