[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
The Establishments war on Donald Trump Title: On Groundhog Day: Conservatism Inc. Thinks It Can Move On With Marco Rubio—But It CanÂ’t In the film Groundhog Day (which Charles Murray thinks will still be remembered centuries from now) a selfish man is doomed to relive the same day over and over again until he understands what it is to lead a good life and is permitted by whatever cosmic force exists to move on to February 3. The Beltway Right seems to think it will forever be 1980, and the same old hoary slogans and invocations of vaguely-defined principles will carry the day. After Iowa, Marc Rubio is their current candidate to do this. But unlike Bill Murrays character, the GOP wont get a chance to do the election over again. The Lefts triumph will be completeand the historic American nation will be decisively dispossessed. Thus for Conservatism Inc., the Iowa primary wasnt about selecting a Republican nominee or even stopping Hillary Clinton. It was about stopping Donald Trump. And when Trump was marginally stumped by the massive Evangelical turnout for Ted Cruz, the Beltway Right reacted with unconcealed gloatingdespite that inconvenient fact that Trump still came away with six delegates to Cruzs seven. [Conservative Twitter is ridiculously happy that Donald Trump lost in Iowa, by German Lopez, Vox, February 1, 2016] John Podhoretz [Email him]seemingly eager to confirm the most paranoid fears about neoconservatives, declared: John Podhoretz ✔ The consensus: Ted Cruz had saved self-proclaimed conservatism from Trumps nationalist heresy. As David French at National Review hyperventilated (after his usual Democrats are the real racists virtue signaling): [H]ad Trump won, we would even now be shuddering not just for the future of the conservative movement but for the future of a nation bounded and governed by constitutional principles. [Ted Cruz, Triumphant, National Review, February 1, 2016]. (Yes, we all remember how that conservative movement that so values constitutional principles treated Ron Paul.) What seems more likely: if Trump had won, the Beltway Right would be shuddering for the future of their useless foundations, nonprofits, and Political Action Committees, and, above all, consultants. To take one example, one of the figures leading the rejoicing was Liz Mair, a self-described pro-choice, pro-gay marriage, pro-amnesty R who believes in global warming. Mair is a political consultant heading up an anti-Trump PAC which ran ads telling Iowas Evangelicals that Trump is insufficiently conservative. [Exclusive: Anti-Trump PAC Launches Ad Warning Voters About Donald Trump, by Charlie Spiering, Breitbart, January 20, 2016] But, all too obviously, the point wasnt to defend Christian values that Mair herself doesnt believe init was to turn Evangelical voters into useful idiots in order to stop Trump. This kind of worked. Tucker Carlson said a few days ago: Evangelicals have given up trying to elect one of their own. What theyre looking for is a bodyguard, someone to shield them from mounting (and real) threats to their freedom of speech and worship. [Donald Trump Is Shocking, Vulgar, and Right, Politico, January 28, 2016]. But while Trump obtained a respectable share of Evangelicals, entrance polls showed Cruz won a larger-than-expected Evangelical turnout. And the most important factor for a plurality of voters: supporting someone who shares my values. [Iowa caucus entrance poll results, by Lazaro Gamio and Scott Clement, Washington Post, February 2, 2016] Cruz has actually been pursing something similar to the Sailer Strategy, focusing on turning out white voters who normally stay home. But Cruzs strategy has an Evangelical twist: hence his calling for the support of the body of Christ. As he put it on his campaign website: We know that if even a fraction of the Evangelicals who routinely dont vote were to turnout and vote, Washington could be changed almost overnight. The may have worked in Iowa. But there arent that many Evangelicals in states like New Hampshire. More generally, as Christian religiosity declines in America, such an approach could prove disastrous in a general election. Which brings us to Marco Rubio, the current Main Stream Media darling. Marco-mentum is the Narrative being pushed by everyone from National Review to Fox News, after weeks of predictions of a Rubio surge that never quite took hold.