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The Establishments war on Donald Trump Title: Trump or Ryan: Who Speaks for GOP? No modern precedent exists for the revival of a party so badly defeated, so intensely discredited, and so essentially split as the Republican Party is today. Taken from The Party That Lost Its Head (1966) by Bruce Chapman and George Gilder, this excerpt, about Barry Goldwaters defeat in 1964, led Thursdays column by E.J. Dionne of The Washington Post. Dionne is warning what could happen if the GOP perpetrates the political atrocity of nominating Donald Trump. For weeks now, the Posts editorial page has sermonized about the moral obligation of all righteous Republicans to repudiate Trump. The Posts solicitude for the well-being of the Republican Party is the stuff of legend. Yet it is a bit jarring to see these champions of abortion on demand, same-sex marriage, and visitation rights for cross-dressers in the girls room, standing in a pulpit lecturing on morality. Yet, there was something off about that Chapman-Gilder quote. First, both were members of the Harvard-based, Rockefeller-backed, liberal Ripon Society. Second, their prognosis of the partys future proved to be spectacularly wrong. The year, 1966, their book on the headless GOP appeared, to press hosannas, Richard Nixon led the party to its greatest off-year victory since 1946, adding 47 new seats in the House. Two years later, Nixon won the presidency, inaugurating an era in which Republicans won five out of six presidential contests, two by 49-state landslides. Out of Goldwaters defeat came the New Majority and Reagan Revolution. And Chapman and Gilder moved rightward to serve with distinction in that revolution. The prodigal sons were welcomed home, and Gilder would recant: The far Rightthe same men I dismissed as extremists in my youthturned out to know far more than I did. At least the right-wing extremists, as I confidently called them, were right on almost every major policy issue from welfare to Vietnam to Keynesian economics and defense
[Why I am Not a Neo- Conservative, NR, March 5, 1982] While the Goldwater campaign, as an insurgency of outsiders, bears comparison with Trumps, in other ways it does not. Goldwater never compiled anything near the vote that Trump did. At this point in 1964, Goldwater was behind Johnson 79-18 in the Gallup poll. Trump is behind Hillary Clinton by single digits. New polls have him running even in Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania. Now, consider the issues comparison with 1964. In July 1964, Johnson signed the popular Civil Rights Act that Goldwater had opposed. The GOP Convention in San Francisco revealed a deeply divided party, subject to the charge, validated by the rule-or-ruin Rockefeller- Romney faction, that it was receptive to right-wing radicals. Lyndon Johnsons decision to bomb North Vietnam after the Gulf of Tonkin incident made him a war leader, and Americans rally to presidents in a time of war. In 2016, however, Trump holds a fistful of face cards. After eight years of President Obama, he is the candidate of change in 2016, and Clinton is the candidate of same. Trump may bring more excitement than some folks can handle. But Clinton has become a crashing bore, until she gets agitated, and then the voice rises to where she sounds like the siren on the hook-and-ladder in Chicago Fire. Other than that she would be the first woman president, what is there about her or her agenda that has popular appeal? That lack of appeal explains why her crowds are a fraction of Bernie Sanders. The Clinton of 2016 is not the Clinton of 2008. As for the issues dividing Trump and Speaker Paul Ryan, Trump appears to have won the argument, if the debate is decided by voter preferences rather than Beltway preferences. Trumps denunciation of NAFTA and other free-trade deals Ryan supports is echoed by Sanders, who opposed those deals when they were up for a vote. Hillary Clinton no longer rhapsodizes over husband Bills NAFTA, and signals she will not support Obamas Trans-Pacific Partnership in a lame-duck session. Ryan professes to be a man of principle. Why does he not then stand by his principles, as Goldwater did, and bring up TPP for a vote? Is Paul Ryans immigration reform package as popular inside his party as Trumps tough line? It would seem not. The longer the primaries went on, the closer the other GOP candidates moved toward Trump. And if Ryan believes in it on principle, why not bring it up? Ryan voted for the Iraq War that Trump calls a disaster. The people seem now to agree with Trump that the war was misconceived. Thursdays Post reported that, five years ago, Ryan stood on the House floor to declare, This is our defining moment. And what was Ryans defining moment? On that day in 2011, said the Post, the Houses new GOP majority approved Ryans budget planwhich
called for cuts in a government program that voters knew and loved: Medicare. Ryan
wanted eventually to turn the massive health-benefit program over to private insurers. Come to think of it, Barry Goldwater wanted to turn Social Security over to private enterprise. How did that one work out? Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 21.
#1. To: nativist nationalist (#0)
What we have is this: Ryan equals the old rule of power, the Washington Elite, the ruling political class, their masters in the donor class and all of those raping the middle class. Donald Trump, Like George Washington, represents those who want to work and get ahead. Right now the nations is at a cross roads, the cross road is freedom thru the ballot of freedom thru the bullet. If Donald Trump can prevail and get his agenda thru, it is freedom thru the ballot, if ryan and his ilk prevail it will be Freedom thru the gullet.
Bob,you have seriously lost your grip on reality if you are comparing the idiot with the orange hair and skin to George Washington.
George Washington and Donald Trump have a lot in common. Both were extremely Rich and used their own money. George Washington as leader of the Revolution and then as President, gave us liberty, freedom, and the Republic. Donald John Trump will, as president or, if necessary leader of the Revolution, restore Liberty, Freedom, and The Republic. And most important both men were supported, to the point of death, by the hard working freedom loving men and women of the Nation, the men and women that were and are willing to accept the risk and responsibilities, in exchange for the rights and privileges of our Constitution and of being a Free Republican Society.
There is no other way to put it,you are mentally ill if you really believe that nonsense. This isn't political support,it's cult leader worship.
OK, imbecile, I have had enough of your ignorance, either apologize or be bozoed.
mainetv.net/nbc.htm What the HELL does a historic record of court cases about citizenship have to do with the prima donna with orange hair and skin that is pretending to be conservative? And I will NOT apologize for calling you delusional in your almost Christ-like worship of that posing pack of shit. IF American is so unfortunate his ego gets in the way of him dropping out and he wins,I want you to remember the warnings,and to repent.
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