Can Political Foes Be Personal Friends? A GOP and a Dem County Chair Test a Theory


By Melinda Burrell


Heads probably turned as we entered the early 1900s red brick town house in Warrenton, Virginia on a warm September morning. It happened to be the headquarters of the Fauquier County Republican Committee. Its chairman, Greg Schumacher, was welcoming me along with his Democratic counterpart, Max Hall.

This isn’t the first time these two have met. In fact, they’ve been meeting regularly this year to get to know each other despite the heat of Virginia’s upcoming state legislature elections.

Greg and Max had already collaborated on letters to their local paper about issues they felt important to democracy: urging neighbors not to tear down others’ political signs and standing by the 2022 Fauquier County election results. “Through that process, we decided to meet periodically, just talk and build a relationship. We both thought, given the polarization in our environment, it should be known that we’re meeting and having good conversations. That we didn’t meet for a duel!” Greg explains with a chuckle.

It's not always easy, and they admit that, during election season, they will prioritize campaigning for their respective candidates. But they definitely agree these conversations are meaningful.

“From my perspective, one of the important aspects is to help to de-demonize the other side. If we can sit and have a coffee without heckling, that’s a good thing,” Max explains.

Both share the belief that cross-party cooperation can help their community. “If issues come up between the two parties or there is some sort of an incident, the first time you call in the other person you don’t want it to be a crisis. You want to already trust each other somewhat to be able to say, ‘can you help me de-stress this?’” Max offers.

The two began by identifying commonalities: both graduated from West Point, have a sense of humor, and have wives named Cathy/Kathy. Those shared experiences combined with shared personality traits. For such cross-divide conversation to work, Greg says, you “have to be open and willing, not begrudging and seeking contention.”

For others thinking about taking on the challenge of cross-party conversations, they offer advice. “Be intentional, and don’t set expectations. We’ve kept it open, just seeing where it goes. There are corollary benefits -- like times we’ve run into each other on the street, shaken hands. People who saw us later said, ‘You shook Greg Schumacher’s hand? Wow. If you two county chairs can do that, maybe I can do it.’” Max recounts. “I’m a big believer in baby steps. It’s not always big accomplishments.”

They’re keeping it low-key now that it’s election season. But for the future, they’re considering more baby steps, such as conversations about divisive issues or joint projects such as putting flags on graves for Memorial Day. “And if a tornado comes, all the political division is out the window. We’d just come together,” Greg adds. “Polarization comes from not having relationships with people from the other side, from not even seeing them as people it’s possible to have relationships with. But there is more richness to us than our political beliefs.”

Two political party chairs, even in the throes of an election, are finding richness indeed.

Melinda Burrell, PhD is a former humanitarian aid worker and now trains on the neuroscience of communication and conflict. She is vice-chair of the National Association for Community Mediation, which offers resources for community approaches to difficult issues.



More Resources


12/03/2024
Corrupt Papa Biden Makes an Unsurprising Move
To cut off any risk of investigation into his corrupt family influence-peddling syndicate and spare his weak son from an almost certain prison term, President Joe Biden unsurprisingly broke his solemn pledge to the American people and pardoned Hunter. By doing so, the president reveals the hypocrisy of Democrats who hector us about morality and equal application of the law, while they weaponized our justice system against those with whom they disagree.

more info


12/03/2024
Paris Invite Shows Power Fast Flowing From Biden to Trump
There'll be a strong sense of deja vu when French President Emmanuel Macron lays the flattery on thick for Donald Trump in Paris this weekend.

more info


12/03/2024
FBI Needs To Be Disrupted, Urgently
Kash Patel will be the focus of scrutiny now, but the Bureau needs to look in the mirror. How J. Edgar Hoover's legacy was revived in the Trump years

more info


12/03/2024
Democrats Already Needed To Break With Biden. Now's the Chance
Democrats already needed to break with Biden. Now's their chance.

more info


12/03/2024
Joe and Hunter Biden and the Rule of Law
Pardon me, what was that about preserving democratic norms?

more info


12/03/2024
Why Hunter's Pardon Doesn't Outrage Me
If anyone in America should be particularly outraged about President Joe Biden's sweeping pardon for his son Hunter's misdeeds - of which he's been charged, convicted, or could otherwise be liable - I should.

more info


12/03/2024
The Coming Struggle for the Soul of the Democratic Party
Beneath the folds of each of our two political parties, a hidden party struggles to emerge. It's not the woke Democratic Party of open borders and Saint Jussie Smollett, and it's not the Make America Great Again GOP of the January 6 rioters and Matt Gaetz. It's the Make America Normal Again party. MANA.

more info


12/03/2024
My Brother Is Doing the Trump Dance
Democrats are eating a giant helping of crow since voters delivered a stunning victory for the Republican candidate

more info


12/03/2024
How Could Secret Service Failures Be a Partisan Story?
Susan Crabtree of RealClearPolitics won the National Journalism Center's second annual Dao Prize for Excellence in Investigative Journalism for her coverage of the United States Secret Service, particularly about the fallout from the first assassination attempt on Donald Trump.

