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Opinions/Editorials Title: How GOP Insiders Will Fail in Civil War Now the United States is hearing The Establishment Strikes Back. But this campaign against the tea party will fail, because false assumptions dominate the thinking and plans of Americas Republican establishment. GOP insiders have now declared war on the tea party. They are promising during the 2014 U.S. elections to restore business interests to dominate the GOP, and weaken the tea party influence. Hopefully well go into eight to 10 races and beat the snot out of them, said former Rep. Steve LaTourette of Ohio. According to the National Journal, LaTourettes new political group, Defending Main Street, aims to raise $8 million to fend off tea-party challenges against more mainstream Republican incumbents. La Tourette explains: Were going to be very aggressive and were going to get in their faces. Trouble is: Americas Republican aristocracy does not understand the tea party or what is motivating the grassroots insurgency. Republican insiders cannot respond to what they do not understand. First, too many mainstream Republicans candidates spend money like drunken sailors. They vote for more spending, bigger deficits, more business-strangling regulations, bigger government, and ballooning national debt. They must eventual buckle to higher taxes. Political gurus put on an act, saying that the divide falls between fiscal issues and social issues. But establishment candidates are not fiscal conservatives, they only play fiscal conservatives on TV. The tea party revolt is against the GOPs rampant fiscal irresponsibility. The tea party aims to put the United States finances in order, lowering taxes, and balancing the budget. The charade of pitting business interests against the tea party will not fool businessmen for long. The GOP establishment is bad for business. Second, the grassroots is demanding genuine change. Until they see actual change, aint nobody listening. GOP elites dont get it: The grassroots is like a wife who has been cheated on, who is refusing to listen to her adulterous husbands excuses. So when GOP aristocrats warn us about tea party candidates, their arguments fall on deaf ears. Voters must see a genuine change of heart before they might start listening. Hell hath no fury like a voter whom the establishment has lied to (once too often). Third, conservative candidates thrive when attacked by GOP elites. The morning after Christine ODonnell won the September 14, 2010, primary, her website displayed a fund-raising goal of $50,000. Then, news spread that Mike Castle refused to endorse the choice of the voters and the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) was refusing to help. Radio talk show host Laura Ingraham that morning then Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity that afternoon urged their enormous audiences to donate. Christines fund-raising blew through $1.1 million by 1:30 PM. She only asked for $50,000 that day. Conservatives ultimately gave $7.4 million. Steve LaTourettes entire budget is only $8 million, spread across 10 campaigns. Contributors gave $7.4 million for the pleasure of sticking their thumb in GOP guru Karl Roves eye. The more the establishment snubbed sweet and sympathetic Christine, the more conservative donors wanted to slap Republican elites across the face with their own donation. Those donations were a rejection of the very establishment who now imagine we will suddenly start listening to them. Third, the U.S. political establishment is gripped with a shared fantasy: If only voters had known about candidates baggage, voters would have nominated the liberal Republican insider instead. Yet the baggage was very well and widely known before those primaries. Grassroots voters simply dont care about the smears against their candidates. A flawed conservative beats a flawless liberal Republican any day, the grassroots is firmly convinced. The establishment insists the exact opposite is true. That is a central question sharply in dispute. Elites thundered mightily before the primaries, loudly warning the voters dont you dare nominate so-and-so. Republican voters heard and completely rejected that message. Political analysts keep making Christine ODonnells U.S. Senate race the centerpiece of the Partys struggle. So we are forced to revisit it. Attacks claiming baggage began in December 2009, long before the September 10, 2010, primary. But the more GOP royalty told voters they mustnt vote for Christine, the more enthusiastically voters lined up to kick Mike Castle out. The very act of telling Republican voters whom they must nominate convinces them to volunteer and vote for the other guy. Fourth, the grassroots rejects the baggage argument fundamentally. They know that the GOP elites have never learned how to answer false smears against Republicans. Conservatives are convinced that it isnt baggage that is the problem, but the unwillingness and inability of supposed Republican geniuses to deal with false smears by liberals and the mainstream media. Even Ann Coulter has adopted false narratives about Delaware. Delawares uncontroversial 2012 Republican nominee baggage free got only 29% of the vote, contrasted with ODonnells 40% in 2010. So, our dear and beloved Ann, with baggage your friend and mine Christine got 40%, of the vote. No baggage got you 29% of the vote in 2012. The real problem is that the GOP aristocracy sabotages its own candidates and doesnt know how to win elections. It would be better for Ann Coulter and indeed Christine ODonnell to work on providing training to Republicans on campaign techniques than to belittle the brave souls who dare to go into the arena to fight for our country. Fifth, Republican moderates lose in primaries because they are often simply bad candidates. On December 8, 2009, Karl Rove came to Broadlands in Delaware to rally the tea party in support of Mike Castle. Russ Murphy, head of the Delaware Tea Party Patriots, was one invited to the summit. He granted me an interview. Initially, Karl Rove alienated Delawares tea party leadership by blovating about Karl Rove and his own supposed importance. Having thoroughly