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Republicans

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

GOP Rebukes Bachmann's Census Boycott Plan

I don't know why Bachmann amuses me so, but she does.  Even her own party is embarrassed by her -- so much so that they're now going public.  From Think Progress:

Bachclown Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) has been bragging about the fact that she plans not to answer Census questions this year, which is a violation of federal law punishable with a fine up to $5,000. Bachmann has been mocked by Stephen Colbert and criticized harshly by the largest Minnesota newspaper for her conspiratorial stance.

Now, in the latest rebuke of her off-the-wall claims about the Census, three out of the four House Republicans on the subcommittee that oversees the Census have released a statement calling her boycott plan “llogical, illegal and not in the best interest of our country”:

“Boycotting the constitutionally mandated Census is illogical, illegal and not in the best interest of our country,” Reps. Patrick McHenry (N.C.), Lynn Westmoreland (Ga.) and John Mica (Fla.), members of the Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on Information Policy, Census and National Achieves, said in a statement Wednesday.

“[A] boycott opens the door for partisans to statistically adjust Census results,” the trio’s statement said. “The partisan manipulation of census data would irreparably transform the Census from being the baseline of our entire statistical system into a tool used to wield political power in Washington.”

According to Roll Call, the three Republicans “approached Bachmann privately over the past few weeks and asked her to stop the boycott,” but “decided to go public because Bachmann appeared unfazed by their request.” Bachmann pushed her boycott plan on Monday in an interview with Sean Hannity.

Census officials have been meeting with Bachmann to try to talk her down from her illogical concerns. CongressDaily reports that McHenry even “showed her printed census materials in the attempt to dispel her fears.” But she remained skeptical. A GOP source said, “As long as Fox News keeps calling, she’s going to keep going.”

Love that last quote.

As Stephen Colbert quipped, maybe it's a good thing that Bachmann is boycotting the census count.... because she would probably include the voices in her head as household members.

On this subject, Steve Benen adds today:

Bachmann talked to Sean Hannity on Fox News last night about her anti-census crusade, and returned to one of her favorite arguments: "Sean, you know the one question they don't ask? They [don't] ask, 'are you an American citizen?' ... [T]hey could at least ask if we're an American citizen? They don't bother to ask for that. That's why I think people need to read this census for themselves. If you go to my website, michelebachmann, you can read it."

Good idea. If you take Bachmann's advice, visit her website, and read the census, you find the American Community Survey put together by the Census Bureau. Question #7 reads: "Where was this person born?" Question #8 reads, "Is this person a citizen of the United States?"

Bachmann probably should have noticed this before repeatedly going on national television, pleading with people to read the census questions, and railing against the absence of a question that's already there.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Could Bachmann Wingnut Herself Out Of A Job?

The Star Tribune of Minneapolis raises an interesting point in its editorial bash of The World's Dumbest Politician (tm), Michelle Bachmann:

At the very least, the census statements call Bachmann's strategic judgment into question. She may be setting in motion events that could substantially hurt her home state and potentially cost her the office she occupies.

The 2010 census will likely determine whether Minnesota loses one of its eight U.S. House seats; population determines seat allocation. Political experts agree that a few thousand people not filling out census forms may be all it takes for the state to lose a congressional advocate in the nation's capital. If Minnesota were to lose a congressional seat, Bachmann's district appears to be candidate for absorption.

That would be the ultimate irony.

Of course, if conservative wingnuts follow the advice of Bachmann and Glenn Beck and refuse to fill out the census for fear of some government conspiracy or something, the end result is that they won't be counted, which means they will have less representation when it comes time to apportion districts and set the number of representatives at the state and national level.

So... good.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Bachmann Follies [UPDATED with Video]

Yay!  Our favorite Worst Politician In The World (tm) is back in the news with some more batshit insanity.

Last week, Rep. Michelle Bachmann (R-MN) said that she would refuse to complete the census when it rolls around next year (which is a crime, by the way). 

Today on Fox News, she explained her reasoning:

"Take this into consideration. If we look at American history, between 1942 and 1947, the data that was collected by the Census Bureau was handed over to the FBI and other organizations at the request of President Roosevelt, and that's how the Japanese were rounded up and put into the internment camps," said Bachmann. "I'm not saying that that's what the Administration is planning to do, but I am saying that private personal information that was given to the Census Bureau in the 1940s was used against Americans to round them up, in a violation of their constitutional rights, and put the Japanese in internment camps."

Right.  She's not saying that the Obama Administration is going to put people into forced camps.  At least not now.  She doesn't have to say it here and now.  Because she's already said it.

Video:

Think Progress dissects:

There are many things wrong with Bachmann and host Megyn Kelly’s so-called analysis: First, both women were shocked that the Census would ask for people’s telephone numbers. However, that information is not required by law, and is used only to contact recipients who have incomplete forms.

Second, Bachmann is confusing the 2010 Census and the American Community Survey (ACS), a long-form survey sent out to one in 40 households (0.0028 percent of the American public) each year. The Census, sent out once every ten years, asks only about one’s age, race, and the type of home one lives in. The ACS, started in 1996, collects more detailed data used to distribute more than $300 billion in federal funds to local communities.

Most importantly, the questions that Bachmann is so concerned about — questions she suggests might somehow lead to internment — are not new questions (not to mention they frequently overlap with information given to the IRS every year). Census questions on race have been asked since 1790; home language since 1890; rent since 1880; and income since 1940. The Census has asked what kind of heating fuel heats Americans’ homes since 1940.

Finally, it’s a federal crime for any Census worker to violate the confidentiality of the Census form, punishable by a federal prison sentence of up to five years, a fine of up to $250,000, or both.

Sanford Fallout

It really really looks like the GOP is revving up to cut ties with the religious right now.  The Sanford Affair seems to have provided the opportunity to do this.  Why do I think that?  Well, the mainstream media is covered with stories about the downfall of social conservatism.  And then there's quotes like this:

South Carolina Rep. Bob Inglis... sees an opening for the Republican Party, a chance to “lose the stinking rot of self-righteousness” and “to understand we are all in need of some grace.”

That's a remarkable quote when you consider that Inglis made a name for himself "in the late 1990s as one of Bill Clinton’s most zealous pursuers, an impeachment 'manager' who attacked the moral failings of the president with a gusto".

A transformation of Inglis?  No, he says.  He's just as religious as ever.  In fact, he claims to be more attuned to the Gospels compared to the days when he was railing against Clinton's indiscretions:

“They want me to walk around saying I am the paragon of virtue,” Inglis said. “But that is unrecognizable to the Gospels.”

A little late to the party, but welcome.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

GOP Sex Scandal Flow Chart

I know.... so many... it gets confusing...

Sex-scandal-flow-chart 

H/T TPM

It's 2:15 PM. Do You Know Where Your Governor Is? [UPDATE: He Confesses]

Gov. Mark Sanford is late for his 2:00 pm news conference to explain his whereabouts and odd behavior these past six days.

Except he hasn't shown up yet.

Probably on the Chisholm Trail, I'm guessing.

Picture 20 UPDATE (2:25 pm): Okay, here he is. He's basically apologizing to his wife, kids and staff for just disappearing like that.

2:27 pm:  Now he's holding back tears.  Saying how he's let people down.  Including his in-laws.  Not exactly saying what he did to let them all down.

2:27 pm:  Now apologizing to people of faith.  Still not explaining what he's ap[ologizing for.

2:30 pm:  BOOM!  There it is!  "I've been unfaithful to my wife".  Developed a relationship with a woman from Argentina.  Began as an innocent email exchange.  Lady in the background behind him gave a "WTF?!?" head turn when he said that. [NOTE: I called it when I first wrote about it: "I smell Republican sex scandal"]

2:32 pm: Going to resign as Chairman of Republican Governor's Association.

2:38 pm: Sanford is explaining that he went to Argentina on this trip was essentially to break off or end the relationship with the woman in Argentina and that he's committed to trying to reconcile with his wife.

And that's all there is to write.  He's still talking and there's still question time, but the rest is just epilogue.  One could take the stance that this is a private, not public, matter, but his behavior this past week makes that argument a non-starter.

Some may want to give him credit for his standing up there, owning up to his mistake, being earnest, blah blah blah, but I can't help but wonder what he would be saying had he not been caught by a reporter in the Atlantic airport where he just debarked from a flight from Argentina.  Would he still be spouting the Appalachian trail story?

Whatever kudos can be given to his newfound earnestness, the affair itself (or even the ending of it, as he claims) doesn't excuse leaving an entire state rudderless for several days.  Nor does it excuse the hypocrisy from this "family values" political figure.

LATER THOUGHT:  Perhaps this webpage should come down....

EVEN LATER THOUGHT:  Less than a month ago, the right blogsphere was all agog at the "scandal" of Obama taking his wife to NYC for a date (a Broadway play).  Not to mention their constant party line that gay marriage creates family instability.  Wonder what they have to say now?

Who Do Americans Trust To Handle Terrorism?

For decades, the American people believed that the Republican Party, despite whatever else they may lack, was the go-to party on issues involving national security and terrorism.

A CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll from 2002 said that 57% of Americans felt Republicans were better on handling terrorism (only 22% favored Democrats).

An NBC/WSJ poll from 2002 said that 49% of registered voters preferred Republicans to deal with terrorism (compared to 13% for Democrats).

A Fox poll from 2003 had similar results: 53% favored Republicans; 19%  favored Democrats.

In all cases the spread was 35-40 points, Republicans beating Democrats.

No more.  ABC/WaPo poll this week asked:

Who do you trust to do a better job handling the threat of terrorism — (Obama) or the (Republicans in Congress)?

   Obama: 55%

   Republicans in Congress: 34%

Looks like the GOP no longer has the edge on the subject of terrorism either.  It sum, this graph compiles the poll on the "trust" issue:

ABCWaPo 

With that much approval on the issues, it is hard to understand why Obama is having such a hard time getting certain things like health care reform approved.  In fact, it's hard to tell why he's even bothering to be partisan.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Missing Governor Sanford: The Plot Thickens

From Greenville SC TV:

WYFF News 4 has received exclusive information from sources who say they have information about Gov. Mark Sanford's whereabouts during a mysterious absence over the past several days.

Sanford's wife Jenny said she last talked to him on Thursday, and though she didn't know where he is, she said she wasn't concerned. She said he had left to have time to write.

Joel Sawyer, communications director for the governor's office, then said the governor had been on the Appalachian Trail. Sawyer said staffers heard from Sanford on Tuesday morning and the governor plans to return Wednesday.

Sawyer said the governor is surprised by all the attention.

On Tuesday, sources told News 4's Nigel Robertson that a state vehicle is missing and was tracked down, not to the Appalachian Trail, but to the Hartsfield-Jackson Airport in Atlanta.

Sources told Robertson that a federal agent spotted Sanford in the airport boarding a plane. Robertson was told that the governor was not accompanied by security detail.

