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The Republican that voted with Obama-Pelosi-Reid and the rest of the Democrat Communist Party
http://www.resistnet.com/forum/topics/the-republican-that-voted-with ^

Posted on 11/07/2009 10:49:54 PM PST by Poparhoid

THE REPUBLICAN THAT VOTED WITH OBAMA-PELOSI-REID AND THE REST OF THE DEMOCRAT COMMUNIST PARTY

* Posted by gary on November 8, 2009 at 1:44am in General, Uncategorized Town Hall * Add as Friend View Discussions

JUST LIKE COMMUNIST VIETNAM HE CAST HIS VOTE WITH THE AMERICAN COMMUNIST

A Prized Republican on the Ropes

Joseph Cao was hailed six months ago as the future of the GOP. Yesterday, he voted to rebuke Joe Wilson. Can the most endangered Republican in the House survive? By Benjamin Sarlin.

As he made his way to the podium to give his health-care speech last Wednesday—a speech that would draw boos from Republican lawmakers, trigger Joe Wilson’s now-notorious outburst, and eventually be likened to Nazism by angry protesters—President Obama was able to find at least one friendly Republican face in the crowd. “I love this guy!” Obama announced to Republicans gathered nearby as he shook hands with Rep. Joseph Cao (R-LA).

The president had plenty of reasons to praise the freshman representative from New Orleans. On issues large and small, Cao has been among the most White House-friendly Republican politicians in the country. There is a very real possibility that he will be the only member of his party to jump ship and support the president’s health-care plan.

“We have to be approachable to the average American family,” GOP Rep. Joseph Cao says of the Republican Party. “Unfortunately, I don’t believe our message has been that. It’s been somewhat anti-immigrant, it’s been oftentimes too pro-business and anti-family.”

Will he cop to being Obama’s favorite Republican? “I'm looking for real solutions to America's problems and my politics has never been partisan,” Cao said. In other words, he’s not running from the label.

Cao’s willingness to play ball with the White House has a lot to do with his status as the most vulnerable incumbent of any party in 2010.

Cao won his seat in December 2008 in a majority African-American district that had not elected a Republican since 1890—thanks to a serious scandal. The incumbent he defeated, William Jefferson, had been indicted for a litany of corruption charges, leading many Democrats to either stay home or cross party lines in protest. In addition, the decisive vote was not held on the same day as the presidential election—meaning Obama wasn’t the ticket to boost turnout.

House Minority Leader John Boehner distributed a memo entitled "The Future is Cao" while Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell touted Cao's election in a January speech as a sign that "a revival is already taking place" for the party.

Cao, for his part, seems to at least agree that the party is in need of a new look.

“I would hope that...if the future truly is Cao, then we have to be approachable to minorities,” he said. “We have to be approachable to the average American family. We have to be approachable to the average American. Unfortunately, I don't believe our message has been that. It's been somewhat anti-immigrant, it's been oftentimes too pro-business and anti-family.”

Despite their early enthusiasm, Republican leaders seem to have largely forgotten about Cao as the party has taken a sharp turn to the right, waging all-out partisan warfare over health care and rising up in opposition to Hispanic Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor—in ways that didn’t help the pro-minority message. Despite his criticisms of the party, Cao has remained upbeat about the GOP. He doesn’t buy into the notion that the Republican brand has become defined by its more extreme element—or that its leadership was undermining health-care reform to score political points.

“I think it’s simply media hype,” Cao said. “At the end of the day I can’t think of one congressman that will obstruct this whole process simply for the cause of obstructing it.”

Nonetheless, there’s an undeniable tension between Cao's Republican loyalties and his district’s Democratic leanings—which makes him an unpredictable vote. He backed an expansion of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, voted for new hate-crime legislation, and says he would have supported the Troubled Asset Relief Program had he been in office when it came to a vote. But he opposed Obama's signature legislation, the stimulus package, a vote that could come back to haunt him in 2010.

