Posted on 12/29/2014 3:53:57 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Congratulations to Texas Senator Ted Cruz for winning the Federalist Today Presidential Straw Poll with 26% of the nearly one thousand votes cast. Placing a respectable second and third, Senator Rand Paul (22%) and Governor Scott Walker (16%) showed that they also have considerable support among the lovers of freedom and anxious for the fray Federalist faithful.
The political insider would, undoubtedly, not be impressed. Good luck getting Senators Cruz or Paul elected President of the United States. Any such insurgents campaign will be undone by a press that favors Democrats, a bare-knuckles Republican establishment that favors milque-toast candidates, and a bewildered flyover electorate conditioned to favor one flavor-of-the-month insurgent presidential candidate after another, to the detriment of any effective insurgent candidacy.
These same insiders would have no problem envisioning a scenario in which insurgent Democrat Elizabeth Warren, establishment Democrat Hillary Clinton, or establishment Republicans Jeb Bush, Mitt Romney, or Chris Christie win the presidency. Ruling-class smugness aside, these folks have a point: playing by the normal rules, the least likely outcome in 2016 is a victory by a Republican insurgent, even though 40% of Americans consistently identify themselves as conservatives (twice the typical number of progressives)
But who says we have to play by their rules?
Suppose the former South Carolina senator and current president of the Heritage Foundation, Jim DeMint, once again able to meet freely with sitting members of Congress, requests and leads a meeting in the new year with Cruz, Paul, and other serious insurgent candidatestwo years before the inauguration of the next president of the United States. At the meeting, DeMint lays out two possible pathways to winning the presidency:
Scenario One: An insurgent miraculously wins a three-front 2016 election battle by simultaneously (a) consolidating conservative-libertarian support in the midst of a heated primary; (b) defeating a well-funded, well-positioned, well-organized Republican establishment candidate, and (c) defending himself against the mainstream media charge that hes too outside the mainstream to win a national election. Likelihood of pulling off this trifecta in a condensed election season: almost zero.
Scenario Two: The insurgents agree to compete with one another over the summer and fall months of 2015 in a well-organized series of regional debates, speeches, town hall meetings, and organized votes. These events would aid the largely conservative and libertarian Republican base in naturally and fairly reducing the field of insurgents to one consensus candidate by Thanksgiving. Likelihood of winning the Republican nomination and thereafter the presidency: perhaps one in four, or about the same as the other contestant wings of the two major parties.
Leading the candidates through the math, DeMint convinces each that the most likely insurgent path to victory in 2016 (and therefore his most likely path to victory) comes from embracing the second option. Since each thinks he has the right stuff to win a fair fight, all agree to work together to make the fight fair.
Led by DeMint, candidates, donors, activists, and organizations across the conservative-libertarian spectrum through the spring of 2015 agree to the terms of the competition and work together to galvanize limited government partisans to participate in the affair. After a spirited summer and fall campaign season, an insurgent emerges from the field battle-tested and well-positioned to move on to win the Republican nomination.
Why is it essential that such an effort begin soon? If nothing like this starts to happen in the next few months, it is all but certain well be playing 2016 by the normal rules, in which the ruling class house wins every timeand for those committed to constitutional, republican government, this is a dangerous election to lose.
The expansive executive power wielded by President Obama may very easily become institutionalized, especially if a Republican successor applies it to his own (perhaps better) ends. The open question, in essence, is whether the hegemonic Obama presidency is the exception or the new (bipartisan) rule. Whether recognized or not, this is the defining question for the campaignand only a top-tier, battle-ready insurgent will be positioned to make it the defining question of the campaign.
The Democratic nomineewhether establishment Progressive or insurgent Progressiverwill have every partisan and ideological reason to consolidate and extend, where possible, President Obamas institutional gains. Progressivism began with a revolt against the Constitutions separation of powers system and a longing to replace itin fact, if not in lawwith a responsible and responsive centralized, parliamentary system led by a charismatic president (or prime minister).
An establishment Republican will be almost equally unlikely to undo the damage of the Obama presidency, not so much out of fealty to a long-term Progressive dream (which most establishment Republicans only accidentallywhich is to say, unconsciouslyshare), but out of the general dont-rock-the-boat respectabilitarianism that is their identifying pseudo-ideology.
