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The Establishments war on Donald Trump Title: Whither the American Right: Cruz And “Movement Conservatism”—Or Trump And National Conservatism? Its a sign of Conservatism Inc.s desperation that they are turning to Ted Cruz to stop Donald Trump. With Jeb! a joke, Christie floundering, Carson cratering, and Rubios momentum looking like wishful thinking by the consultants, even Establishment Republicans recognize they may need Ted Cruz, the Texas Senator who has been the bête noire of Capital Hill Republicans since he entered office, to save the Party and the Movement from Donald Trump. But the question for patriots outside the Beltway: is it more important to save the existing Conservative Movementor build a new one to save the country? Desperation can be seen in the speed with which Conservatism Inc.s bigwigs are moving to consolidate behind Cruz. At the heart of this effort: the Religious Right organizations, spearheaded by Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council (like us, a hate group according to the $PLC). Perkins summoned dozens of conservative leaders to form a collective known as The Group to unite and marshal their support behind one candidate early in the primaries. After heavy debate, they choose Cruz over Rubio in a meeting at Northern Virginia hotel. National Reviews Tim Alberta writes: The impact was felt immediately on the 2016 campaign. Three prominent participantsdirect-mail pioneer and longtime activist Richard Viguerie, the National Organization for Marriages Brian Brown, and The Family Leaders Bob Vander Plaatsannounced their support of Cruz within 72 hours of the meeting at the Sheraton. [Inside the Secret Meeting Where Conservative Leaders Pledged Allegiance to Ted Cruz, December 14, 2015] Cruz is counting on evangelicals to deliver him a victory in Iowa and is even trying to sap Donald Trumps strength in the Deep South. Significantly, Cruz is also taking action to guard his greatest vulnerabilityon immigration. Hes rallied the man VDARE.com calls Americas Senator, Jeff Sessions, to his defense. Refuting charges Cruz had favored some kind of an Amnesty/Immigration Surge and accusations of double talk from Marco Rubio (who would know), Sessions defended Cruz at a Saturday rally in Alabama, saying the Texas Senator was with Sessions every step of the way when fighting the Gang of Eight bill [Defiant Jeff Sessions on Gang of Eight: Every Step of the Way, Ted Cruz was on my side, by Jeff Poor, Breitbart, December 19, 2015] Sessions also squarely identified Marco Rubio as the man who wrote and created the Gang of Eight Billwhich will make it even more difficult for Rubio to squirm out of his prior positions [Ted Cruz, with Jeff Sessions at his side, toughens immigration stance during Daphne speech, by John Sharp, AL.com, December 20, 2015] Cruz has also received the endorsements of former Congressmen Tom Tancredo and Steve King, neither of whom need any introduction to immigration patriots. Yet the fact remains that Cruz has a checkered record on immigration. He undoubtedly advocated Amnesty in 2013, even if he ultimately did not support the Gang of Eight bill [Ted Cruz Jettisons 2013 Compromise on Immigration, by Jay Root and Patrick Svitek, The Texas Tribune, December 16, 2015]. More importantly, even now Cruz appears to be leaving a door open for a later Amnesty/Immigration Surge. Obviously, Cruzs recent moves towards Trumps immigration stance arise from a purely political calculation. And Cruz dueling Rubio on the battleground of immigration does nothing to help the Texas Senator displace Trump, who is, after all, still the undisputed frontrunner. Yet there is a strategy here. Cruz is, in his own words, trying to restore the old Reagan coalition [Exclusive: Ted Cruz Lays Out Pathway to National Victory on Grassroots Strength: Reassemble That Old Reagan Coalition by Matthew Boyle, Breitbart, December 12, 2015]. Congressional Republicans and donors will grumble, but theyll support Cruz over Trump as Cruz will govern in line with congressional Republicans policy preferences [GOP leaders hate Ted Cruz, but he may be their last best hope, by Matthew Yglesias, Vox, December 14, 2015] Cruz is assuming that if the Beltway institutions unite around him, he can consolidate support (and funding) and edge out Trump by appearing the more electable alternativeall without attacking him. The irony is that it is only because Trump has shifted the Overton Window, and also has destroyed much-touted rivals like Rick Perry, Scott Walker and (just about) Jeb Bush, that Cruz is even competitive. Cruz has been a largely consistent Movement Conservative. But immigration barely appears on his to do list and theres little evidence he sees the issue as important. The fact is that Immigration patriots have long been trapped as simply part of the Right wing of the conservative movement. And being the right of the Right is a problem for three major reasons. 