You know the party is clueless when Michael Steele turns out to be more reliable than Mitch McConnell and John Cornyn.
TAMPA— Ronald Reagan taught Republicans some priceless lessons
on how to succeed politically. Lessons about both ideology and
style. The old cowpoke showed us how to solve some of the
nation’s problems with conservative principles and policies, and
did it in a cheery, upbeat way that left voters happy and
confident about America.
When the Gipper left office in January of 1989, the Republican establishment remembered these vital lessons. For about an hour and a half.
George H.W. Bush ran in 1988 on a pledge to be Reagan III. But he soon reverted to his own form. We all remember what then happened to “Read my lips, no new taxes.” And the Federal Register under George the First soon regained the elephantine heft it sported before Reagan put the brakes on federal regulation. Since then Republican poobahs and money-men have supported countless RINOs (often against solid conservative candidates), careerists with no philosophy or soul, and other me-toos who gave us a Republican president and a Republican Congress better at spending than even the Democrats and no detectable progress on any conservative social issue. This was the lot that was routed in ‘06 and again in ‘08.
Democrats decry to every open mike they can find how conservative the Republican Party has become. If only it were so.
Considering recent history, it should come as no surprise that with what promises to become an exciting 2010 Senate primary race shaping up in Florida between a substance-free, moderate-to-liberal governor and a conservative former speaker of the Florida House, the Republican establishment has lined up to give the liberal governor a big, wet tongue kiss, and has not so subtly tried to elbow the conservative aside. These guys clearly miss Arlen Specter already, and are searching for his replacement.
They think they’ve found him in moderate-to-liberal Florida governor, Charlie Crist, who campaigned in his own state for our rookie president’s bank-busting goodie package, aka the stimulus bill. Crist has tried to get the Florida Legislature to adopt a carbon cap and trade program and to force Florida utilities into generating an unreasonable percentage of their electricity using “renewable fuels,” the kind that excite environmentalists’ erogenous zones but exist in but trifling amounts and are bloody expensive. He also wants California-like auto emissions standards that would cost a packet but provide a negligible improvement in Florida’s air.
You’ll never hear an encouraging word from Crist on any conservative social issue. He’s pro-abortion and thinks marriage-like legal arrangements between homosexuals are fine. He recently put a liberal Democrat on the Florida Supreme Court.
In Crist’s speeches, conservatives will wait in vain to hear any of their principles promoted. What they hear are endless lullabies about “bipartisanship,” “diversity,” and other warm-sounding, non-sequiturs from the Democratic hymn book. These are just the most actionable of Crist’s sins against conservative principles.
No matter. Less than an hour after Crist threw his hat in the ring last week, Senate Minority leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Republican Senatorial Campaign head John Cornyn of Texas both endorsed him. In Florida, Republican Party Chairman Jim Greer endorsed Crist. These quick endorsements came in spite of the fact that national Republican Party Chairman Michael Steele has said Republicans who’ve supported the president’s stimulus plan shouldn’t themselves be supported, and in spite of the fact that there’s another very solid Republican candidate in the Florida race. Steele said Sunday that in spite of McConnell’s and Cornyn’s premature coronation of Crist, the RNC would stay out of the Florida race until after the primary.
The “other guy” clueless Republican leaders would like to ignore is Cuban-American attorney Marco Rubio of Miami. In eight years in the Florida House he compiled a conservative voting record and has been a frequent speaker across the state on issues such as holding the line on taxes, limited government, and the importance of the family. He hit these themes and others Friday afternoon at a meet-and-greet at Crabby Bill’s seafood restaurant in Tampa.
“We’re scheduled for the largest deficit in the history of the world,” Rubio said of the stimulus package Crist fancies. Rubio was critical of the recent automaker bailouts, saying, “The jobs will be gone and we’ll still owe the money. Washington should just get out of the way.” On Obama-Care, “We shouldn’t put the government between patients and their doctors, or do anything to increase costs. There are free market solutions to health care.”
Rubio was critical of politics by poll and focus group, and critical of the Republican Party’s recent melancholy record on limited government and spending.