Sanford has been out of reach for more than four days, including Father's Day.

Sawyer has emphasized that the governor was hiking on the Appalachian Trail and that it wasn't something the staff or Jenny Sanford were concerned about.

But sources told WYFF News 4 that the federal agent who spotted Sanford saw him at the Atlanta airport, which is about 80 miles from the start of the trail.

WYFF News 4 has not yet confirmed where the plane was going or how the governor got to the airport, but it is clear there are two very different stories.

News 4 called the governor's office, and was told again by staffers that they stand by their original statement that the governor is hiking the Appalachian Trail. They did not want to comment on this story.

I go back to original theory -- sex scandal.

And don't say he flew from Atlanta to someplace on the trail.  He could easily fly from Columbia, SC.  Or drive.  The only reason to fly out of Atlanta is if you are going someplace far away and you want to fly nonstop.

BONUS:  CNN quotes his wife, who still hasn't heard from him, as saying:

"I am being a mom today. I have not heard from my husband. I am taking care of my children."

I guess it depends on the tone, but Notice how she said “my” children. Ouch… maybe we have a little Jon and Kate Gosselin situation here.

Nobody's Down With The GOP

Ugly numbers from the latest Daily Kos/Research 2000 poll:

REPUBLICAN PARTY

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 24 71 5
MEN 32 63 5
WOMEN 16 79 5
DEM 5 94 1
REP 70 22 8
IND 15 78 7
OTH/REF 19 76 5
NON VOTERS 14 81 5
WHITE 31 64 5
BLACK 3 94 3
LATINO 8 86 6
OTHER/REF 9 84 7
18-29 9 87 4
30-44 35 59 6
45-59 21 74 5
60+ 23 72 5
NORTHEAST 8 90 2
SOUTH 45 47 8
MIDWEST 18 78 4
WEST 20 76

4

 
Let's put that in graph form, so you can see the breakdown by race:
 
Race 
Josh Marshall notes that the Republican Party may have structural impediments in place that will make progress with minorities difficult.

The only problem is that the modern Republican party's panic switch, or at least one of them, is rancid jingoism and more or less open anti-Hispanic (though often specifically targeted at Mexicans) prejudice. Or, to put it more bluntly, as with African-Americans, it's tough to be the party of the blacks and the racists at the same time. (Not that the Dems didn't try it for a few decades in the middle of the 20th century -- but it didn't end up panning out.)

One might imagine an alternative universe in which gays were not only an increasingly open and powerful political constituency but also one that was growing rapidly in population terms. And you'd have Republicans wanting to cultivate support among this growing group but also episodically bashing them to consolidate support among base conservative voters.

In other words, it's not a mistake or incompetence or any lack of planning that has Republicans in such a bad position with Hispanics, America's fastest growing ethnic group. It's just that people who are hostile to Hispanic immigration and just Hispanics in general are one of the GOP's key constituencies. That puts some real obstacles in the way of becoming the party of Hispanics.

Mystery Solved?

See update on Governor Sanford story below....

FUN FACT:  If the governor truly is in fact enjoying the Appalachian Trail, one might point out that the trail got stimulus money -- money that the governor himself opposed.  Read more.

ANOTHER FUN FACT: Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) -- yes, that John Ensign -- disappeared for two weeks in 2002 citing personal reasons. When he returned to the Senate, he offered no explanation for his absence.  Just sayin'....

AND STILL ANOTHER:  The governor was "hiking" on Naked Hiking Day

Monday, June 22, 2009

Odd Story Out Of South Carolina

Probably nothing, but still...

The whereabouts of Gov. Mark Sanford have been unknown to state officials since Thursday, and some state leaders are questioning who is in charge of the executive office.

Neither the governor's office nor the State Law Enforcement Division, which provides security for governors, has been able to reach Sanford after he left the mansion in a black SLED Suburban SUV, said Sen. Jake Knotts and three others familiar with the situation but who declined to be identified.

Sanford's last known whereabouts were near Atlanta, where a mobile telephone tower picked up a signal from his phone, authorities said.

First lady Jenny Sanford told The Associated Press today her husband has been gone for several days and she doesn't know where he is.

His wife doesn't know where he is? Neither do the state officials responsible for his security? And weirdly, both the governor's personal and professional phones have been turned off, and messages have gone unreturned since Thursday.

The governor's wife said the governor needed some time away "to write something." Sanford's office issued a statement today saying that Sanford decided to "recharge" after the legislative session, and has decided to "work on a couple of projects that have fallen by the wayside."

South Carolina's lieutenant governor said he also didn't know where Sanford is, but added that he has not been given any temporary power.

Wonder what's up.... peculiar behavior for a 2012 presidential candidate.

I smell Republican sex scandal.

NEXT DAY: Mystery solved.  He's on the Appalachian Trail.  Although, it's still a little odd...

(1)  Staff and wife didn't know where he was

(2) Wife said governor needed time away "to write something".  Really?  On the Appalachian Trail?

(3)  Saying that you're at "the Appalachian trail" is odd.  The dame thing runs from Maine to Georgia.  Most people go to a part of the Appalachian Trail, like "Mt Washington", or Great Smoky National Park.

(4)  When this issue was raised, SC spokesmen said that his cell phone suggested that he was in the vicinity of Georgia.  That suggests that somebody had already inquired about the governor and had conducted some sort of cell phone trace.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

The State of The GOP

A revealing USA Today/Gallup poll came out this morning.

One of the findings? "One-third of Republicans now say they have an unfavorable opinion of their party."  That doesn't bode well (by contrast, only 4% of Democrats have an unfavorable opinio of the Democratic Party".

But more importantly, Republicans acknowledge their huge power vacuum. A 52% majority of those surveyed couldn't come up with a name when asked to specify "the main person" who speaks for Republicans today.

And who was the top response?  Rush Limbaugh.  But he had only 13%.

Those figures bear little comment.  The GOP is divided and rudderless.  Which probably accounts for why som many Republicans have a negative opinion about the party itself.

Monday, June 08, 2009

"It's Not The Tool; It's What You Do With It"

For some reason, Republicans still think that they can crawl their way back up to the political mountaintop... by (among other things) using Twitter.  Slate covers the annual conference of the College Republican National Committee (where future Republicans are born -- see Karl Rove and Lee Atwater):

According to those headlining the conference, who ranged from the baby-faced Rep. Aaron Schock, 28, to the rapidly fossilizing Phyllis Schlafly, 75, the party needs to diversify. Get back to principles. And, oh, use Twitter.

***

The group is also working on its technological chops, which outgoing president Charlie Smith told me should be the CNRC's No.1 priority going forward. David All, of the eponymous conservative media consulting group, tried to persuade a less-than-capacity crowd that Twitter was the future. "That's the thing that we need to embrace and evangelize every single day," he said. "We have a massive opportunity to grow the pie of conservatism because of the quickness of Twitter and because everyone is jumping on board."

When he asked who was on Twitter, about half those assembled raised their hands. Only a couple—including Charlie Smith—used the #crnc tag. One member piped up skeptically: "What is Twitter? I don't get it, I use it kind of begrudgingly."

Steven Benen is right about this:

It's all very silly. For one thing, party leaders continue to confuse the technology with the substance behind it. College Republicans can have a Twitter account with plenty of followers, but if the group doesn't have a compelling message to share, it won't make any difference. It's not the tool, it's what you do with it.

For another, party leaders who already embrace Twitter seem to be extraordinarily bad at it. Just ask Chuck Grassley, Newt Gingrich, Mark Shurtleff, Pete Hoekstra, Jeff Frederick, and Jim Tedisco.

UPDATE:  As for the GOP diversity, they still can't decide whether to let Palin into the tent.

Monday, June 01, 2009

Gallup States The Obvious

Gallup headline:

Republican Base Heavily White, Conservative, Religious

Democrats are more likely to be moderate or liberal, Hispanic, or black or other races

But there is a nice revealing chart:

Compogop 

I'm sure the opposition to Sotomayor's going to help with the GOP's appalling appeal to minorities.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Dear Michael Steele

I read your article in Politico.  I see you were trying to strike a theme:

Republicans have engaged in some healthy soul-searching since Election Day, trying to come to grips with our minority status and debating the best way forward....

To accomplish this goal Republicans are turning a corner in three important ways: First, the Republican Party will be forward-looking – it is time to stop looking backward...

Republicans are emerging once again with the energy, the focus, and the determination to turn our timeless principles into new solutions for the future...

Okay.  Forward-looking, future-oriented.  Got it.

So I hit a wall when I read this, toward the end of your article:

The Republican Party has turned a corner, and as we move forward Republicans should take a lesson from Ronald Reagan.

Eeeeeeeerp! *CRASH*

Reagan?  Who became president a generation ago?  Reagan?  That's "forward-looking"?

Care to 'splain?

Again, we’re not looking back – if Reagan were here today he would have no patience for Americans who looked backward.

That has to be the most unintentionally funny-in-an-ironic-way statement I've read in ages.  Dude, you're invoking a long-dead, hopeless irrelevant Ronald Reagan to support your thesis of not looking backward!

Fail.

In order to go forward, the Reagan worship has to stop.  A few weeks ago, Jon Chait explained that the conservatives' approach too often consists of "latching onto an old president, glossing over the reality of his record, and trying to recreate all of his actions whether or not they have any bearing upon the circumstances of the present day.... The 'philosophical content' of Reagan-worship is a cult-like process for circumscribing original thought."

Indeed. And it shows no signs of letting up.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

No Wonder Conservatives Hate Science

Because science hates them.  Here's the abstract from a recent issue of a scholarly journal called Intelligence, describing a study funded by the National Institute of Education:

Conservatism and cognitive ability are negatively correlated. The evidence is based on 1254 community college students and 1600 foreign students seeking entry to United States' universities. At the individual level of analysis, conservatism scores correlate negatively with SAT, Vocabulary, and Analogy test scores. At the national level of analysis, conservatism scores correlate negatively with measures of education (e.g., gross enrollment at primary, secondary, and tertiary levels) and performance on mathematics and reading assessments from the PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment) project. They also correlate with components of the Failed States Index and several other measures of economic and political development of nations. Conservatism scores have higher correlations with economic and political measures than estimated IQ scores.

Ouch.  That's gonna leave a mark.

A conservative tries to spin the study, trying to make it NOT say that conservatives are stupid:

But there’s a more basic reason the conservatism-is-stupid argument does not actually follow from this research. As long as smarter people are more likely to be skeptical of tradition, then full-blown rejection of tradition will almost inevitably be associated with higher IQ, even if a majority of smart people still favor traditionalism.

Ummmmmm, what?  Okay, whatever, but the study has nothing to do with acceptance or rejection of traditionalism.  It has to do with cognitive ability.  Conservatives have lower cognitive abilities and less education, period.  That's what the study found.