1. It turns immigration into just another issue, rather than a core priority. And when other elements of the Republican coalition (namely donors) want cheap labor, congressmen, Senators, and even conservative nonprofit heads tend to listen to the donors rather than anti-immigration voters. But Donald Trump has changed everything. He has created the potential for a different movement altogether. Not only is immigration at the center of his campaign, its part of a larger agenda that is genuinely different from the movement conservatism of Ted Cruz: Trade. Trump has been a vocal opponent of bad trade deals, while Cruz is a supporter of free trade, even vocally backing Trade Promotion Authority for months before opportunistically voting against it when it no longer mattered [Cruz reverses support for TPA trade bill, blasts GOP leaders, by Manu Raju, Politico, June 23, 2015] Safety Net. Trump is opposed to raising the retirement age for Social Security while Cruz supports it [Where the presidential candidates stand on Social Security, by Steve Vernon, MoneyWatch, November 23, 2015] Trump is also placing the protection of Medicare at the center of his campaign, defying conservative movement dogma [Debate over Medicare, Social Security, other federal benefits divides GOP, by Robert Costa and Ed OKeefe, Washington Post, November 4, 2015] Russia. Trump has famously promised hed get along with Vladimir Putin, praised Putins actions in Syria and has received compliments from the Russian leader; Cruz sticks to the usual anti-Russian rhetoric of the conservative movement calling Putin a KGB thug and saying America should undertake more intervention in the Middle East to confront Russia [Ted Cruz: Russia-US tensions increasing over weak foreign policy, by Sandy Fitzgerald, Newsmax, October 7, 2015] Christianity. Ted Cruz notoriously called a group of Middle Eastern Christians consumed with hate for being insufficiently pro-Israeli while Trump has defended Middle Eastern Christians as a group that is under assault from Islamic terrorism [Trump: Absolutely An Assault on Christianity, by Joe Kovacs, WND, August 25, 2015]. At the same time, while Trump has been quick to defend American Christians from cultural assaults, he is also probably the Republican most friendly to gay rights, as homosexual columnist Mark Stern has mischievously noted [Of course Donald Trump is the Most Pro-Gay Republican Presidential Candidate, Slate, December 18, 2015] While Cruz wants to rebuild the old Reagan coalition and simply turn out the evangelical vote, Trump wants to win back Reagan Democrats and build a new coalition of independents, blue collar workers, whites who had given up on the political process, and perhaps a surprising number of minority voters. And while Trump-style conservatism isnt totally different from traditional economistic Movement Conservatism, there is far less rhetorical emphasis on limited government and moral issues and far more emphasis on nationalism, especially when it comes to trade and immigration. In this respect, Trump (like Sessions) is advocating something more like the immigration-critical, pro-worker National Conservatism that has emerged in Europe. Of course, considering the Beltway Rights total failure in limiting government or promoting traditional values, its hard to see what practical difference Trump vs. Cruz really makes from a libertarian or Christian perspective. Even Cruz no longer speaks of reversing homosexual marriage. Indeed, Trump isnt a total clean break with the Conservative Movement. Ann Coulter is of course on board the Trump Train and legendary pro-family and conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly speaks warmly of The Donald. Former Constitution Party presidential candidate and Congressman Virgil Goode has also enthusiastically endorsed Trump and is working as part of Trumps Virginia team. The real divide on the American right today: between those who think a new approach, a new coalition, and new alliances are neededand those who think that, if we can just get a true conservative like Cruz, it wont be like all those other false dawns
this time! But to borrow one of Marco Rubios more banal slogans for my own purposes: This election is about the future. And in an age dominated by questions of terrorism, immigration, and above all identity, its hard to see why the American Right should once again turn to an approach thats been failing for decades. After all, what good is a conservative movement that doesnt think its important to conserve the American nation itself? Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2.
#1. To: nativist nationalist (#0)
Besides not being a social conservative ,Chump is neither a fiscal conservative ,or a small government constitutional conservative . Actually would love to hear his answer if he was asked what a Federal Republic is .
Then you should have no problem voting for him if you really believe that's the case. The RINO's you carry water for are big government deficit spenders, and the tens of millions of turd world voters you want to import will vote for ever larger government and insolvent economics.
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