Posted on 02/02/2012 9:51:34 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
The short answer is that Mitt Romney isnt a small-government conservative. The slightly longer answer is that Barack Obama has been as he promised to be a game-changer, and the 2012 election is the one in which libertarian anti-statism will either have a voice in the Republican Party, or will have to do something else.
This primary season is a fight for the character of the GOP. The fight is not the perennial standoff between social cons and fiscal cons; it is a long-postponed dispute over the size and charter of government, and how the GOP will approach it. It is the most basic possible dispute over ideas about man and the state and their consequences. Its also a dispute only the Republican Party could have. The Democratic Party does not have such a diversity of viewpoint, at least not in any politically consequential way. The decision about whether America will continue on a fiscally unsustainable path of ever-growing statism comes down to the GOPs fight with itself.
The Romney wing represents the attitude that America is really OK with the size of government we have now: it just needs better management and some tweaking on the margins. The Romney wing does not by any means have a class-hostile, socialist vision for the future. It has no intention of interfering with the citizens intellectual liberties, and its view of managerial government is not predicated on the idea that the people need to be coerced (or nudged) into collectivist life choices. It simply sees the existing size of government as compatible with a free-enough life, in the sense that we dont need to push for significant changes.
The other wing the one that has been getting behind a different candidate every few weeks believes precisely that America is not OK with the size of government we have now. Its main point is that our fiscal and economic problems, and many of our social ones, result directly from the size and interventionist activities of government. The size of government is the problem already, today and if it isnt fixed, America literally cannot survive as a republic with the intellectual and lifestyle liberties we have enjoyed up to now.
Many in the GOPs Not OK wing have perceived government to be out of control for some time. But the shock administered by the Obama administration gave the most direct impetus to the Tea Party movement, because it brought home to many Americans how vulnerable we had already become to executive overreach.
For this wing of the GOP, it isnt enough to put a Republican in charge of the sprawling, momentum-driven executive. The mere existence of such a gigantic apparat is an already-proven threat to liberty. A Democrat could be reelected to head it at any time, and even with a Republican in charge, the civil-service army would continue in obscurity to pursue regulatory and money-spending charters issued years or decades ago. The failure of Congress to pass a budget for over 1,000 days has suspended the legislatures principal hammer over the executives freedom to do what it wants. As long as government limps along from month to month, on continuing resolutions that are mainly about constituency-tending fights in the House and Senate, Congress cannot gather its will to bargain seriously with the executive over spending priorities.
For the Not OK wing of the GOP, what is essential in 2012 is repudiating government on this model. Nothing is more important to Americas future than that. The different wings of the GOP have differing views of what constitutes realism: the America is OK wing views it as unrealistic to focus on something other than putting up the candidate whom they feel will appeal to the most voters. The Not OK wing sees that as an unrealistic perspective on the current situation. If government is not reined in put through an effective bankruptcy proceeding, with its assets sold off and its charter reorganized then nothing else will matter.
Who is right? While I am with the Not OK wing philosophically, I dont think it would be the end of America as we know it if Mitt Romney were elected. But I do believe it would be a grave strategic error for the Republican Party to endorse him early, and silence intra-party dissent as if he represents what America really needs. A Romney presidency would be no more than a hiatus in deliberately using the state as a steamroller for ideological purposes. That would be better than 4 more years of Obama, but from the perspective of getting America on a different path, its not good enough.
The GOP needs this fight over philosophy of government. What has to be established in the 2012 primary season is that the small-government vote matters. If that is not established, the GOP itself will matter little. Its difference from the Democratic Party will not be sufficient to attract (or keep) membership.
I believe Palin has a strategic view of Americas future that looks beyond the 2012 election itself. The most important thing now is that the small-government perspective continue to have a chance to express itself on its terms. If it is silenced in electoral politics, there will be no hope of changing Americas path. And the only way for it to have a voice is for this primary season to continue on a competitive basis. That is the mechanism through which the voice of either wing of the party matters to the industry of politics. Thats where the noise has to be made.
Palin is right. This is an incredibly political year, more so than any year I can remember other than maybe 1979. Americans are more engaged in political ideas than I have ever seen them. Obamas poll numbers arent good, but perhaps more importantly, those numbers and others on GOP candidates keep shifting. Peoples choices havent been set in stone. Theyre not sure whats going on, theyre still trying to find a candidate who says what theyre waiting to hear, and they havent made up their minds. The media will do what theyre going to do, but the people are having a separate dialogue with themselves, and it isnt over.