“America hasn’t solved a major problem in 20 years. That’s because politics now isn’t about solving problems, it’s about getting elected. Leadership and popularity are not the same thing.”
Rubio not only has a message, but he’s enthusiastic and deft in putting that message across. He gives every appearance of a conviction politician who knows what he wants to accomplish in office. His remarks went over well with the 120 or so who gathered during working hours to hear the candidate the McConnells and Greers of the world would as soon Republicans ignore. Many on hand were members of Central Florida Republican executive committees where there is considerable resentment about Greer’s attempt to announce an end to the Republican senatorial race before it starts.
In recent Republican executive committee meetings in Hillsborough (Tampa), Pinellas (St. Petersburg-Clearwater), and nearby Pasco and Hernando counties, Rubio’s campaign has generated interest, including lots of folks volunteering to volunteer. The Hillsborough committee passed a resolution objecting to Greer’s attempts to get the state party behind Crist. There have been similar rumblings in Republican groups across the state.
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The debacle of this president’s administration is both a cause and a symptom of the decline of American values. Unless Congress impeaches him, that decline will go on unchecked. An eminent jurist surveys the damage and assesses the chances for the recovery of our culture.
It won’t take long for conservatives to scratch this presidential wannabe off their 2008 scorecard.
The American Christmas, like the songs that celebrate it, makes room for everybody under the rainbow. Is that why so many people seem to be hostile to it?
Was the President done in by the economy, or by the politics of the economy?
H/T to National Review Online
Martha's Brother| 5.19.09 @ 6:57AM
We have a similar contest in New Jersey between conservative Steve Lonegan and moderate Chris Christie. Guess who the Republican establishment supports. Paul Mulshine at the Newark Star-Ledger has written some excellent articles on the rivalry.
Nick| 5.19.09 @ 7:16AM
What is with these stinking Republicans, have they learned nothing in the past 2 years?
What happened to the practice of people in leadership positions staying neutral? I remember Gingrich did this in California over 10 years ago when he endorsed Firestone (the lib) over the conservative whose name I can't recall.
This is the reason Rick Santorum lost his election. Not because of his leadership position, but because he supported S-P-E-C-T-O-R, along with President Bush. Boy, that was a great call, huh?
McConnell and Cornyn should be flogged!
Melvin| 5.19.09 @ 7:29AM
Republican Buffoons outnumber Republican leaders.
SLG| 5.19.09 @ 7:45AM
Mitch McConnell in an interview on Fox News Subday was a wimp -- the cupboard is bare, 'cept maybe for DeMint and a few others, but no one to rival the Narcissist-In-Chief or his Merry Marxists in congress anytime soon... that's for sure.
Again, I ask, where's Barry Goldwater when we need him so badly?!?
(although, like it or don't, Barry was pro-Choice and more of a Libertarian than today's "social consevatives" would accept today...)
Darin| 5.19.09 @ 7:52AM
Don't forget, John McCain was a media darling until he ran against a Democrat. Then the gloves came off the media. The same would happen to Crist and any other RINOs.
Are Republicans ever going to learn they can't be "Democrats-lite?" As a conservative, the Republican party as a whole looks to have abandoned me years ago. It appears many conservatives are realizing this fact. Note to Congress - that's why Republicans were voted out in 2006. I'd guess a good number of conservatives either stayed home or voted for someone else.
The Bishop| 5.19.09 @ 8:04AM
Don't forget that John Wilkes Booth was a moderate Republican.
Michael L. Hauschild| 5.19.09 @ 8:07AM
There really is no solution for our leadership other than the ballot box. The situation, however, can be incrementally improved by the very simple procedure of contributing to national candidates directly. I supported Bachmann of Minnesota with what I could afford while notifying the RNC of my intent and contempt. Rubio in Florida also will also be on my list.
Dave| 5.19.09 @ 8:12AM
Darin, Minnesota provides a perfect example here. The moderate, Norm Colman, could not defeat the idiot, Al Frankin, largely because 16+% went for the Democrat in sheep's clothing, Dean Barclay.