more info


12/03/2024
The Election Story Nobody Is Talking About
Donald Trump's substantial gains with young women voters call into question almost every important claim the Democrats made.

more info


12/03/2024
Pete Hegseth's Secret History
A whistle-blower report and other documents suggest that Trump's nominee to run the Pentagon was forced out of previous leadership positions for financial mismanagement, sexist behavior, and being repeatedly intoxicated on the job.

more info


12/03/2024
Smearing Pete Hegseth
An essay published by The New Yorker on Monday claims that Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for secretary of defense, was forced to step down as president of the advocacy group Concerned Veterans for America amid serious allegations of misconduct.

more info


12/03/2024
Judge Enforces Subpoena Against ActBlue, Opening New Front
Left-wing fundraiser ActBlue failed to convince judge that it should not have to disclose documents. Something is not right, judge says as court gets involved in probe launched by Congress and 19 state attorneys general.

more info


12/03/2024
What Is the Democratic Party?
The inability to answer that question informs the election result.

more info


12/03/2024
Education Upstarts Hold Lack of Civics To Be Self-Evident
As the autumn sun warms the historic campus outside, a professor specializing in ancient and modern political philosophy guides undergraduate students through the seemingly ruthless nuances of Machiavelli's 16th-century philosophy of morals.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Senate Drug Plan Helps Government, Hurts Patients


Nancy Pelosi has a plan to lower drug prices. The Speaker of the House just released a new bill that would impose a slew of new taxes and allow the government to meddle with private businesses.

So-Called Methane Regulation "Rollbacks" Actually Reduce Emissions


President Trump just proposed a small update to methane-emission regulations. But judging by the Democratic candidates' hyperbolic reactions, you'd think he personally assaulted Mother Earth.

A Time of Civility Needed Again


Tonight, President Donald Trump will visit Minneapolis. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey stated, "While there is no legal mechanism to prevent the president from visiting, his message of hatred will never be welcome in Minneapolis." For those too young to remember, the United States in 1963 was divided deeply over the growing civil rights movement—a division that later widened with the war in Vietnam.

Betsy Ross Recall is a Cheap Moral Stand


Nike courted controversy when it cancelled a new line of Betsy Ross flag-stitched sneakers just before the Fourth of July. The American shoemaker, valued at over $130 billion, pulled the shoes after former NFL quarterback and company spokesperson Colin Kaepernick worried on Twitter that the flag was a racist symbol.

Jordan B. Peterson: A Sign of the End Times?


It is not often that a clinical psychologist becomes the cultural equivalent of a rock star, but Canadian academic Jordan B. Peterson has done just that. Cometh the hour, cometh the man, as the old saying goes, and Dr. Peterson is surely a man who has found his time. And all indications are that, behind his characteristically serious (if not slightly puzzled) expression, he quite enjoys the irritation and annoyance that his forthright statements on our current cultural climate cause the self-appointed members of contemporary Committees of Public Safety. Like Camille Paglia (who provided a jacket commendation for his latest book) he preaches that most unpopular of gospels in this age of victimhood: personal responsibility.

Direct-to-Consumer Drug Advertising Benefits Companies, but Patients Even More


Analysts at the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office recently scored Speaker Nancy Pelosi's drug pricing bill, H.R. 3.

Sharp Cuts to Research Funding Would Deprive Patients of Hope


Congress is poised to pass two separate bills designed to bring down drug prices.

America Shows How to Fight Climate Change Without Regulation


Speaking at the United Nations in December, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi drew cheers by saying the United States was "still in" the Paris Climate Agreement.

Trump's New Drug Pricing Plan Isn't "The Best Deal" For Patients


President Trump will soon unveil a new plan to reduce drug prices.

The Smart and Practical Way to Address Climate Change


Lawmakers want to fight climate change, but many of them are taking the wrong approach. Proposals to abandon fossil fuels entirely, like the Green New Deal, are both impractical and expensive.

Expansion of "Buy America" Rules Would Slow Development of Coronavirus Vaccine


Federal policymakers are considering laws that would force federal agencies to rely solely on medicines made in the United States.

Costs At the PHarmacy are Spiraling, But Price Controls Are the Wrong Solution


Congress is considering two plans to reduce high drug prices. Senators Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) have spent the past several months promoting their Prescription Drug Pricing Reduction Act. Meanwhile, Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) is pushing his alternative, the Lower Costs, More Cures Act.

U.S.-Canada Trade Must Prevail Amid Pandemic


The United States-Canada border has been closed to cross-border tourism and other non-essential travel for more than three months.

Summer 2020 COVID-19 Data in Pennsylvania: What We Don't Know


The COVID-19 coronavirus is a novel virus, and everybody who claims they have it figured out is living under an illusion. Our knowledge is growing, but it is still very fragmented. Our local politicians have been cautious because of the vast unknown; we have never been here before.

The World Can Thank President Trump for the Oil Deal


In the midst of a pandemic, President Trump was able to convince the second and third largest crude oil producing countries to voluntarily cut production. In so doing he may have saved global financial markets, the U.S. energy industry -- and the U.S. economy.