I believe the GOP would be out of step with the remarkable nature of this year to crown a big-government-as-usual candidate early, on the theory that we need to damp down philosophical debate and concentrate on campaigning as early as possible before November. The campaigning is what is annoying the living bejeebers out of the voters; its the philosophical debate that matters this year. Shutting it down would be a tactical as well as a strategic error. The only way to force Romney to the right is to keep the primary season competitive. Its also the way to keep quality attention on the most important debate America has had on the nature of government since 1860.
She is keeping her options open while backing who she believes to be the best candidate at this time.........Just guessing at her motives here.
I support Newt right now, but I can't tell what will happen in the future just like nobody else can.
If he was to make a stupid statement on abortion or the second amendment, that would be it for me.
Don't think he will do that however, was just saying that hypothetically.
As I read somewhere years ago, "Leave yourself room to maneuver in uncharted waters, the future is always uncharted waters".
I seriously think you’re trying to read more into it than is there. Sarah Palin doesn’t mince words. However, when she speaks on FOX she’s under contract so she might not be able to come out and endorse anyone. And she might also feel it’s not her place to influence the process.
I hear all the time that important person X or Y should endorse “MY” candidate. If it turns out they endorse “NOT MY” candidate they’re suddenly the scum of the earth and should have stayed out.
If they endorse no one, they’re corporate shills, they’re hedging their bets, they’re (insert mind reading negative thought process of another person here), etc.
But again, she might mean exactly what she says...she wants the process to continue...if she lived in NC she’d vote for Newt...after FL she’d still vote for Newt. She’s been talking about the same issues for a long time and Newt best represents those at this point.
Cindie
Because if she openly throws her support behind Newt and he fails to overtake Romney, she loses credibility about her ability to rally peoples thoughts, minds and actions. She taints her ability to be perceived as a king maker. She's afraid to take a strong stand because it may come back and haunt her.
If she's only angling for a Newt win in the primary process, then she's misrepresented that she wants a competitive nomination process. She needs to say I want Newt to take this from Mitt.
I established my tagline two years ago as a challenge to us to make a Palin candidacy happen. Of course it is literally impossible to draft someone who takes the William T. Sherman position that "If nominated I will not run, if elected I will not serve."But if we could have coalesced around Palin from the gitgo, before she ever made an announcement one way or the other about running, we could have created a super pac and affected her deliberations. Once we allowed the primary season to begin and the deadlines to loom, and Rick Perry and Herman Cain to enter the lists, we were doomed to the current situation. We find ourselves trying to settle on one of two candidates for whom, I venture, not one FReeper in ten would have advocated back in August or September.
Why did we need to lead her, if we think she should be our leader? McCain-Feingold. I have seen it credibly argued that Ronaldus Maximus himself could not have mounted a campaign for the presidency under the current rules. Governor Palin shouldn't have had to make that decision under the circumstances which the illegitimate, unconstitutional, "campaign finance reform" laws establish.Thanks, John McCain! Thanks, GWBush! Thanks, Sandra Day O'Connor! </sarcasm>
For those that seem to think I have been dumping on Palin and supporting Romney, this article is so right on, until it says Romney would be better than O, I am in no way sure that is true. (Note old tag line reactivated)
Social conservative understand all too well, it is you that lacks understanding. We hear this cr@p every election and everything keep getting worse.
Platforms mean nothing. Bob Dole was asked about the pro life plank in the platform, he replied, no one ever reads that thing.
I guess when the nation is overrun by illegals, and we are bankrupted by social welfare programs for the disadvantaged we can point to the SOCON agenda and feel good.
You can’t vote in a Christian Theocracy. That’s for you, your church and community/state to approach. I do think Roe V. Wade is an abominable ruling, and is bad law, as is recognizing homosexual marriage, etc.
Do you think it’s OK for the government to step in and redistribute your wealth in keeping with Christian principles?
Social Conservatism by itself is a trap for government. There’s no end to doing feel-good stuff with your and my money.
Things are getting worse, FRiend and will likely continue. We know how the chapter ends.
The secular Government needs to get it’s fiscal house in order, return and adhere to the secular Constitution. Christians need to get their own house in order and strengthen the things that remain. Do not conflate the Cross and the Flag...
{Do not conflate the Cross and the Flag...}
The Cross and flag were always joined, the failure to recognize this, is to the detriment of the country. This country is doomed to despotism, if we fail to take a moral stance, against the debauchery of the libertarian, and Marxists, If libertarians were the answer Goldwater would have won, instead he gave us the beginning of the end of the modern era.
I do believe God blessed this nation and it’s radical form of government, despite the deists and Masons and slavers intertwined from inception.
The Cross and the Flag have marched together more often than not over our brief American history. Our collective moral compass as a nation may roughly parallel Israel’s vacillation between keeping God’s covenants and wandering off into groves, idols and strange altars.
Don’t miss the exit on this turnpike; it’s not brightly signed...
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