When you can't show yourself superior to a smut mouthed ignorant fool, you have have a problem.
Big J| 5.19.09 @ 8:25AM
Another back-stab from my esteemed good-ole-boy Senator from Texas.
I am ashamed to be represented by this man and RINO Hutchison.
Loosing all hope of REAL representation in
3,
2,
1....
Martha's other brother| 5.19.09 @ 9:22AM
Pat Toomey challanged Specter, Specter quit and flipped.
Now the PA GOP Establishment is looking for a candidate. Hello, Rob Gleason, It's Pat Toomey!! WAKE UP YOU KNUCKHEADS.
Gill O'Teen| 5.19.09 @ 9:24AM
Colin Powell abandoned the Republican Party last year when he endorsed obumassiah for president. Yet today the foolish leadership of the MOP (mediocre old party) prefers this traitor to Dick Cheney. Excuse me. Now in all honesty I expected nothing less from the general since he was at best a liberal pro-death RINO similar to the kennedy-clan governor of california. We do not need leaders like him or Johnny McCOIN. We need leaders who will fight for the principles of life (from conception to natural death), liberty (from government over regulation) and the pursuit of happiness. Leaders who will preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. Leaders who believe, practice and support the wisdom of the ages contained within the Holy Bible. My vote is to precious to be given to anyone less.
Bram| 5.19.09 @ 9:29AM
Another example of why all the quality Republican candidates over the next 4 years will be coming out of the states. The DC GOP is absolutely rudderless and disconnected from the general party members.
Gill O'Teen| 5.19.09 @ 9:34AM
GRAMMAR ALERT:
The final sentence of my previous post should read, "My vote is too precious to be given to anyone less." Oops.
Rearden| 5.19.09 @ 9:41AM
Again the GOP fails to recognize that their agenda should not come from inside of the beltway. What works is taking your agenda to the beltway and fighting for it. For God's sake, Obama tried as hard as he could to sound like a fiscal conservative and it worked. The GOP left me long ago and I will not support them with my vote or money until they wise up. Though it will count for little, I will go third party.
Nick| 5.19.09 @ 9:42AM
Gill O'Teen,
That's what was so disappointing about Rick Santorum, he was that candidate. Until he chose party over Life.
Anyone who ever saw one of his speeches on the senate floor during the partial-birth abortion debates knows what I'm talking about. His discription of the few hours he and his wife had with their premature baby who died in their arms brought tears to my eyes.
And then to campaign for someone like Spector in the primary, talk about infuriating. I hope he runs for governor and tries to redeem himself.
Northern Rebel| 5.19.09 @ 10:20AM
This is why I am a member of the Conservative party in New York, no longer a republican.
They'll never get another dime from me, because the republican party, not America, is what is most important to them.
They might as well merge with the democrats, and if they could run the country that way, they would make the attempt.
Michael Tomlinson| 5.19.09 @ 10:40AM
While it was unseemly for McConnell and Cornyn to jump on the Crist bandwagon and it is my firm hope that Marco Rubio wins the primary and Senate seat in Florida let us not forget that is was Ronald Reagan who gave Arlen Specter a "big wet kiss" when he first ran for the Senate (Reagan never wavered in his support for Specter). The same Ronald Reagan who granted amnesty and citizenship to millions of illegal aliens, raised Federal taxes seven times in 8 years (his support for TEFRA in 1982 led 89 House conservatives to vote against his massive and imprudent tax increase), refused to fight Iran's surrogates when they murdered US Marines and saved the PLO.
Even the Heritage Foundation, no squishy RINO think-tank, during his Presidency was disappointed in Reagan's reluctance to dismantle the Great Society and his willingness to march in step with Democrats on Social Security and other issues.
Ronald Reagan for all his eloquent conservative rhetoric and charisma was first and foremost a pragmatic politician. He realized to get any of his agenda enacted he needed to make deals with Democrats and even support moderate Republicans in Congress. Based on the current "conservative" diatribes Reagan might have even been a RINO.
