A win is win and knowbody pays attention to a loser.
A loser can come back a be a winner (like Nixon).
Sending a message may give you a little influence, but not much.
You need to win, but you only have one vote. You need to work to get your candidate elected, but don’t take the football home if your candidate doesn’t win. Play the game with the best quarterback that the majority supports.
Liberals win because they stick together irrespective if their particular group is getting all they want.
Conservatives need to stick together. Conservatives have too many independent thinkers (that’s good) but each person want it their way and not willing to take small gains and work together for the greater good. The Tea Party is changing that, but they continue to need to convince others.
They have an influence, but they are not in control.
There are strenghts and weaknesses in each Republican candidate, but I will support the Republican nominee.
I hope we get a better nominee than Rommney, but he would be better than the alternative. I could see Rommney as a better President than Bush.
“Working together” goes both ways. I, and many more here have bitten the bullet many times in the spirit of “working together” and the only ones getting anything out of this deal seem to be the partisan Republicans, and then don’t seem one bit interested in having anything to do with us once they’ve got that vote. It’s getting pretty damned old.
Boehner, is that you?
You sound just like a typical establishment Republican, who’s willing to sacrifice principles over paltry gains.
Is there going to be anyting to this argument more substantial than the standard list of truisms?
I think we've all probably seen them all before, trotted out right before every election.