On a related note, the people at the National Organization for Marriage (who provided that wonderful "The Gathering Storm" ad a couple of months ago), have a new ad.  Pay particular attention to the final image (and if you need help), read below the fold.

 

Continue reading "No Wonder Conservatives Hate Science" »

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Demonization Politics

The Republicans are taking it to a whole new level.  It's one thing for a politician or blow-hard Fox News pundit to name-call, but when the party unites to officially rebrand its adversary, that's an entirely different thing:

A member of the Republican National Committee told me Tuesday that when the RNC meets in an extraordinary special session next week, it will approve a resolution rebranding Democrats as the “Democrat Socialist Party.”

When I asked if such a resolution would force RNC Chairman Michael Steele to use that label when talking about Democrats in all his speeches and press releases, the RNC member replied: “Who cares?”

...Exercising a rarely used party rule that allows any 16 RNC members from 16 different states to demand a special meeting, conservatives in the party forced Steele’s hand, and now the special meeting will be tacked onto the end of a previously scheduled meeting of state party chairmen that will convene next week at National Harbor outside Washington.

Democrats are rejoicing.  This is exactly the kind of over-the-top rhetoric which has propelled the Republican Party into disrepute and oblivion.

I mean, think about it.  How wise is it to tell the majority of the American electorate that they voted in "socialists"?

It also cements the reputation of the Republican being nothing more than anti's.  No solutions.  No new ideas.  Just always being negative.

The leader of the "Democrat Socialist" rebranding effort, Indiana RNC member James Bopp, Jr., sent an memo around further explaining its purpose. Here's a pertinent passage:

The threat to our country from the Obama administration cannot be underestimated. They are proceeding pell mell to nationalize major industries, to exponentially increase the size, power and intrusiveness of the federal government, to undermine free enterprise and free markets, to raise taxes to a confiscatory level, to strap future generations with enormous unsustainable debt, to debase our currency, to destroy traditional values and embrace a culture of death, and to weaken our national defense and retreat from the war on terror. Unless stopped, we will not recognize our country in a few short years.

See, the problem with this over-the-top rhetoric -- "we will not recognize our country in a few short years" -- is that when life in America doesn't appear to most as bleak "in a few short years", the Republicans look like jackasses.

Thursday, May 07, 2009

GOPosaur

Goposaur_xlg I haven't written about it much lately, but I am constantly fascinated by the Republican party's attempts to "re-brand" themselves.  It's really an interesting social-psychological phenomenon.

The whole GOP implosion is the result of a rift which simply gets wider as each day progresses.

What is going on -- in case you're not following it -- is a struggle between two opposing contradictory forces carried by (a) those who demand that the party remain ideologically pure and (b) those who want to make the party's tent bigger.

Call it The Purists vs. The Big Tenters.

The Purist camp is embodied best by Rush Limbaugh who argues that the GOP has lost the last two election cycles because it has catered too much to moderates, thereby weakening its appeal to the hard-core.  There's nothing to support this and everything to support the opposite -- even Republican pollsters agree.  But that doesn't deter Rush, who is none too squeamish about purging the partyof so-called RINOs (Republicans in Name Only), as he did this week when he flatly recommended that Colin Powell "join the Democrats".

The Purist camp is also embodied by religious right groups.  And although (frankly) their political clout is mediocre compared to what it once was and their ability to set the agenda is diminished, they still carry a significant amount of voters within their ranks.

The Big-Tenters are typically moderates who recognize that some of the GOP stances, particularly on social issues like gay marriage, are increasingly becoming turn-offs to the general electorate (which has moved noticeable left in the past five years), especially the younger demographic.  Arlen Spector, for example, realized that the GOP is so out-of-touch with the majority of voters in his district that he would do better next election running as a Democrat.  So he abandoned his party, much to the Purists' delight.

Other Big Tenters include Colin Powell, who not only is moderate on many issues, but is strongly against the Purist spokesmen, noting that people like Rush Limbaugh "diminishes the party and intrudes or inserts into our public life a kind of nastiness that we would be better to do without."

The battle lines have been drawn, and there lacks a strong GOP leader to heal the divide.  So what you have are these two camps, Republicans picking sides, with a handful trying to do the impossible task of having one foot in both.

Who is winning?  Right now, it looks like the Purists have the edge, especially with the defection of Spector which, although voluntary, was effectively a purge by the far right.

But the rift itselfis what is splintering the party.  An example of this phenomenon can be gleaned from reading this.

How will it all play out?  Well, that's the most interesting thing: it could go on for years, maybe decades.  And the longer it does, the more disgruntled Republican voters will become.  Disgruntled moderates will migrate slowly to the Democrats; disgruntled Purists will abandon the party in favor of the Libertarian/Ron Paul movement.

It doesn't take a genius to see that the only way the Republican Party will ever become a national party again (rather than a regional Southern-state-based party) is if it grows by reaching out to moderates.  But if that happens, it will have to do so against the will of the Purists, who will defect, negating any gains that the party might have.  [Even Joe the Plumber is looking to get out]

Put another way, Limbaugh is literally KILLING the party of any potential potency.  By seeing to it that the GOP holds true to its far right values, he and those like him are virtually ensuring that the Republican Party become a fringe party at best.

And while this internal struggle is going on, the Republican Party cannot come forth with any new ideas or even a coherent stable message -- all they can do his remain true to the tag placed on them as "the party of 'No'".

UPDATE: I'm going to expand this post based on this commentary by a former GOP congressional staffer, who cites 5 reasons why the GOP will be back "sooner than you think".

The first reason he gives is Overreach:

The Democrats are certain to overdo it on the liberalism, and that will make the Republicans much more attractive in two to four years.

I never underestimate the talents of the Democrats to screw things up and pull defeat from the jaws of victory.  But this first reason lays on the shaky assumption that Americans don't likeliberalism.  That may have been the case once, but that's far less a truism now.  Trendlines, in fact, suggest, that most Americans lean center-left.

The second reason?  Checks and balances

Unlike the parliamentary governments of Europe, where one party runs everything until they mess up, the American system actually gives a preference to both parties having skin in the game.

Actually, it doesn't.  There's nothing in the constitution about political parties at all, and that is not what is meant by "checks and balances".

He continues:

Most polls now show voters prefer a candidate who will serve as a check on President Obama's power.

I call bullshit.  I've never seen this poll question even asked, and it's interesting that there is no cite to this bald assertion.

That said, his larger point that having one party in control leads to corruption and ineffective government may be true.  But that hasn't happened yet with the Democrats, and if it does, it will be the corruption and ineffectiveness, and not some blind nebulous concern about "checks and balances", that will inure to the benefit of the GOP.

Third reason: Crisis breeds renewal

His point here is that the Republicans are in crisis, which provides the GOP (unlike the Democrats) to emerge from a phoenix from the ashes.

Quite true, but as I've noted, the search for the GOP's soul is unusually contentious for a party being out of power.  It's not going to resolve itself soon.

Fourth reason: Talent senses opportunity

Talented political entrepreneurs look to the GOP and see nothing but opportunity. The old bulls have been wiped out. The new guard is ready to start leading.

I don't doubt that either, but like I say, the "new guard" can't emerge until one side or the other of this rift ultimately prevails. 

Fifth and final reason: The Republican Party is the de facto Libertarian Party

Most people I talk to think of themselves not as Republicans or Democrats, but as libertarians. Not libertarians in the political party sense, but libertarians in a deeper philosophical sense. They tend to want government to stay out of their lives as much as possible. They tend to distrust all politicians, and when they hear someone say, "I am from the government, and I am here to help," they tend to laugh uproariously. It was Will Rogers who said, "I don't make jokes. I just watch the government and report the facts." The Republican Party does best when it seeks to reform government, to lessen the power of the bureaucrat, and to fight to give more freedom to the people. When the GOP returns to that philosophical creed -- which it will do in the face of the Obama administration's vast expansion of government power -- its fortunes will brighten again.

I'll be generous and grant the premise, but the problem is in real-world applications of that libertarian philosophy.  A party which claims to want government out of people's lives can't simultaneously have be anti-choice on abortion, or fight against gay marriage.  Yet, a significant number of Republicans won't stay within the party with those issues being taken off the agenda. 

That's the schizophrenic problem facing Republicans today -- it can't be, on the one hand, a party which wants government out of people's lives... AND -- at the same time -- be a party which intends to use the heavy hand of government to impose a certain vision of "family values" on the people.  That's a fundamental philosophical contradiction.  And I don't see any sign of that contradiction being resolved in the near future.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Don't Hold Your Breath

The Washington Post/ABC poll found 21% of Americans identify themselves as Republicans. The NYT/CBS poll put the number at 20%. NBC/WSJ also put the GOP number at 20%.

Nate Silver combines these and other polls to show party identification in this telling graph:

Partisan

That's the backdrop for this news from CNN:

Coming soon to a battleground state near you: a new effort to revive the image of the Republican Party and to counter President Obama's characterization of Republicans as "the party of 'no.'"

CNN has learned that the new initiative, called the National Council for a New America, will be announced Thursday.

It will involve an outreach by an interesting mix of GOP officials, ranging from 2008 Republican presidential nominee John McCain to Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor and the younger brother of the man many Republicans blame for the party's battered brand: former President George W. Bush.

In addition to Sen. McCain and Gov. Bush, GOP sources familiar with the plans tell CNN others involved in the new group's "National Panel Of Experts" will include:

*Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, a former national GOP chairman
*Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal
*Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney

Blog_Party_Of_No John McCain, the failed presidential candidate, and Jeb Bush, brother of the disreputed ex-president, are going to help rebrand the GOP?

Into what?  This will be interesting.

I note, however, that the distinguished panel does not include the likes of people like Sarah Palin or Mike Huckabee [UPDATE: The Politico reports that although Gov. Sarah Palin (R-AK) had been invited to the join the National Council for a New America, she has not responded to the request.] [UPDATE SIDEBAR:  Follow Sarah Palin on her new Twitter account!!!!]  I suspect that if the panel does anything concrete (big if, there), it will be to abandon social conservatives and wave goodbye to the GOP's stances against gay marriage, and maybe even abortion.

Though the letter announcing the National Council promised an "open policy debate" with "not a Republican-only forum," Cantor disputed the notion that the initiative is actually a move to shift the party away from far-right ideas. Speaking on CNN last night, Cantor admitted it is "not so much a rebranding effort," but an avenue to "begin to lay out the solutions that Republicans have."

More likely, the new GOP "brand" will be just the old one -- emphasizing tax cuts, tax cuts, spending cuts, and tax cuts.

Of further interest: Conspicuously absent from the list of Republican heavyweights participating in the effort is current RNC Chairman Michael Steele. Steele was elected on a platform to rebrand the GOP, promising an "off the hook" public relations campaign. But after a string of missteps, conservatives are now pushing a resolution to revoke the Chairman's power to dole out money.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Bachmania!