Until we retake the Presidency and have a 60+ seat majority in the Senate and a solid lock on the House conservatives in office will be forced to follow the example of Ronald Reagan and be conservatives in their hearts, but pragmatists when it comes to governing.
If Ronald Reagan were alive and able he would probably refrain from endorsing Crist at this early stage, but if he deemed it the only way to defeat Democrats next November he'd be a Charlie Crist supporter just as he was a supporter of Arlen Specter (this makes Specter's betrayal even more despicable).
Either we conservatives learn to work with moderate Republicans (like Reagan did) or Clinton creature's (Carville) will be right and we'll spend the next 40 years in the political wilderness that is if there is a US left after the Democrats rape and it pillage it for their own gain.
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Gill O'Teen| 5.19.09 @ 10:58AM
Michael Tomlinson - The Israelites were forced to wander in the wilderness for 40 years before God allowed them to enter the Promised Land. They have been fighting to keep it ever since.
Think First| 5.19.09 @ 11:42AM
You see what happens when the GOP talking heads do get a hold of a good conservative. Ronald Reagan trusted these leaders to help him get his ideas done and convinced him he would get his agenda if he just played ball.
Reagan trusted them until his message and his ideas became diluted to little more than Blue Blood repeats. Let's hope and pray these clueless leaders of the current RINO party don't win. And if Rubio and Toomey can prevail against them, so much the better.
These people still labor under the idea they know better than us what we want and need. That we're just supposed to fall into step behind them while they lead the party further down the rabbit hole.
The reason they still don't seem to get it and are falling into step behind Obama's agenda instead of proving they finally got the message and grew a pair, is they think all this tea party and resurgence in Conservatism is just a phase and we'll all go back to being the mindless sheep we were before.
It's going to be up to each one of us to prove them wrong. Reagan had the ideas and the desire to fight them on whatever ground they wanted. And he did take stands against them when he felt he must. That's why there were mixed results. Let's all stop playing their game and take OUR America back. Let's get done what he wanted to but was undercut from being able to.
Paul from SA| 5.19.09 @ 11:59AM
The Republican senators are not conservatives and need to be replaced. It's because of moderate/liberal senators like John McCain, Lindsay Graham and Mitch McConnel that I am not a Republican. I saw Boener recently saying Nancy Pelosi should apologize for her statements about the CIA misleading Congress. Apologize? They should demand that she tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth today (or else), and explain, testify, resign, go to jail.... But apologize?
Obama and the Dems recently changed union financial disclosure rules. The Republicans shoud be having daily press conferences expressing their outrage at this. New CAFE standards out today? Where is the opposition? Where is the outrage? Where are the Republicans?
Where is the leadership? Mike Steele is good, but it seems he is working all by himself. Do they think that talk radio, Fox News, tea parties and some websites will do all their work for them?
Did anybody see Liz Cheney last week on several news talk shows? She was terrific. Honest, articulate, direct, tough, fearless.
notmypresident09| 5.19.09 @ 12:09PM
There should be a general rule of thumb that anyone who endorsed McCain early should be banned from Republican office. If Charlie does get elected, his first piece of legislation will be to get everyone a tanning bed so they can look like him
Howard| 5.19.09 @ 1:40PM
The sad fact is that Republicans will not get elected until people begin to see through the Democrats bullcrap. Once they realize Obama's tax cuts are a mirage, and that his regulations and schemes will impoverish them, will they vote GOP. The Republicans need to stay true to solid principles. The RINO's should not be totally abandoned, but it must be made clear that unless they agree with at least 80% of the GOP agenda, they should register as Democrats. The only people who loved the Rockefeller crowd were MSM types like Time Magazine and The New York Times. They accepted WASP country club types, but nothing else. We will not be a majority part if we are as other here have said, Democratic Lite.
batman| 5.19.09 @ 1:56PM
You forgot to mention the statist property casualty insurance scheme Crist concocted--said he was glad State Farm left Florida. You folks in Florida will be in trouble when the next storm hits.
batman| 5.19.09 @ 2:00PM
You forgot to mention the statist property casualty insurance scheme Crist concocted--said he was glad State Farm left Florida. You folks in Florida will be in trouble when the next storm hits.
