By Larry Thornberry on 5.19.09 @ 6:08AM
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.
The Republican muftis doubtless like Crist because he has the
appearance of a winner. After two years in office Crist still has
approval ratings in the sixties. He's about as popular among
Democrats and independents as among Republicans, largely because
he often sounds like a Democrat. This is the reason Crist gets
better press treatment than most Republicans. If the election
were next week, Charlie would likely beat Rubio and any of the
Democrats likely to seek that party's nomination. Of course, the
race isn't next week.
Charlie is a charming fellow who knows how to work a room, and
has floated from one Florida office to another on an engaging
smile, a few populist bromides, a great tan, and the ability to
convince voters he has their best interests at heart and knows
how to make their lives better. He is in fact empty political
calories. He's accomplished next to nothing in the many Florida
offices he's held, none of them for long before he was seeking
the next office. The only thing he's worked hard at, or seems
really committed to, is keeping himself in office.
But populists often fall quickly when voters finally discover
there's no there, there. This may happen with Charlie. Florida
has serious problems about which Crist has done little in his two
years as governor. So the muftis' sure thing of today could be
problematic a year from now. And a candidate with real
conservative principles could look pretty appealing in a state
that has traditionally supported conservative candidates, the
deliriums of the recent presidential race notwithstanding.
During the war Dwight Eisenhower said that De Gaulle, supposedly
on the same team, caused him more trouble than Mussolini did.
Right now Republican "leaders" are causing Rubio more trouble
than the Democrats. Looking at his record through the post-war
years, le Grand Charlie never did figure out what team he was on.
Perhaps Jim Greer still can.
Listen up Jim, this isn't complicated. The sequence goes in this
wise: primary first -- then close behind a candidate. Not the
other way around.
topics:
Charlie Crist, U.S. Senate Races 2010, Marco Rubio