Time to spread a little lovin' once again to "America's Worst Legislator"TM, Rep. Michelle Bachmann (R-MN).


First of all, she weighs in with her thoughts about the swine flu pandemic alert:


"I find it interesting that it was back in the 1970s that the swine flu broke out then under another Democrat president Jimmy Carter," said Bachmann. "And I'm not blaming this on President Obama, I just think it's an interesting coincidence."


Interesting coincidence?  How?  If you're not blaming this on President Obama, then what is your point, Congresswoman?

Oh, and by the way, the swine flu outbreak occured in 1976.... under President Gerald Ford.

And earlier this week, Bachmann took the House floor to give a speech:



"As a matter of fact, the recession that FDR had to deal with wasn't as bad as the recession Coolidge had to deal with in the early 20s. Yet, the prescription that Coolidge put on that -- from history -- is lower taxes, lower regulatory burden, and we saw the 'Roaring 20s,' where we saw markets and growth in the economy like we'd never seen before in the history of the country. FDR applied just the opposite formula. The Hoot-Smalley Act, which was a tremendous burden on tariff restrictions. And then, of course, trade barriers, and the regulatory burden and tax barriers. That's what we saw happen under FDR that took a recession and blew it into a full-scale depression. The American people suffered for almost ten years under that kind of thinking."


Now, what is interesting about this is that she was reading from a prepared script, so she obviously had done some research.  

Or maybe not.

First of all, there was never such a thing called "the Hoot-Smalley Act".

Secondly, "a tremendous burden on tariff restrictions"?  What the fuck does that mean?

Now, there was something passed during the Great Depression called the Smoot-Hawley Act, and it did exacerbate the bad economic conditions.  Except that FDR didn't pass it.  It was signed into law by Herbert Hoover, a Republican, in June 1930.  And the bill was sponsored by Sen. Reed Smoot and Rep. Willis Hawley.  They were both... yes, you guessed it... Republicans.  FDR showed up on the scene almost 3 years later, in March 1933.

Finally, the notion that "FDR took a recession and blew it into a full-scale depression" is simply false -- you don't need me to tell you how to read graphs....

Depression-GDP-output-2

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Can Wingnuttery Be Cured?

I used to read Charles Johnson of the Little Green Footballs blog.  I stopped because he was, to my mind, just another batshit crazy conservative, and his commenters were often outright racist.  Blatently, unapologetically so.

But according to The Washington Independent, something has happened to Charles as of late:

But in the early days of Barack Obama’s presidency, LGF has become better known for the various fights it picks with many on the right — including conservative bloggers, critics of Islamic extremism, and critics of Islam in general who used to be Johnson’s fellow travelers.


Johnson has blasted Fox News host Glenn Beck, promoting a video from a Beck-inspired party that shows conservatives ranting about evolution and arguing that “this turn toward the extreme right on the part of Fox News is troubling, and will achieve nothing in the long run except further marginalization of the GOP.” In response to the news that the Department of Homeland Security was watching for increased right-wing extremism — something that most of the conservative blogosphere, like most Republicans, responded to with angry ridicule — Johnson pointed to the recent arrests of right-wing terrorists and criticized bloggers for buying into “distorted claims” about the DHS report. When Obama genuflected before King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, Johnson found archival video of President Bush bowing to take a medal from the King and urged conservatives to turn down their “hyperventilating nonsense.”

This has the blogger’s peers asking themselves the same question, over and over: What the heck happened to Charles Johnson?

Either he's gone sane, or the right wing around him has gone so far afield that even Johnson can't help but take notice.

Interesting reading.

Saturday, April 04, 2009

The Wasilla Hillbillies Strike Again

Sarah Palin's sister-in-law is arrested for burglary.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Why Many People Can't Take Congress Seriously

Exhibit A.

This is Representative John Shimkus, Republican from Illinois.  He serves on the U.S. House Subcommittee on Energy and Environment, a body which considers, among other things, global warming and climate change.

Below is a clip of Representative Shimkus speaking on March 25 in the Energy and Environment Subcommittee.  He is expressing his view that global warming is not happening because..... wait for it... the Bible says so. 

That's right.  God had declared in the Bible that He would not destroy the Earth again in a flood, therefore there was no threat of worldwide flood from global warming.

Look, I'm not knocking God or the Bible.  But I do think we run into serious trouble when biblical interpretation dictates environmental policy.... or any policy coming out of Washington, for that matter.

Shimkus also believe, contra scientific evidence, that limiting CO2 in the atmosphere is a bad thing because plant life thrives on CO2.  Therefore, he says, capping Co2 emissions will kill plants.  Nice theory, but not true.

Shimkus, by the way, was aware of the Mark Foley scandal (where House Representative Mark Foley was making advances to teenage male congressional pages) years before the story broke.  He knew of it, but didn't inform anyone of it.

UPDATE:  On Republican Senator James Inhofe gets the runner-up award, for saying today on the Senate floor that global warming can't exist because his home state of Oklahoma just got a snowstorm.

I loved how he prefaced his remarks about "not getting into the science".  Yeah.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Bachmann, Again

Matt Yglesias says all that needs to be said, but the bottom line is this: Sen. Michele Bachmann does not see the difference between China making a recommendation about what currency to use as the reserve currency, and the institution of a sinister One World currency, outlawing the dollar.

It was a mistake she made two days ago, when she read about China hoping to switch to a different reserve currency.  You would have thought that someone on her staff, or perhaps someone in the Republican leadership, would have taken her aside and explained to her that she's showing her ignorance.

Fun With The GOP Budget

Like me (see post below), everyone else is laughing at the GOP budget, and their helpful graphs. 

Yes, it's spoof time.

Nate Silver has some fun:
 
Rrtr 
 
And others join in:
 
Step3 
Picture4a
 

Thursday, March 26, 2009

The Republican Alternative "Budget"

Today was the big day where Republicans were going to come out with the alternative budget proposal, because Obama was all like "Oh, yeah?  You got some better ideas??  Let's see them!" and the Republicans were all like "Okay, We will!"

So the only problem with their budget, released this afternoon to much ballyhoo and hype, is that it isn't a budget.  There is an appalling lack of things that make it resemble a budget -- not just things like deficit projections, income projections, etc. -- but also things like, uh, numbers.

That's right... it's a "budget" with almost no numbers.  I'm no economist, but one would expect a budget to have lots of those.  Shit, even Bush famously said, when he revealed the first budget of his presidency, "It's clearly a budget.  It's got a lot of numbers in it."

So what does the GOP alternative have?  Well, it's 12 pages of generalities, mostly criticizing the Obama budget (things we've heard), and giving bland statements about what the GOP would do better.

They will "undo" the stimulus bill, they say.  I don't know how you do that.  The stimulus has passed and the money is out the door and on the way to states.  But, whatever.  They will under it.

Oh, and they call it a "stimulus" bill -- in air quotes.  I guess they don't want to acknowledge that it will stimulate the economy.

What does it offer?  Oh, here's a surprise.  Tax cuts.  Tax cuts.  Mostly for the wealthy.

Predictable.

But best of all, you get helpful graphics like this, explaining the Republican budget considerations for health care.

Repubchart 

That's either a really bad flowchart, or the beginnings of a molecule.

Anyway, it's a bit devoid of specifics.  Kinda like this.

But it ain't no budget.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Why Rush Is Good For Republicans

That's the title of Ramesh Ponnuru's column in this week's Time.  I'll let you read it, but there's something in there I particularly note:

[T]he debate today has a special charge because, like the similar debate over Alaska Governor Sarah Palin a few months ago, it is tied up with questions about the future of the Republican Party.

In one camp there are those who believe the Republican Party must modernize its message to account for changing circumstances. The columnist David Brooks has called these people the "reformers." Against them are the "traditionalists," who believe that Republicans need only recommit themselves to Ronald Reagan's agenda to succeed again. (Read "Can Michael Steele Broaden the Grand Old Party?")

The traditionalists push for upper-income tax cuts. The reformers want to cut the payroll taxes paid by the middle class. Traditionalists often deny that global warming is real. Reformers just want to make sure that our answer to it is cost-effective. Traditionalists want to hold the line on government spending. Reformers think it's more important for Republicans to advocate market-friendly solutions to problems such as rising health-care costs and traffic congestion.

Limbaugh, needless to say, is a traditionalist, and some reformers have become fierce critics.

Ponnuru goes on to say that "the vast majority of conservative voters agree with Limbaugh, not the reformers, on most of these [ideological] questions".

Ponnuru is playing a semantical game here, and missing the entire problem.  Replace the word "traditionalist" with "conservative", and "reformer" with "moderate" -- because that is what he is talking about.  And then you'll recognize that, to Ponnuru and most conservatives, the Republican Party is the conservative party -- even though they don't come out and say it.

And that's their problem.  Because there are many Republicans who are not conservative, at least on many ideological issues.  Rush, therefore, is not good for Republicans; he is good for conservatives.  And conservatism, as an ideology, is dying. 

Rush and his ilk keeps the Republican party from becoming a broad-based party.  Michael Steele, a moderate, had the opportunity to expand the party, but found himself catering to the far right, and kissing Limbaugh's ring.  And now the conservatives want to expel him.  This may keep the Republican Party staunchly conservative, but will it help it win elections?

Many conservatives think all the GOP has to do is win over conservatives.  This is wildly wrong.  The GOP didn't lose conservatives in the last two elections; it lost moderates and independents.  And where do moderates and independents come down on Rush Limbaugh?  According to Gallup:

He enjoys a positive image among the majority of Republicans (although about one in four Republicans view him negatively), while having a much more negative image among independents and particularly among Democrats.

So how can it be said that Rush is good for Republicans?

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

New Blood To Lead GOP

The Republican whisper campaign to remove its own leader gets louder:

Steele May Face No Confidence Vote

Republican insiders tell Political Wire that a no confidence vote on RNC Chairman Michael Steele is likely to be called after the NY-20 special election on March 31 -- regardless of whether Republicans win the seat or not.

Katon Dawson, who came in second in the January RNC vote, is said to be quietly organizing a vote and is getting the support of several state party chairmen who want to dump Steele.

Now, Steele really is muffing things up, starting with the fact that he appears to more interested in doing TV appearances than hiring staff.

But the bigger picture is this: The Republican party is setting to dump its first African-American leader mere weeks into his tenure in favor of Katon Dawson, a member of an all-white country club.

Says a lot, doesn't it?

Thursday, March 05, 2009

Quote Of The (Yester)Day

Senator William Edgar Borah (R-Idaho):

“”I should like to see the Republican Party reorganized. … I don’t think there is any room in this country for an old conservative party. . . . Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt were liberal leaders. It doesn’t take long to shake off what you call conservatism. . . . There was a vast amount of reaction against the New Deal, but what were the people offered? . . . People can’t eat the Constitution.” 