disgusted the tea party leaders with his arrogance, Rove finally got around to commanding them to support Mike Castle. Eyes rolled as Rove misrepresented Castles record. Russ Murphy stood up and told Karl Rove that Mike Castle was losing because he wasnt meeting with the voters. Christine ODonnell was winning because she was showing up. Christine took the voters questions and answered them. Mike Castle was dodging and hiding from the voters. Simply put, Mike Castle was a bad candidate, Christine was a good candidate. Delaware is a small State which, like New Hampshire, prizes personal contact with the candidates. Karl Rove who claims to know campaigns could have taken Russ Murphys tip straight back to the Mike Castle campaign. Rove could have insisted that Castle start getting out there and talking to voters. Nope. Instead, within two weeks, a professionally prepared, expensive dossier of smears against Christine ODonnell started circulating among Delaware journalists and Republican activists. Neither Karl Rove nor Mike Castle could figure out that if you ignore and snub the voters, they probably wont vote for you. So, the Republican aristocracy has decided to try something new: They are going to attack tea party candidates and warn grassroots voters they must nominate moderates. But that is not new. Its old. That is the same failed game plan insiders have been trying over and over. And they keep failing miserably at it. Refusing to acknowledge or address the real problems, GOP elites keep playing out vain hopes of getting a different result. The establishment doesnt understand why it has a problem. 0 Comments Jonathon Moseley is a Virginia business and criminal defense attorney. Moseley is also a co-host with the ?Conservative Commandos? radio show, and an active member of the Northern Virginia Tea Party. He studied Physics at Hampshire College, Finance at the University of Florida and law at George Mason University in Virginia. Moseley promoted Reagan?s policies at High Frontier and the Center for Peace in Freedom. He worked at the U.S. Department of Education, including at the Center for Choice in Education.
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#1. To: nolu chan (#0)
Fourth, the grassroots rejects the baggage argument fundamentally. They know that the GOP elites have never learned how to answer false smears against Republicans. Conservatives are convinced that it isnt baggage that is the problem, but the unwillingness and inability of supposed Republican geniuses to deal with false smears by liberals and the mainstream media. Even Ann Coulter has adopted false narratives about Delaware. Delawares uncontroversial 2012 Republican nominee baggage free got only 29% of the vote, contrasted with ODonnells 40% in 2010. So, our dear and beloved Ann, with baggage your friend and mine Christine got 40%, of the vote. No baggage got you 29% of the vote in 2012. The real problem is that the GOP aristocracy sabotages its own candidates and doesnt know how to win elections. It would be better for Ann Coulter and indeed Christine ODonnell to work on providing training to Republicans on campaign techniques than to belittle the brave souls who dare to go into the arena to fight for our country. "baggage free got only 29% of the vote, contrasted with ODonnells 40% in 2010."
I don't think O'Donnell was an effective candidate but the Tea party wing of the GOP continues to grow in strength and influence. The conservative voters are finally rising up and voting against the old guard who run conservative and vote liberal. An Obamacare catastrophe could deliver the Senate to the GOP in 2014. That will be a difficult struggle, but they should at least close the gap. The more Obamacare flops, the more it enhances Ted Cruz. Rand Paul continues to get plenty of face time, and Paul Ryan is still around. Jeb Bush is sniffing about but I think another Bush candidate will be a disaster. For 2016, GOP prospects depend largely on whether the old guard controls the process and barfs up another McCain/Romney candidate. In 2012, Obama was vulnerable but the GOP proved they could not beat somebody with nobody. The Dem disaster of Obamacare is just beginning. When the website gets up, it will only get worse. They can not fix it, test it, and have it near 100% stable and reliable in a month. Millions are thrown off their plans and will encounter serious sticker shock when they can get on the website. If the website does not come up in time to let them get enrolled by December 15th, they will be uninsured on January 1st. Delaying implementation of the Act will not put them back on their old plan. And then there is a New York poll of 414 physicians that showed 44% will not particpate in Obamacare, 33% may not participate, and only 23% indicated they intended to participate. If that holds, a lot of people are losing their doctor and are going to get used to long waits. Democrats up for reelection in 2014 are going to have a tough time explaining their Obamacare votes, and they will invite strong Republican candidates. Many anti-Democrat votes will be cast in 2014, just as many anti-W/Cheney votes were cast in 2008.
The dumbest thing she did was make an ad saying she is not a witch. Dumb imo. She lost ok. But she didn't lose as bad as the candidate the establishment didn't complain about.
She lost ok. But she didn't lose as bad as the candidate the establishment didn't complain about. Yeah, the witch ad became a caricature. Regarding elections, primary results do not compare directly to general election results. The makeup of the electorate is significantly different. Castle may, or may not, have performed better in the general than he did in the primary due to different turnout. Due to gerrymandered districts, it is easier for incumbents to win general elections but more difficult to survive primaries if they do not appeal to their party base, conservative for Republicans. Some of the party machine candidates have delivered such non-conservative goodies as NAFTA and GATT. They enjoy little support from the conservatives who turn out at primaries in a greater percentage than non-conservatives.
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