Hermit| 5.19.09 @ 3:39PM
I have beeen getting calls from RNC, NRCC, NRSC.
I have told them no each time.
I have good news and bad news... the good news is I will continue to support GOP candidates the bad news (for them) is I will be directly supporting conservative candiadtes and bypassing the party.
If we all do this I suspect we will have more conservatives in leadership positions.
No more cash to the party until they listen...
Neutral until after the primary, let the voters choose.
Marc Jeric| 5.19.09 @ 3:48PM
Michael Steele in another "compassionate" wimp, just like the two Bushes - losers all. They all want the same things like the commies od the Democrat Party - just a bit slower, please.
By the way - Nanci Pelosi, born Annunciata D'Alessandro from the well known Baltimore mafia family (two mayors, both indicted fror bribery, conspiracy, etc.) - has been caught lying, as is the tradition in her family. We have the Speaker of the House from a traditional mafia family - who they will murder next?
JP| 5.19.09 @ 4:38PM
As I pointed out in an earlier post, it isn't RightWing Religious Nut jobs who've been getting waxed in the elections. Since 2006 and continuing through next year to following "moderates" have lost or will retire:
Senators Hegel, Gordon Smith, Norm Coleman, Hutchison, Dole, Chaffee, Stevens, and Gregg. McCain, a self-described moderate lost in conservative states like Florida and Indiana to a liberal. Specter, another must-have moderate switched parties.
Yet, Conservatives get all the blame. President Bush (and his father), are classic Moderates. As a matter of fact, From 2001 to 2007, it was the Golden Age for Moderates. The GOP Senate caucus, as far as I can tell, is almost 90% moderate. So much so, that it is difficult to tell them and the Blue Dogs apart.
Yet, one retured politician, a much maligned former Vice President, has gotten not only President Obama on the defenisve on many issues, but may yet bring the current House Speaker down. Yes, if Cheney is the problem I want more of him.
Despite being retired, Cheney brings fear to the liberal establisment.
JP| 5.19.09 @ 4:42PM
"The sad fact is that Republicans will not get elected until people begin to see through the Democrats bullcrap. Once they realize Obama's tax cuts are a mirage, and that his regulations and schemes will impoverish them, will they vote GOP."
But when you only have a few people with the guts to tell the voters the truth (one of them isn't even a politician), the truth gets buried. I suppose until a large group of voters are unemployed things will remain the same.
cc Goldwater | 5.19.09 @ 5:04PM
Some of the comments suggested where's Barry Goldwater when we need him so badly, how about cloning him? Oh no that won't due there is just too many Christian fundamentalist that would get in the way. Maybe someone should just listen again to what he said and his Constitutional beliefs and groom a future candidate, start now there is a lot of work ahead.
Jeff Nordlander| 5.19.09 @ 5:46PM
When Ronal Reagan assumed Presidency the highest effective taxe rate was 74%. Over he dramatically cut taxes and also raised them twice. The current rate is 39%. STOP WHIING ABOUT PROHIBITIVELY HIGH TAX RATES. With regard to Crist v. Rubio, Conservatives should wholeheartedly support Rubio if they want to lose another Senate seat. Go for it, then I will have to listen to one less idiot.
Blacque Jacques Shellacque| 5.19.09 @ 5:56PM
Anyone here a Facebook member? Join this group.
Hermit| 5.19.09 @ 6:28PM
Jeff
39% and rising....
That is before next year’s promised increase and before we fund healthcare and before cap and trade and before we actually face paying for the trillions the ONE is spending.
39%+7.65% plus another 7.65% (if you are self employed) plus 10% sales tax plus 5.3% state tax leaves me just about 40% of what I earn Then you take property tax plus the gas tax plus the tax on phones, electricity, tires etc.
That’s before the rates increase, how the f**k much is enough Jeff?
How much risk should I take and how many folks should I employ for 20-25 cents on the net dollar earned?