- From a 1934 Time magazine article just after the Republicans had thoroughly lost in the 1934 elections after FDR’s takeover in 1932

Boehner's Take

Today, House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) has a Washington Post op-ed entitled "Democrats' Diversionary Tactics":

In the first two months of 2009, the Democratic Congress and the White House have spent more money than the combined cost of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and the response to Hurricane Katrina. After they doled out taxpayer dollars at such a blistering pace, the instinct of many inside the Beltway is to do what's most convenient: desperately try to change the subject by creating straw men -- called "the party of no" -- to rally against.

And in a carefully calculated campaign, operatives and allies of the Obama administration are seeking to divert attention toward radio host Rush Limbaugh, and away from a debate about our alternative solutions on the economy and the irresponsible spending binge they are presiding over. This diversionary tactic will not create a single job or help a single family struggling in today's economic crisis. And that is where our focus should be.

At the risk of being obvious, a couple of things need to be pointed out to Boehner.

(1) As I mentioned in a post yesterday, it strains credulity to pin the Limbaugh-as-de-facto-GOP-leader on Democrats.  The power vacuum in the Republican Party was not created by the Democrats, save for the fact that the American public overwhelming supported Democrats in the last election.  Nor did Democrats somehow compel Limbaugh to fill that vacuum (anyone with even a passing knowledge of Limbaugh knows that he grabbed the limelight and nobody put a gun to his head).  Nor did Democrats make Limbaugh say that he hopes Obama fails.  Nor did they invite Limbaugh to be the keynote speaker at CPAC where he rallied the conservative troops with incidiary language.  Nor did Democrats have any role in the repeated ring-kissing and apologies that noted Republicans have given to Limbaugh these past few weeks.

Sure, Rahm Emanuel and other Democrats have been asked by the media to weigh in on the Limbaugh prominence, and that has in a small way helped to keep the story alive.  But Republicans, like Michael Steele, are talking and debating about Limbaugh just as much, if not more, than Democrats.  So the idea of it being a successful "carefully calculated campaign" is giving far too much credit to Democrats, and too little credit to Limbaugh's self-aggrandizing nature.

(2)  As the Boehner sees it, Democrats don't want to talk about their economic policies, so they're talking about Limbaugh instead.  Ridiculous.  First of all, Americans largely approve Obama and his economic policies.  Why then, would Democrats want to cast the spotlight on Limbaugh, who clearly doesn't approve of those policies?

Until people like Boehner understand that they have a problem, offer something other than being the "party of no", and start looking in the mirror instead of blaming others, they're going to spend a long time in the wilderness.

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Rush Is Still Topic #1

Everyone is giving their two cents.  I guess it doesn't matter what people say, because as long as Rush occupies the center stage as the de facto leader of the GOP, the worse off it is for the GOP.
 
You can peruse the links (from Memeorandum) below, but the general landscape is this: The Republicans are divided about whether to embrace Limbaugh and his followers, repudiate Limbaugh and his followers, or try to remain on the fence.  The Democrats (with a few exceptions) are eating popcorn, enjoying the infighting (and occasionally spurring it on).
 
GOP to Michael Steele: Quiet About Rush Limbaugh or You're Fired  —  Apology to Rush Limbaugh aside, new Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele is coming under fire from his own GOP troops to shut up and focus on his job of organizing the party and raising money, not fighting with his own political kind.

Discussion: Crooks and Liars, DownWithTyranny!, Jack & Jill Politics and Hot Air

RELATED:
 
Peter Daou / The Huffington Post:
Why on Earth Are Democrats Legitimizing and Empowering Rush Limbaugh?  —  I don't buy into this ‘brilliant’ strategy of elevating Rush Limbaugh in the hopes that it will tarnish Republicans.  —  Focus relentlessly on the disastrous Bush presidency to tarnish Republicans, yes.
Discussion: CNN, FiveThirtyEight.com, Jules Crittenden, No More Mister Nice Blog, Liberal Values, skippy the bush kangaroo, Hold Fast, pandagon.net, Liberty Street, The Impolitic, Open Left and Booman Tribune
 
Greg Sargent / The Plum Line:
Limbaugh Attacks Stephanopoulos, Says ABC Falsely Reported That Eric Cantor Disagreed With “Fail” Remark  —  Okay, the Limbaugh wars have just taken yet another weird new turn — Rush is claiming that a high profile GOP leader who appeared to disagree with his professed hope that President Obama …
Discussion: Washington Monthly and The Moderate Voice
 
 Greg Sargent / The Plum Line:
Rush Refuses To Say Whether Successful Obama Fix Of Economy Would Be Good For The Country  —  Okay, as noted below, I somehow ended up in an extended email exchange with Rush Limbaugh.  In it, Rush repeatedly insisted that his desire for President Obama to fail didn't mean he didn't want the country to “succeed.”
Discussion: Wilshire & Washington and Think Progress
 
 Americans United / americansunitedforchange.org:
WHO'S THE REPUBLICAN PARTY'S REAL LEADER?
Discussion: Los Angeles Times, Associated Press, MoJo Blog Posts, Liberal Values, The Swamp, American Power and The Moderate Voice
 
 Ryan Powers / Think Progress:
Pence: ‘You Bet’ We Want Obama's Policies To Fail
Discussion: The Plum Line, The Politico, D-Day and The Huffington Post
 
David Neiwert / Crooks and Liars:   Limbaugh's excuse for hoping Obama fails — ‘Dems did it too’ — is baloney
 
 The New Majority:
LIMBAUGH AT CPAC  —  President Obama and Rush Limbaugh …
Discussion: Firedoglake, Ross Douthat, The Corner, Macsmind and NewsBusters.org
 
 Al Giordano / The Field on the Narcosphere:
Ugly and Incendiary  —  Talk radio host Rush Limbaugh began …
Discussion: Midwest Voices, Vanity Fair and The Reaction
 
 Jonah Goldberg / Los Angeles Times:
The tired war on Rush Limbaugh
Discussion: Patterico's Pontifications, Eunomia, World-O-Crap and American Power
 
 Andrew Malcolm / Top of the Ticket:
So if Rush runs the GOP, does Michael Moore head the Dems?
Discussion: TPMDC, The Moderate Voice and Comments from Left Field
 
 Chris Good / The Atlantic Politics Channel:
A ‘Rush Is the Leader’ TV Ad
Discussion: The Moderate Voice, Ross Douthat and The League of Ordinary …
 
 Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Rush, Back in the Saddle  —  The White House has decided to run against Rush Limbaugh.
Discussion: The Raw Story, The Swamp and MSNBC

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

The Right's Rush Problem

Former Bush speechwriter David Frum weighs in, anti-Rush:

Here’s Rahm Emanuel on Face the Nation yesterday: “the voice and the intellectual force and energy behind the Republican party.”

What a great endorsement for Rush! (And we know Rush is fond of compliments – listen to his loving account in his CPAC speech of the birthday lunch given him by President Bush just before Inauguration Day.)

But what about the rest of the party? Here’s the duel that Obama and Limbaugh are jointly arranging:

Well, I don't think Obama is really "arranging" to make Rush the face of the GOP.  Rush, the great grandstander that he is, doesn't need Obama's aid to do that.  But to the extent that Obama is interested in painting Rush as the face of the GOP, he is (wisely) doing so behind the scenes, letting his surrogates pick up the brushes.

On the one side, the president of the United States: soft-spoken and conciliatory, never angry, always invoking the recession and its victims. This president invokes the language of “responsibility,” and in his own life seems to epitomize that ideal: He is physically honed and disciplined, his worst vice an occasional cigarette. He is at the same time an apparently devoted husband and father. Unsurprisingly, women voters trust and admire him.

And for the leader of the Republicans? A man who is aggressive and bombastic, cutting and sarcastic, who dismisses the concerned citizens in network news focus groups as “losers.” With his private plane and his cigars, his history of drug dependency and his personal bulk, not to mention his tangled marital history, Rush is a walking stereotype of self-indulgence – exactly the image that Barack Obama most wants to affix to our philosophy and our party. And we’re cooperating! Those images of crowds of CPACers cheering Rush’s every rancorous word – we’ll be seeing them rebroadcast for a long time.

Rush knows what he is doing. The worse conservatives do, the more important Rush becomes as leader of the ardent remnant. The better conservatives succeed, the more we become a broad national governing coalition, the more Rush will be sidelined.

I don't get how that first sentence jibes with the remainder of the paragraph.

But do the rest of us understand what we are doing to ourselves by accepting this leadership? Rush is to the Republicanism of the 2000s what Jesse Jackson was to the Democratic party in the 1980s. He plays an important role in our coalition, and of course he and his supporters have to be treated with respect. But he cannot be allowed to be the public face of the enterprise – and we have to find ways of assuring the public that he is just one Republican voice among many, and very far from the most important.

I think the comparison to Jesse Jackson of the 1980s is misplaced.  Jackson was, after all, a politician (he ran an admirable campaign for the presidency in 1984, gaining 21% of the popular vote in the primaries).  Sure, Jackson was outside the mainstream, which made him both odd and have a popular following, but he was an entertainer (as Rush is).

The better comparison is: Rush is to the Republicanism of the late 2000s as Michael Moore was to the Democratic party of the early 2000s.  With one big exception, of course.  And that Rush has LOTS of influence and the ability to drive a wedge into the Republican party.

In fact, that is precisely what he is doing.

UPDATE --  James Woolcott says it better:

During its Rovian/Fox News heyday, the right tried to make Michael Moore's mug the face of the Democratic Party, hold Democrats responsible for every egregious thing Moore said or did. It only partially succeeded because Moore was too independent an operator to be seamlessly morphed with Al Gore and John Kerry. But Limbaugh bleeds Republican red. He has been glorified and embraced as the perfect Ganesh by Newt Gingrich, CPAC, and the Bush family. He is the face and mouth of the conservative movement. A mouth that has swallowed Michael Steele whole, and has room for plenty more.

Friday, February 27, 2009

An Open Letter To The GOP

Stop it. 

Stop it now. 

It's uncomfortable to look at. 

Stop trying to be cool.  Stop trying to be "hip".  Stop with "the Twittering".  Don't try to convince us that the Republican Party is "off the hook".  Don't look at the RNC chairman (an African-American) and shout, "You be da man!".  Don't be sending some "slum love" to Republican governor Bobby Jindal, thinking that, because he is Indian, you have to make some reference to Slumdog Millionaire.

Just stop it all.

I get embarrassed for you.

It's like when my mother, circa 1980, went to a ZZ Top concert.  Or me, circa today, trying to do hip-hop.  It's just too psychologically jarring and it makes people uncomfortable.

What the hell are you thinking?  Did you see Obama win, largely because of the youth vote, and figure that the reason he won was because he was "fresh" or "fly", or even "da bomb"?