[Fetch Happens, by Noah Millman, The American Conservative, February 2, 2016] Marco Rubios third-place finish was treated as a victory, even by the candidate himself in his euphoric speech. As Michael Brendan Dougherty observes, nominating Rubio means the conservative movement doesnt have to change anything [Rubio-mania is upon us, The Week, February 2, 2016]. Rubios neoconservative foreign policy and support for Amnesty may not be popular with the public, Dougherty notes, but these are very popular with the GOPs elites, and not hard to swallow for most conservative elites. Paul Ryan, among other leading Republicans, is quietly moving to support Rubio [If you dont want Cruz or Trump as the nominee, you better get onboard with Rubio, by Jonathan Chait, New York, February 2, 2016]. And the donors are fleeing ¡Jeb! for Rubio as well [The Jeb Bush to Marco Rubio donor shift is real and its accelerating, by Katherine Miller and Jeremey Singer-Vine, Buzzfeed, February 1, 2016] Rubio has Establishment support in South Carolina, recently winning the endorsement of African-American Republican Senator Tim Scott. [Marco Rubio Snags South Carolina Sen. Tim Scotts Endorsement After Iowa Caucus, by Alexandra Jaffe, NBC, February 2, 2016] But Rubio faces a difficult race in New Hampshire, with fellow Establishment candidates Jeb Bush, Chris Christie, and John Kaisich all sniping at him. So the strategy seems to be to get a respectable finish in New Hampshire, drive other Establishment candidates out of the race, and then win South Carolina. The race the Beltway Right wants is Cruz v. Rubio [A Cruz v. Rubio Fight Would Electrify Conservatives, by Eliana Johnson, National Review, January 13, 2016]. This means driving Trump out. And the Koch Brothers are building a network of plutocrats with the singular goal of doing just that [Koch Brothers Network Considering Anti-Trump Campaign, by Leigh Ann Caldwell, NBC, February 1, 2016]. If they are successful, Cruz will find the strange new respect hes getting suddenly dissipate as Conservatism Inc. shepherds Republican voters behind the more electable Rubio. Conservatism Inc.s furious hostility to Trump and its voters shows that it still assumes America is a center-right country. It believe an optimistic Rubio (or even a lucky Cruz) can beat Hillary. Sanders can be brushed aside as a Socialist. But America is changing. An astonishing 84 percent of Democratic voters between 17 and 29 supported Sanders, as well as a majority of those between 30 and 44 [The key to Bernie Sanderss Iowa success? Young voters, by Sarah Kliff, Vox, February 2, 2016] Sanders is polling competitively with Rubio, supposedly the most electable of the GOP candidates. Socialism is no longer a scare word to these voters. If Sanders can ever win over non-white Democrats, he may be far more formidable than Hillary. Theres a key difference in mindset between the American Left and Right. Even after eight years of Barack Obamas fundamental transformation of the United States, the Democratic base is still pushing aggressively for its egalitarian goals. In contrast, the Beltway Right is concern-trolling its own voters and using faux opposition to ethanol and Eminent Domain as a way to purge dissidents on immigration, trade and foreign policy. Beltway conservatives seem to believe they can continue to win elections by simply repeating condemnations of socialism and Big Government. But the center-right America of 1980 is gonelargely because of the Beltway Rights cowardice. More young people favor socialism instead of capitalism. The ever-increasing number of non-whites can be counted on to vote monolithically in support of Big Government. And the disastrous consequences of George W. Bushs invasion of Iraq (cheerled by the entire Beltway Right) convinced an entire generation that Republicans are too reckless to be trusted with foreign policy. Trump offers a solution to the dying GOPby rebranding the Republicans as a nationalist party with something to say to working class voters, the squeezed Middle Class, and that majority of white people who dont actively hate themselves. Unlike Cruz, Trump has also proved his ability to change the political conversation and take the strategic offensive to retake lost ground. Without Trump, immigration would not be an issue at all in the GOP primary and Jeb Bush might well have cruised to victory. And Ted Cruz, who rode Trumps coattails for most of the campaign, would not have even been a contender. But rather than seizing the opportunity, the GOP seems to almost hope for defeat by attacking its frontrunner, purging his supporters, and then screwing over its base the minute it can get away with it. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: nativist nationalist (#0)
More and more, and more, older voters too. Every worker who has been screwed by free trade and open borders will vote for socialism by that very name, over more Republican-style capitalism that leaves them in precarious jobs or jobless, with bleak futures. Trump is the only candidate on the RIGHT who actually ADDRESSES the concerns of the working poor, and acknowledges that THEY need government help - JUST LIKE THE CRONY CAPITALISTS DO. The Republicans hate Trump, so he is trying to effect a hostile takeover of the Republican Party. If he succeeds, he wins and the GOP is brought back from the edge. But if he fails, then you've got some Republican with the same economic beliefs that got us into this mess, running under a brand name that has demonstrated in two successive election cycles that it cannot be trusted. Trump will beat the Democrat, whoever that is. Cruz will lose. So will Rubio.
|
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|