And after it is all said and done and the race is over you want half of the remainder before my kids and grand kids, from the death tax?
Jeff if you think that is fair and equitable I would really like to hear your view on what is extreme..
I am tired of pulling the wagon just so others who refuse to pull can ride..
Don't tread on me.
harrycat| 5.19.09 @ 8:09PM
Can't help but notice how well things have gone the last few years. Keep up the good work.
Real ConservativeFloridian| 5.19.09 @ 8:35PM
Sorry, but I saw Marco Rubio in action in Tallahassee. You guys have it wrong. The guy - at Charlie Crists behest - walked right off the plank on insurance reform and embraced socialism and rejected market principles. He then had the "fiscal discipline" to put into the budget pork projects galore, including a 6 figure flag football field for himself and his league in Miami.
Crist is a moderate Republican, but one who is popular and one who has cut taxes and trimmed government. Marco is an opportunist who thinks he can ride a wave of revisioninsm about his time in office.
And Marco is from Miami - which seals it for anyone north of the Iron Curtan (Dade Broward PB).
Forget it folks. Youre being had.
Spicy Joker| 5.19.09 @ 8:54PM
It's time to not only defeat RINOs like Charlie Crisp but capitulationists like Mitch McConnliberal and John Corndog.
carolinem| 5.19.09 @ 9:44PM
The Republican Party should read posts like these instead of engage in self-congratulatory fests of empty speechifying or making the round of lapdog radio talk show hosts who care nothing about the Republican betrayal of the last eight years. When the Republican Party renounces agriculture subsidies, government aid for illegal aliens and their children, Medicare/Social Security unfunded liability, bank and corporate bailouts, and deficit spending, only then will they be taken seriously again. Until then, Romney can do all the pizza event fact-finding tours he wants, and he, like other insiders, will never "get it."
Simon| 5.19.09 @ 11:26PM
Northern Rebel said: "They'll never get another dime from me, because the republican party, not America, is what is most important to them."
Yep -- and even that isn't all that important to them....
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Nick| 5.19.09 @ 11:45PM
Real ConservativeFloridian,
If you are indeed a REAL conservative from Florida, you should provide citations for your charges. You should know REAL conservatives don't believe everything anonymous posters write on blogs. We think for ourselves.
I will do my own research on Mr. Rubio, but if you want people to take you seriously, include some sources next time.
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Hi there,
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Brian| 5.20.09 @ 7:31AM
I hate to be in this position but...if Crist wins the primary I may vote Dem just to keep him out, yes he's that bad.
JPaul| 5.31.09 @ 4:44PM
Since Florida has a closed primary Crist will lose. There are many other reasons why conservatives will reject him in the primary. He also has a potential grand jury problem on the horizon concerning a land deal for one of his donors. Stanaki Land deal in Volusia County could hurt Crists and McCollums election Bids. FDEP/ DSL was negotiating to buy land from a major Republican donor Mori Hosseini. In derrogation of a court ruling (Case 05-001852) Crist and Bush and granted development entitlements on the Land (FLAWC053106) while negotiations were in process. The donor was allowed to get new appraisals and raised the asking price from 8 to 16 million. Crist then had FDEP end negotiations and asked DCA to fund the purchase through a FCT Grant reimbursement program. This allowed new appraisals to be used by the State. May 8 2009, (FCT Governing Board Meeting) DCA approved funding the purchase at the higher per acre price. FCT Director Ken Reecy, said the earlier FDEP appraisals and offers were "irrelevant" and removed them from the files prior to staff and Board review of the grant application (08-004-FF8). FDEP Secretary Mike Sole skipped the meeting and vote. AG McCollum was aware of the Johnston ruling and advises FCT. Both McCollum and Crist received donations before and since the Pioneer CDD was granted. Hosseini is among the best known Republican Donros nationally and donated over 500 k to the Bushs in the past decade. Iranian Born Hosseini spent the night in the Lincoln bedroom and has been tied to a group who provided faulty pre war Intelligence to the white house before the Iraqi War. McConnell and other republicans may have soon regret the quick endorsements here.
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