Consider this: maybe -- just maybe -- Obama won the election (including the youth vote) because of his policies, which he articulated with eloquence and sincerity.  Maybe it was his seriousness about the issues facing America that won over the electorate.  Did you think that just because he was black, he was edgy or tuned in to America's youth... so now you have to do the same?

And you think engaging in ebonics on Twitter is the way to do that?

Stop it.  You're being Poochie.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Why The GOP Is Still Lost In The Woods

Daniel Larison:

It seems to me that conservatives and Republicans have assumed the GOP is the natural governing party, at least regarding the Presidency and to some extent as it relates to Congress since ‘94, which is why so many have continued to insist that America is a “center-right nation” in face of mounting evidence that it is not and hasn’t been for a while. Symbolic gimmickry does stem in part from a lack of confidence, but it is more the product of a movement and party that have ceased to understand, much less address, most of the pressing concerns of working- and middle-class Americans. The party assumes that all it needs to do is show up, push the right pseudo-populist buttons and reap the rewards, and for the most part the movement cheers. See Palin, Sarah.

But of course, the GOP is not reaping the rewards for this strategy, as working- and middle-class Americans in such places as Ohio and Indiana are becoming increasingly center-left.  Why?  They experience the income stagnation.  They experience the war.

As we all know, income stagnation is something that most conservatives and Republicans have spent years pretending was not happening, because it did not fit in with the assumption that working- and middle-class Americans were thriving as part of the “greatest story never told.” It is the failure to acknowledge and address all of these things along with the preference for using symbolic gimmickry that begin to account for the lamentable states of conservatism and the GOP. There is also the war, but movement and party have become so invested in it that I have my doubts whether they can ever recognize its role in discrediting both with the public.

So.... will conservatives adopt a new strategy?  Or will their ever-smaller numbers congregate to engage in the more-of-the-same, i.e., spewing populist rhetoric which only receives applause lines from the furthest fringes of the right?

This week is the annual CPAC (Conservative Political Action Conference) convention, typically seen as a necessary speaking place for future GOP candidates.  It's also where the rabid right can pose with cardboard cutouts of real-life cardboard cutouts -- rightwing icons like Palin and "Joe the Plumber" (In the real world, Joe the Plumber is a nobody; a non-entity that can only muster eleven people to come to his book signing).  Perhaps we can find an answer there.


That's Cliff Kincard, a writer and editor for the right-wing organization, Accuracy In Media.  That's a rather ironic name for his organization, seeing as how he is shown here touting that Obama is a communist who was not born in the United States.

And Ann Coulter hasn't even spoke yet.

This video is a perfect example of why Americans are taking Republicans less and less seriously. People are seeing conservatism as nothing more than a low-brow, ignorant, mob-inspired, tirade.

UPDATE:  Even one prominent conservative blogger laments the GOP's inability to become something new:

I’m writing this from the CPAC convention and judging from the speakers, there’s not a whole lot of recognition of the need to update the intellectual platform to accomodate a changed era.  It’s as if Jimmy Carter’s still in the White House and Roe vs. Wade was just handed down.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Rebranding The GOP ("You Down With GOP? Yeah, You Know Me!")

This should be amusing.

Washington Times:

Newly elected Republican National Committee Chairman Michael S. Steele plans an “off the hook” public relations offensive to attract younger voters, especially blacks and Hispanics, by applying the party's principles to “urban-suburban hip-hop settings.”

The RNC's first black chairman will “surprise everyone” when updating the party's image using the Internet and advertisements on radio, on television and in print, he told The Washington Times.

"Yo.  Get your GOP on, ai-ight?  I'm down with da tax cuts, and don't be steppin' with the estate-o-bizzle tax, dawg."

Seriously, I'm not sure what Steele has in mind, but I think it will be comedy gold.  Especially if it pans out like the GOP's embrace of Twitter.....and "the Google"...

UPDATE from Steve Benen:

Steele said the party needs "messengers" who can capture a "region" made up of "young, Hispanic, black, a cross section." He added, "We want to convey that the modern-day GOP looks like the conservative party that stands on principles. But we want to apply them to urban-surburban hip-hop settings.... [W]e need to uptick our image with everyone, including one-armed midgets."

"One-armed midgets"?  Dude.

Steele went on to explain his public-relations vision, saying, "It will be avant garde, technically. It will come to table with things that will surprise everyone -- off the hook."

Asked if he imagines a cutting-edge approach, Steele replied, "I don't do 'cutting-edge.' That's what Democrats are doing. We're going beyond cutting-edge."

Raise your hand if you think Michael Steele has the foggiest idea what he's talking about.

Bueller?  Bueller?

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Two Americas (What Digby Said)

I was going to blog about this, but Digby beat me to it, so I'll just pilfer her post:

If you get a chance to see the HBO Alexandra Pelosi documentary about the McCain campaign called Right America: Feeling Wronged, do it. If you ever doubted that this is actually two countries, and that there is a very real divide that is unbreachable by any single politician, you won't doubt it after you see these people. I have been hearing various versions of this crap my whole life. They never change. And their most distinguishing characteristic is that they never, ever back down.

These folks were already convinced that the election of Obama ushered in the end of western civilization and all that follows will be seen as a result of that. The inept George W. Bush never existed. (Except he saved us from the boogeyman.) I'm sure these people aren't representative of all conservatives and the film doesn't claim they are. But they sure as hell are representative of the dittoheads who pull the strings of what's left of the Republican party.

I found the documentary rather depressing.  These people patted themselves on being "real" Americans, the kind of salt-of-the-earth bread-and-butter workers who live between the East Coast and West Coast, and who keep America going.  Which is fine.  But then when they utter Hannity-like talking points -- like Obama being a Muslim, etc. -- I began to despair for this country.

Digby is correct that the people featured in the documentary are not representative of all conservatives.  But it did cause me to think -- what if there are people even more rabidly wingnutty?  People who actually take their despair about the "liberal" movement, and turn that despair into action?  Oh, wait:

It was a simple plan, he wrote, borne out of hopelessness but rooted in patriotism.

“The future looks bleak,” the ex-soldier lamented. “I’m absolutely fed up! So I thought I’d do something good for this country — kill Democrats ‘til (sic) the cops kill me.”

With what he believed to be his last pen strokes, Jim David Adkisson urged other suicidal soldiers against the “liberalism that’s destroying America” to leave their own trail of carnage behind.

“I’d like to encourage other like-minded people to do what I’ve done,” Adkisson wrote. “If life ain’t worth living anymore, don’t just kill yourself. Do something for your country before you go. Go kill liberals.”

These people scare me.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

The Partisans Cometh

A PLAY IN THREE ACTS

ACT I

(Scene: A House)

Obama: Hey guys, we could really use your input on this stimulus bill.

Republicans: Go jump in a lake, Messiah!

Pelosi: This isn’t about party, it’s about people.

Republicans: Did you guys hear something? A cackling noise?

ACT II

(Scene: A Senate)

Reid: We’ve got 3 votes! Can I get four? Bueller? Bueller?

Republicans:  Weeeee can't heeeeear you!  We're on teeeveeeee.....

Snowe: It’s no use, guys. Why don’t we go ahead and get this done tonight.

Republicans: Tough talk, but you’ll come crawling back to us tomorrow.

ACT III

(Scene: A Fainting Couch)

Republicans: Why weren’t we consulted? This is an outrage!! Wait ‘until Rush hears about this!!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Idiot Elected Leaders

From Columbus Dispatch:

U.S. Rep. Steve Austria said he supports a scaled-down federal economic-stimulus proposal, but the Beavercreek Republican told The Dispatch editorial board that the huge influx of money into the economy could have a negative effect.

"When (President Franklin) Roosevelt did this, he put our country into a Great Depression," Austria said. "He tried to borrow and spend, he tried to use the Keynesian approach, and our country ended up in a Great Depression. That's just history."

Most historians date the beginning of the Great Depression at or shortly after the stock-market crash of 1929; Roosevelt took office in 1933.

I don't care if it provides job stimulus or not; clearly there needs to be an influx of money to the Ohio education system.

Monday, February 09, 2009

Why Is The GOP Smiling? (Or "The Audacity of Nope")

To read today's Washington Post, you would get the impression that Republicans are happy with their opposition to the stimulus bill.  By fighting the popular Obama, the article suggests that the GOP is beginning its road to a comeback:

After giving the package zero votes in the House, and with their counterparts in the Senate likely to provide in a crucial procedural vote today only the handful of votes needed to avoid a filibuster, Republicans are relishing the opportunity to make a big statement.  Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Tex.) suggested last week that the party is learning from the disruptive tactics of the Taliban, and the GOP these days does have the bravado of an insurgent band that has pulled together after a big defeat to carry off a quick, if not particularly damaging, raid on the powers that be.

"We're so far ahead of where we thought we'd be at this time," said Rep. Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.), one of several younger congressmen seeking to lead the party's renewal. "It's not a sign that we're back to where we need to be, but it's a sign that we're beginning to find our voice. We're standing on our core principles, and the core principle that suffered the most in recent years was fiscal conservatism and economic liberty. That was the tallest pole in our tent, and we took an ax to it, but now we're building it back."

The second-ranking House Republican, Rep. Eric Cantor (Va.), put it more bluntly. "What transpired . . . and will give us a shot in the arm going forward is that we are standing up on principle and just saying no," he said.

Yes, the GOP is finding their voice.  A voice that just says "no" (Cue Nancy Reagan's anti-drug message, and Senator Ted Stevens).

The article contains a photograph of Rush Limbaugh, suggesting that he is the de-facto leader of the Republican Party.  What's that about? Change nobody can be believe, because it's not change.

And the last paragraph is a howler, containing a nice quote from Rep. Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.):

"This thing is a dog and it doesn't hunt," Ryan said. "Everyone thinks Washington is just going back to pork-barrel spending. You can't walk down the street in Janesville, Wisconsin, without someone trashing it."

I suppose there are a lot of disgruntled people walking aimlessly down the street in Janesville Wisconsin, seeing as how so many of them were thrown out of work when the Chevy plant (which had been there 90 years) was closed.  But I don't think they will be complaining loudly about a job stimulus bill.

In fact, it appears that most Americans are behind Obama on this.  The graph don't lie.

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That's right. by nearly a two-to-one margin, Americans do not approve the Republican attempts at obstructionism.  Republican politicians and pundits might want to hold off on popping the champagne cork.

FURTHER THOUGHT:  I suspect that both Obama and the "Democrats in Congress" approval ratings would be higher if they were a little less centrist.

Friday, January 30, 2009

RNC Leader Follies

I love the little news scrolls coming across my desk today, as the Republican National Committee seeks to elect a new chairman -- the guy who will lead the Republican Party.

