From Deseret News archives:
Celebrate the many who run
It's the irony of public service. The public is seldom thankful for the service rendered, and criticisms fall like raindrops.
Which raises the question of why people run for office in the first place. Frankly, that's a question worth contemplating today as thousands of Utahns go to the polls.
Undoubtedly, a few people run to stroke their own egos or to pad resumes. A few others want the power to pull strings and demand favors. A long list of public scandals bear this out.
But many others the overwhelming majority, we trust run out of a sense of civic duty, or simply because they think they have the ideas, the smarts and the energy to govern in the public's best interests. Win or lose, those people deserve a lot of thanks. Without them, the great experiment started by this nation's founders would have ended disastrously a couple of centuries ago.
Running for office not only is thankless, it's also exhausting. Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah, who isn't up for re-election this year, told us that campaigning for office is the "most sustained physically draining activity you can ever go through."
In politics, there is a heady side the one that comes from winning the hearts of voters and gaining a share of power within government. And there is a side that constantly offers reality checks the one that proves time and again how difficult it is to keep people happy. Elected representatives tend to be better informed on issues than are their constituents, who seldom have the luxury of full-time devotion to matters of government. But those constituents are never short on opinions or judgments.
The miracle of this Election Day isn't so much that voters continue to freely choose their leaders 230 years after the nation declared independence. It is that so many people continue to willingly stand up and file as candidates for the many available offices.
Given that level of effort on the part of so many who want to serve, the least you can do as a citizen today is to study what they wish to accomplish, understand the issues and cast an informed ballot.
Comments
- 3A: Hurricane 24, Park City 19 2:29 a.m.
- GameDay back in the MWC 2:19 a.m.
- Westminster campus briefs 1:49 a.m.
- SUU campus briefs 1:48 a.m.
- Dixie campus briefs 1:47 a.m.
- Real Salt Lake gameday 1:33 a.m.
- 5A: Bingham rolls to title game 12:59 a.m.
- Aggies hope for Spartan cure 12:57 a.m.
- 5A: Miners pull tricks to win 12:56 a.m.
- 5A: Davis runs over Hunter 12:54 a.m.
- Williams leaves, won't play tonight
- Unga family is making its mark
- Trial begins in toddler death
- Selfishness to blame for Jazz woes?
- ESPN suddenly loves MWC
- Study: Divorce likely when wife ill
- Man killed during 3rd I-15 crash
- Two killed in Iron County crash
- Historically, Utes have owned TCU
- Cougs give Rose new deal
- SLC council OKs gay rights policies
348 - Editorial: Mormons and gay rights
199 - Senators want food tax restored
162 - Will state consider gay rights law?
145 - Letters: Strange breed in Utah
129 - Utes remain silent about BCS
120 - S.L. vote pending on gay protections
113 - Celtics crush Jazz
103 - Pratt pleads not guilty to sex charges
102 - Hatch empathizes with Muslims
88
Maybe someone out there can help me understand how raising the state...
True. It's not terribly funny and if it has any effect on society, it won't...
What else would you expect to find in a book called "The Founders on Religion"?
Ok not to be rude here, but check the stats, Hinds isnt first in yards and...
t-hinds = best player in utah
Anonymous: Was that English? I though conservatives believed if you are in...
Wow! Glad the Lord kept you safe. Separate comment: That was a horrible...
I have never been to a Utah high school game before as I am not from the...
It would behoove the above commenters to recall that religion, including our...
Only 8000 attendance? BYU had 16,000+ tonight. What is wrong with Ute fans?...
ian you are the 3A MVP If you win next week so just do it that would be nice....


You can be the first to comment on this story.