House leaders Hastert, DeLay, and Blunt must have used LBJ
tactics with Mike Pence if the Washington Post is correct
that Pence is backing down from his criticism of the uncontrolled
spending being thrown at the Gulf states. I hope that the
Post is wrong or that Pence has figured how to outsmart
the leadership. Whatever the case, Hastert, DeLay, and Blunt have
forgotten their conservative constituencies and their conservative
roots and are acting like Democrats who see their majority in
jeopardy and are trying to buy their way out of trouble. My old
friend Dave Keene usually gets it right, as he does in his latest
Hill column:
Years ago, management guru Tom Peters suggested the
slogan of many U.S. corporations might as well be "We're no worse
than anybody else." It didn't work for those businesses in a
competitive world, and DeLay's new slogan for the House
Republicans, which might as well be "We're not quite as bad as the
Democrats," isn't going to be much more effective for his party.
Washington Republicans may not care much about limiting spending or
restraining the growth of government, but the people who hired them
and sent them here do.
Ronald Reagan was elected in 1980 because he believed in people
rather than government. While he didn't always succeed, he fought
for eight years in Washington to deliver on his promises to those
who elected him. Today's Republicans ape the Reagan rhetoric, but
if their actions mean much they are as different from Reagan as the
Republican liberals he vanquished in the early '80s.
Don't you miss Ronald Reagan as much as I do?
topics:
Business
About the Author
Alfred S. Regnery is the publisher of The American Spectator. He is the former president and publisher of Regnery Publishing, Inc., which produced twenty-two New York Times bestsellers during his tenure. Regnery also served in the Justice Department during the Reagan Administration, worked on the U.S. Senate staff, and has been in private law practice. He currently serves on several corporate and non-profit boards, and is the Chairman of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute .
His first book, Upstream: The Ascendance of American Conservatism, was published in 2008. The book has been praised as one of the best authoritative accounts on the history of the American conservative movement.