The first ballot had Mike Duncan in the lead.  Mike Duncan has been the head of the RNC, which mounted massive losses in Congress in the 2006 and 2008 election (not to mention, of course, the loss of the White House in 2008).  Duncan was Bush's appointed guy, and a strong supporter of Bush policies.  So electing him would signal that the Republican Party is going to stay with the Bush doctrines, foreign and domestic.

Naturally, though, there was competition.

And by the third ballot, Mike Duncan has dropped to second place.  He then, in a surprise to many, withdrew his name.

So who became the frontrunners?  Michael Steele, noted because he is an African-American.  And Katon Dawson of South Carolina, who recently had to abandon his membership in a "whites only" country club.

Where are they now?  Given (primarily) those two choices, what is the temperature of the new "rebranded" Republican party?

After the surprise drop out of former Chairman Mike Duncan, South Carolina party chairman Katon Dawson has taken a two-vote lead over Michael Steele, 62-60.

This comes despite Duncan encouraging his voters to go with Steele, a source close to Duncan told First Read.

Anuzis moved to 31, and Blackwell remained at 15, rounding out fourth-round voting.

The winning candidate needs 85 votes to clinch. That means Dawson now needs 23 more votes, and Steele needs 25.

Duncan met with Steele privately prior to dropping out to tell him of his plans, a source said. The source added that "he likes Steele," but he's not sure that the members will all move to Steele. Many of them aren't warm to Steele, because he's not a committee member.

The source also said that Duncan pulled out because he's a "party guy" and didn't want a long, drawn-out fight.

This now is shaping up to be a fight between, fundamentally, an "insider" (Dawson) and an "outsider" (Steele). It also ironically sets up the first African American to lead the Republican Party against a party chairman from the South, who was a member of a country club that was formerly was all-white.

It would be a political embarassment to have the black guy lose; it only solidifies (perhaps unfairly) the perception that the GOP is not exactly minority-friendly.  On the other hand, if Steele (who is not only black, but more moderate) wins, what will be the response of the Republican rank-and-file?

Then again, this whole "RNC leader" selection process might just be like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

UPDATE - 3:08 pm:  Blackwell (another African-American), who was running last in the fourth round of balloting (see above), bows out and throws his support to Steele.

UPDATE - 3:30 pm: Michael Steele has re-gained the lead in the fifth round of voting for RNC chair.

Michael Steele: 79
Katon Dawson: 69
Saul Anuzis: 20

Aaaand... Anuzis dropped out without endorsing anybody. 

So the next round should be the last.  Which is good because, in his liveblog, NRO's Jim Geraghty notes that in addition to the other weighty questions hanging over this balloting for the chairman of the RNC who will lead the party out of the political wilderness ...

the RNC has to be out of the ballroom by 5 p.m. because a wedding is slated to use the room starting at 5:30.

Steele only needs to get 6 of Anuzi's forfeited 20 to win 85 votes and take the throne.

UPDATE - 4:05 pm:  It's Steele, with 91 votes.

Steele is the most moderate candidate, and (unlike Dawson) not from the South (NOTE: But he is pro-life).  And he's black.  Signs of a major shift in the Republican party.

Conservatives are becoming dust in the wind.....

UPDATE:  On Twitter, Ana Marie Cox observed, “Strong showing for Steele –widely considered a ‘moderate’ — in #rncchair suggests that Rs at least considering abandoning Palinism,” which she defined as, “[a]ggressive know-nothingism, pride in ignorance.” “It’s a diverse party. We’re tired of being labeled as white supremacists,” said a committee member from Rhode Island.

And it looks like social conservatives will be very unhappy.....

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Chart Of The Day

Just who is Republican nowadays?

Not many:

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Gallup concludes that there are only five solid Republican states — representing a grand total of 2% of the population — left in the entire country. Full report here.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

The Beast's List of The 50 Most Loathesome People of 2008

Naturally, they are mostly politicians and pundits, but the Freecreditreport.com guy makes an appearance at 40 (while "you" are at 43).

Obama is No. 50.  (Other Dems and liberals are on the list, including the Clintons, Olbermann, Caroline Kennedy, and John Edwards).

I'll save the suspense -- Sarah Palin is #1, who got this scathing write-up:

If you want to know why the rest of the world is scared of Americans, consider the fact that after two terms of disastrous rule by a small-minded ignoramus, 46% of us apparently thought the problem was that he wasn’t quite stupid enough. Palin’s unending emissions of baffling, evasive incoherence should have disqualified her for any position that involved a desk, let alone placing her one erratic heartbeat from the presidency. The press strained mightily to feign respect for her, praising a debate performance that involved no debate, calling her a “great speaker” when her only speech was primarily a litany of insults to city-dwellers, echoing bogus sexism charges when a male Palin would have been boiled alive for the Couric interview alone, and lionizing her as she used her baby as a Pro-life stage prop before crowds who cooed when they should have been hurling polonium-tipped javelins. In the end, Palin had the beneficial effect of splitting her party between her admirers and people who can read.

Bonus:

21. Michelle Malkin

It’s a remarkable achievement in unconscious projection that the author of a book called Unhinged could lose her fucking marbles over a patterned scarf in a donut ad, but that’s what Michelle Malkin did when she sounded the nutbar clarion call and sicced her half-cocked league of masturbators on Rachel Ray and Dunkin Donuts for the flatly absurd notion that they were sending a message of solidarity with Palestinians. Right, Michelle—you just can’t sell donuts without joining the intifada these days. What did the nauseously spunky Ray do to incur the wrath of the Malkinoids? She wore a black and white scarf. A paisley scarf. A scarf that was clearly not a kaffiyeh, which, by the way, is just a hat that Arabs wear, not some universal symbol of jihad. In terms of completely false outrage, the only thing that rivaled this travesty of reason this year was the “lipstick on a pig” metaphor panic. But what puts this embarrassing sham over the top is that Dunkin Donuts actually apologized and pulled the ad, rather than try to explain to the fact-phobic horde that they were just blind, raging idiots with the collective brain-power of a lobotomized howler monkey.  

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Republican's Plans To Become More Popular

They're going to get "hip":

"We have to do it in the Facebook, with the Twittering, the different technology that young people are using today," Duncan ventured.

"Let me just say that I have 4,000 friends on Facebook," contributed Blackwell, putting his hand on Dawson's and Anuzis's knees. "That's probably more than these two guys put together, but who's counting, you know?" Acknowledged Saltsman: "I'm not sure all of us combined Twitter as much as Saul."

Anuzis claimed he had "somewhere between 2- and 3,000" Facebook friends, which prompted Blackwell to remind the audience that he has 4,000 friends on the social networking.

And using "the Facebook" works how?

It's the Underpants Gnome business plan at work:

(1)  Use Twitter and Facebook
(2)  ?
(3)  Republican majorities in Congress and Republican presidents!!!

The problem with the GOP isn't their lack of youth outreach so much as they are devoid of a message to reach out to youth with.  At present, the GOP is all about following Rush Limbaugh, and debating whether "Barack The Magic Negro" is a racist parody song.  Oh, and obstructionism -- i.e., blocking any Democratic initiative or plan simply because it's a Democratic initiative or plan.

And mostly, as the article suggests, the GOP is about embracing Reagan.  Now, you tell me.  Even using Facebook and Twitter, how are you going to get young people, who weren't around in the Reagan era, to get charged about a party that reveres him like a God?

I think the GOP has many many many days ahead in the wilderness.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

GMILF?

Sarah Palin has become a grandmother.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Sarah Palin: Conservative Of The Year

According to conservative Human Events magazine, Governor Sarah Palin is the 2008 Conservative of the Year. 

And Ann Coulter has the honor of explaining why Palin is the 2008 Conservative of the Year, in an article more telling than Coulter probably imagined.

The reason why Palin is 2008 Conservative of the Year?  Apparently because she annoys liberals.  Seriously!  Read Coulter's article!  After griping about the unfair media scrutiny Palin received from the lie-beral media, Coulter can offer no reason why Palin represents the best of conservatism other than the fact that she makes liberals' heads explode.

Apparently, this is what "conservatism" means now: bugging the crap out of liberals.  Conservatism is no longer a political ideology designed to improve the life of Americans; it's now just a poke in the eye with a sharp stick.

Coulter's article reinforces the notion that conservatism has no ideological basis other than to oppose and demonize progressive politics.  Even when conservativism was in its heyday (up to and including 2004, I'd estimate), it was primarily based on opposition to liberalism, and little else.  No wonder movement conservatism is dead. 

Friday, December 12, 2008

Sing It, Colin Powell

On the future of the GOP:

Powell, who says he still considers himself a Republican, said his party should also stop listening to conservative radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh.

"Can we continue to listen to Rush Limbaugh?" Powell asked. "Is this really the kind of party that we want to be when these kinds of spokespersons seem to appeal to our lesser instincts rather than our better instincts?"

Friday, December 05, 2008

Oogedy-Boogedy: Part Deux

Columnist Kathleen Parker, a longtime GOP supporter, revises and extends her "oogedy-boogedy" remarks from a controversial column last month, in which she wrote:

To be more specific, the evangelical, right-wing, oogedy-boogedy branch of the GOP is what ails the erstwhile conservative party and will continue to afflict and marginalize its constituents if reckoning doesn't soon cometh.

Today, she acknowledge addresses what "oogedy-boogedy" means (since that's the catchphrase that caught fire and ruffled a few feathers), and adds:

How about social conservatives make their arguments without bringing God into it? By all means, let faith inform one’s values, but let reason inform one’s public arguments.

That was and remains my point. It isn’t so much God causing the GOP problems; it’s his fan club.

The broad perception among centrists, moderates, conservative Democrats, renegade Republicans, etc., is that the GOP is the party of white Christians to the exclusion of others, some of whom might also be social conservatives.

One can believe this or not. But as the gazillions who have written me to say either that “God Is Here To Stay” or that “Conservatives Won’t Be Silenced” ought best to know: Just because you don’t believe something doesn’t make it untrue.

***

As long as the religious right is seen as controlling the Republican party, the GOP will continue to lose some percentage of voters, and that percentage likely will increase over time as younger voters shift away from traditional to more progressive values.

The cause is not helped when someone of the stature of Rick Warren interviews the leading presidential candidates in his church, questioning them about their faith. If that’s not a religious test, I don’t know what is.

Yup.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Free The GOP

Another voice in the rising chorus of Republicans who think the GOP cannot survive as long as it continues to coddle the religious right.  This time from Republican Christine Todd Whitman, who served as Bush's EPA Director.  I suspect she left that post out of frustration; the Bush Administration doesn't believe in environmental protection.

Anyway, here's her thesis in the Washington Post, and it's becoming a common one:

The Republican Party had been taken hostage by "social fundamentalists," the people who base their votes on such social issues as abortion, gay rights and stem cell research. Unless the GOP freed itself from their grip, we argued, it would so alienate itself from the broad center of the American electorate that it would become increasingly marginalized and find itself out of power.