The politics of the health-care debate are tricky for him. Cao says he is “leaning toward supporting the [administration’s] bill,” though he hopes it will include stronger language prohibiting funds from going to abortion and abandon an employer mandate to provide health care.

He’s also been careful to put distance between himself and his party’s conservative wing at some key moments. This month, he took to the House floor to defend Obama's speech to schoolchildren after widespread hysteria from conservative media figures and politicians alike who claimed the event was socialist “indoctrination.”

“I was shocked and I believe that it was uncalled for,” Cao said of the protests. “The office of the president must have the respect of not only members of Congress, but of the people.”

Hoping to win over his African-American constituents, Cao has sought membership in the Congressional Black Caucus. But like other non-black members who have attempted to join, he's yet to be accepted.

“They said I'm always welcome to join the Black Caucus but obviously there might be some meetings where I cannot attend. But I have not made my decision whether or not to continue the push to be a member,” he said.

GOP leaders have exerted pressure on him to toe the party line, but ultimately they understand his unique situation, Cao said. Party independence is the key to the Cao “brand”—an asset he hopes will propel him to another surprise victory next November. He believes his “chances are very good,” despite being panned by political analysts. But the competition is already lining up: State Democratic Reps. Cedric Richmond and Juan LaFonta have announced plans to seek the seat.

“I believe that the people of the district see me as a strong leader, a leader that they can trust,” Cao told The Daily Beast. “I believe that people are coming around from seeing me as simply just another Republican.”


TOPICS: Government
KEYWORDS: 111th; cao; gop; hr3962; josephcao; louisiana; louisianas; neworleans; nongrata; rino
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To: Soul of the South

I understand your position, but there are a number of problems with it. First of all, this was an absolutely horrible bill, it is antithetical to our freedoms. It is about the government’s attempts to nationalize 1/7th of our economy, dangerously Marxist. In supporting this, Cao, who fled a Marxist country ostensibly to find “Freedom”, has voted for something that he sought to escape. It’s offensive in that regard.

Also, pandering left does not earn a Republican anything. It destroys any credibility they have with the GOP base, and they become a useful idiot for the Democrat/Left, and they are then quickly deposed for their (Dems) favored candidate at the next election and are quickly forgotten. Cao could vote 100% liberal and it would NOT save him in this district. So he has now not only assured his defeat (because Republicans will not support him, and Black Dems want a Black Dem), he has killed any political future he has in Louisiana that might’ve been winnable for him (statewide office). He not only disemboweled our freedoms, he slit his own throat. I have no sympathy for someone who does that, he has rightly earned our enmity.


41 posted on 11/08/2009 1:44:10 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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To: BillyBoy

We last held that district from 1889-1891. It was the last GOP held district in the state until Dave Treen won 82 years later in the 3rd (actually, Treen almost beat Hale Boggs in this 2nd).


42 posted on 11/08/2009 1:49:24 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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To: BillyBoy; Impy

My first question now when I approach IL politics isn’t “How Conservative are they ?” it is, “Are they a Combiner ?” If they’re a Combiner, I can’t endorse them in good conscience, regardless of how Conservative they claim to be. Being a Combiner tells me you have no problem making common-cause with corruption.


43 posted on 11/08/2009 1:52:24 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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To: Impy

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2381305/posts?q=1&;page=151#193


44 posted on 11/08/2009 2:23:33 PM PST by Impy (RED=COMMUNIST, NOT REPUBLICAN | NO "INDIVIDUAL MANDATE"!!!!!!!)
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To: fieldmarshaldj; BillyBoy; PhilCollins

Yeah. McKenna is a conservative. And combine superscum.


45 posted on 11/08/2009 2:24:46 PM PST by Impy (RED=COMMUNIST, NOT REPUBLICAN | NO "INDIVIDUAL MANDATE"!!!!!!!)
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To: Clintonfatigued

Then go door to door and tell her story and show the treason that is taking place in the White House and in the Congress. Those that don’t want to be euthanized by the death panels of Hitler Pelosi et al. may back her.


46 posted on 11/08/2009 2:40:14 PM PST by ExTexasRedhead
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