***

Following the conventional wisdom of the past two presidential elections, McCain tried mightily to assuage the Republican Party's social-fundamentalist wing. His selection of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, whose social views are entirely aligned with that wing, as his running mate was clearly meant to demonstrate his commitment to that bloc. Yet while his choice did comfort those voters, it made many others uncomfortable.

Palin has many attractive qualities as a candidate. Being prepared to become president at a moment's notice was not obviously among them this year. Her selection cost the ticket support among those moderate voters who saw it as a cynical sop to social fundamentalists, reinforcing the impression that they control the party, with the party's consent.

In the wake of the Democrats' landslide victory, and despite all evidence to the contrary, many in the GOP are arguing that John McCain was defeated because the social fundamentalists wouldn't support him. They seem to be suffering from a political strain of Stockholm syndrome. They are identifying with the interests of their political captors and ignoring the views of the larger electorate. This has cost the Republican Party the votes of millions of people who don't find a willingness to acquiesce to hostage-takers a positive trait in potential leaders.

Unless the Republican Party ends its self-imposed captivity to social fundamentalists, it will spend a long time in the political wilderness. On Nov. 4, the American people very clearly rejected the politics of demonization and division. It's long past time for the GOP to do the same.

She's 100% right.  As A Democrat, I would hope that the advice of Whitman and others will be ignored by the greater GOP.  But somehow, I don't think the social fundamentalists are going to fade away without a long protracted fight.  Good.

Friday, November 07, 2008

Eating Their Own: The Future Of The GOP

It seems that everybody is writing their views about where the Republican Party goes from here, now that they are "in the wilderness", without a leader.  It's a given that the GOP has lost its way.

From what I read, the theme seems to be this: in order to re-emerge, the Republican Party needs to return to its roots.

But from what I read, there's strong disagreement about what those roots are.  I'm seeing the developments of two factions though.

The first is that the Republican Party finds itself "in the wilderness" because it is no longer the party of "small government".   This is true especially in the area of fiscal spending.  Under Bush, government spending is at an all-time high.  Cartoonist Steven Greenberg drew a popular campaign cartoon which explains it all:

Fiscconserv 

The Republican Party also cannot lay claim to being the part of "small government" when it engages in wiretapping of its citizens, etc.

So, many pundits are arguing that the GOP needs to return to its "small government" roots.

The second faction is the "religious right", or more aptly, the "social right".  These are people who favor the GOP because of its stance on abortion, affirmative action, gay marriage, guns, etc.  You know the type.

This second faction is at odds with the first faction, because its tenets (often, not always) embrace the antithesis of a "small government".  A government which tells women what they can and can't do with their bodies?  A government which says who can and can't fall in love and get married?  A government in our bedrooms?

For two and a half decades, the GOP has been able to keep both factions within its tent.  That was no small trick.

But it just didn't work this time.  McCain's selection of Sarah Palin was an attempt to rein in the social/religious right.  It succeeded, but in doing so, he lost independents and libertarians and moderates and people just SICK of the religious right agenda.  The country moved to the left, and most people now see the Democrats as being "better" at handling the economy and foreign affairs. 

And I think more and more people are turned off by the emphasis on social issues, like gay marriage.  They're turned off by it even if they are opposed to it, because of what it happening to their homes and wallets.

In short, *I* think the GOP needs to purge itself of the social/religious right.  It is that branch of the GOP which has alienated the moderates and libertarians, who normally fall into the GOP camp at election time, but failed to this time.

The social/religious right simply isn't that large a constituency anymore.  In fact, I don't think they ever were.  They appeared to be a large constituency, but only because they carried large megaphones in the form of people like Jerry Falwell and Laura Ingraham.

It's not that the majority of Americans aren't religious and/or don't care about these issues.  It's just that the mix of religion and politics is a turnoff.  Always has been always will be.  And when the pious religious right seeks to impose their views on others through the government, it has a tendency to alienate.  And this is why the GOP has fallen into disfavor.

Barry Goldwater, for example, would never have embraced the religious right into his Republican party.  He would have seen those people as heretical to the GOP philosophy of a small government which gets out of people's way. 

The current attacks on Palin, I believe, are being brought about by the "elite" of the Republican Party.  It's step one of the religious right purge.  Social conservatives love her, and are already geared up for the Palin 2012 presidential campaign.  But GOP insiders will have none of that.  They know that you turn more voters OFF than ON with that rhetoric. So they're trying to kick her (and by extension, her social conservative supporters) out of the Big Tent. (FWIW, I think that McCain camp attacks on Palin that she "lost the election" for McCain are silly; after all, he picked her!)

The Palin attacks are part of the larger plan of purging, as expressed here:

National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman John Ensign (Nev.) argued that Senate Republicans need to “re-establish what the Republican Party is all about … [and] get back to this big tent Republican Party” that is united on fiscal conservatism. Although Ensign was not ready to call for a break from socially conservative ideologies, he said issues such as abortion or gay rights should not be at the core of the party.

“I think we lost our way on our fundamentals” in recent years, Ensign said, adding that “those are the issue that we can disagree on as a party.”

And of course, social conservatives are trying to kick GOP insiders and "Trojan Horses" like Colin Powell (who supported Obama) out of the Big Tent.  They've even got a name for this operation in the blogosphere -- Operation Leper.

As a progressive, it's fun for me to watch Republicans eat each other.  But also a little sad.

I don't know how it resolves itself.  Both factions are determined.  I suspect it may take years for this to play out.  I wouldn't be surprised to see the emergence of a third party from the warring factions.  Maybe more, as Tbogg suggests in his "Splitters!" post:

"Divided we stand"...no...wait...um... "united we flail" ...no, that's not it. Crap, I think I wrote it down on a Wendy's napkin. Look in the back seat of my car.... Oh, here we go:

Peoples Front of Republicans

Republican Peoples Front

Republican Popular People's Front

Front of Republican People Who Wish They Were Popular


Maybe a return of the Know-Nothing Party.  Yeah, Palin would be great in that party.

ADDENDUM:  But, if history teaches us anything, the Republican Party will be back.  Consider this:

"I leave you gentleman now and you will write it. You will interpret it. That's your right. But as I leave you I want you to know — just think how much you're going to be missing. You won't have Nixon to kick around any more, because, gentlemen, this is my last press conference and it will be one in which I have welcomed the opportunity to test wits with you."

-- Richard Nixon, November 7, 1962

UPDATE:  Interesting to read the suggestions for "rebuilding the Republican Party".  Very diverse, and often conflicting.  Some I applaud, like:

Break the association with anti-intellectualism

From the time I became politically aware, one of the strongest associations I made was that of the active evangelical community around me and the republican party. Many of these people believe that the universe is a few thousand years old, Noah's flood explains all of geology, there will be a Rapture soon, and Bush was guided by divine will. Idiots, in other words.

The republican party has been in bed with this crowd for my entire life. There is a distinct anti-intellectual bent that projects the message "we're poorly educated, and proud of it - vote for us!" It brings with it small-mindedness, pettyness, and ridicule.

I am very receptive to economic ideas about small government, but I just cannot bring myself to cast a vote for a party with the associations I just described - and I didn't three days ago.

And then you have ideas like this:

Social Conservatism, with strong families, support for life, and a firm committment to traditional values is essential to America's survival. Weak homes - the result of on-demand abortion and the destruction of traditional marriage - breed a generation of Americans that will be more dependent on the government from everything from the food they eat the morals they learn. That, in turn, will consume more and more resources as our economy suffers from the entrance of this generation into the work force. The ultimate end, of course, is a weakened position for America in the world, and our relegation to becoming the France of the 21st century.

Republicans must launch a drive that will not only drive the hypocrites from the party, but return the GOP to its socially conservative roots, and, at the same time, begin a national campaign to remind and convince Americans of the importance of traditional values.

Ideological clashes.  I'm not sure they can be resolved....

Monday, October 27, 2008

Senator Stevens (R-AK) Who Immortalized "The Internet Is A Series Of Tubes" Is Convicted

As the Wall Street Journal notes, this has some historical significance.  Sen. Stevens is a sitting senator, one of only five in all of history to be convicted of a crime, and the first since 1981.

Stevens is 84 years old -- soon to be 85 on Nov. 15 -- and is the longest-serving Republican with almost 40 years in the Senate representing Alaska.

He's been running for re-election this year, despite the trial.  His Democratic challenger has been edging ahead by 1 or 2 points in the polls, but Stevens' conviction will, I'm guessing, lock it up for the Democrat.  This means Democrats are one seat closer to the ideal 60 seats.

Here's Stevens from this past summer, pallin' around with a friend of his, who once served as director of the 527 group Ted Stevens Excellence in Public Service, Inc.

Go See Theatre



  • ONLY ONE WEEK LEFT!
    PERFORMANCES ADDED JULY 9 and 10, 2009 AT 8 PM!

    The author of Daddy's Dyin' (Who's Got the Will?) brings you a comedy that was nominated for over thirty awards during its long run in Los Angeles. When Peggy, a good Christian woman, hits her head on the sink and bleeds to death after tripping over her lover's wooden legs in a motel room, chaos erupts in Winters, Texas.

    FROM THE WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL, June 21, 2009....

    The laughs are big....

    Director Jamie Lawson makes sure there's no weak acting in this honky-tonk reprise....

    Cheryl Roberts... shows us how to embrace truth.

    April Meacham-Linscott....is a hoot as the woman who picked the wrong week to stop smoking.

    Gray Smith as "Brother Boy" has outdone his previous flamboyant, cross-dressing characters.....

    Put it all together, and you've got laughs, and an evening that flies to a high-kicking conclusion!

    Order tickets online!




    Don and Michael are two well-meaning dads eager to coach their sons' Little League team to victory – as soon as they can agree on exactly what that means! Veteran coach Don wants to win at all costs; newcomer Michael just wants the kids to have fun. Stuck together for an entire season, they struggle to resolve their differences and get their team to the championship. Michael and Don form an uneasy alliance for the benefit of the team. And over the course of exhilarating victories, heartbreaking defeats, and interminable rain-outs, the two men battle over how to lead the team.

    With SCOTT STEVENS as Mike and
    KEN ASHFORD as Don

    July 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25 at 8 pm
    July 19 at 2 pm

    Open Space Cafe Theatre
    Greensboro, NC

    Reserve your seats now!



    The Great American Trailer Park Musical
    Music and lyrics by David Nehls
    Book by Betsy Kelso

    August 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 22, 2009 at 8 PM
    August 15 and 22, 2009 at 4 PM
    August 16 and 23, 2009 at 2 PM

    Set in Florida, this hysterically offbeat musical features a love triangle between toll collector Norbert, his agoraphobic wife, Jeannie, and the stripper on the run from her ex-boyfriend, all narrated by a Greek chorus of trailer-park sluts. It's bold, brash and trashy, just like its subjects.

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