We know enough about the Bushes not to expect Jeb to repudiate his brothers own aggressive use of signing statements and other extra-constitutional prerogativesand therefore can expect him to be as effectively neutered on the central issue of the 2016 campaign as Mitt Romney was on the central issue of the 2012 campaign (Obamacare, thanks to Romneycare). Moreover, does anyone think that gusto and bluster Chris Christie has a credible critique of executive overreach in him? Or once (and future?) would-be Management Consultant-in-Chief Mitt Romney?
A serious conservative-libertarian insurgent candidate that emerged from a serious debate on the contemporary state of the American republic should have a very different profilebeginning, we hope, with a very different understanding of the role of the president (and the leaders of the coordinate branches of the federal government) under our constitutional system.
There is no more insightful and aphoristic summary of the Constitutions separation of powers system than Alexander Hamiltons near the beginning of Federalist 78, in the context of explaining why the judiciary ought to be the least dangerous branch of the federal government:
The Executive branch not only dispenses the honors, but holds the sword of the community. The legislature not only commands the purse, but prescribes the rules by which the duties and rights of every citizen are to be regulated. The judiciary, on the contrary, has no influence over either the sword or the purse; no direction either of the strength or of the wealth of the society; and can take no active resolution whatever. It may truly be said to have neither FORCE nor WILL, but merely judgment.
Force, will, and judgmentthree distinct but complementary powers for three distinct but complementary branches. Combine any two and dangers to liberty abound. Most critically in our time, combining executive force with legislative will produces every opportunity for selective enforcement of oppressive rulesthe exact opposite of what Hamilton suggests should be the aim of all government: a steady, upright, and impartial administration of the laws.
Getting the basics right is the first step toward constitutional recovery. We believe that there are a number of potential insurgent candidates who could champion this cause and encourage like-minded members of Congress to do the sameand that they are much more likely both to make the effort and succeed in it with a pre-primary process that sharpens the insurgent message and unifies insurgent voters, donors, activists, and institutions.
One scenario is clear: well either hang together in 2015or be hung out to dry, once again, in 2016.
If “hanging together” means holding my nose to vote for the least liberal candidate (You know, the guy with the “R” next to his name), then I’m proud to say I’ll hang separately. Unlike the vast majority of low info R voters, I love my Country far too much to vote for the lesser of evils any more. Plus, I take offense to being bent over by my supposed “friends”.
Now read the article.
It’s a wordy, unfocused article based on a lot of hypotheticals. As far as I can tell, the author has their heart in the right place, but I found this hard to slog through. They should learn to just say what they want to say,
I know at least one of the authors, and he’s got a PhD. I’m pretty sure that they don’t give you one of those if you can still get straight to the point. :-)
“Insurgent” = Conservatives?
A highly negative connotation already in-use by the Oligarchy.
I certainly want nothing to do with the present GOP Ruling Class and will never vote for anyone in that Judenrat party ever again.
That being said - if people are thinking the election in 2016 is going to be anything but a corrupt fraud and a joke with no affect on stopping this tyranny - we are ignorant fools plagued with a fatal case of Normalcy Bias.
Okay, then why are you here?
But, when they had started their trek, so many years before, they had been high-functioning adults.
Yup.
If Bonehead and McDorkell are not hung out to dry (or better yet, just plain hung), the GOP is dead, dead dead.
Go through their pockets and lock for loose change.
To Promote Conservatism and our Christian heritage, not Establishment party politics and to share my thoughts as a Watchman on the wall.
Oops, that’s “look for loose change”, one only has to lock their loose change (and everything else) when around liberals.
CW-II doesn’t sound so silly now, does it?
I think he meant to say we need to pick a candidate and support a candidate.
We always have too many. They trash each other and we trash all of them in favor of the one we like.
Truth is, a person needs to be chosen asap because without money, a great machine, and ardent supporters, they haven’t a chance in hell.
That said, I don’t really believe much of this mess is going to get fixed by an election. We have gone way to far for a simple return. The forces are against us and will refuse to allow a win because their ugly future vision is within their grasp.
True dat.
Ditto that. Sheesh it is not that hard to understand this article!
He’s giving two scenarios in which one of “our guys” might have a chance to win and giving more detail on the second option.
It’s one that many of us have suggested over and over. We have debates between invited conservative candidates all through one summer, and then ALL conservatives agree to get behind the winner. (jeb, mitt, etc need not apply). So Cruz, Walker, etc would duke it out in an arena of our own choosing, not in debates sit up and established by the liberal media and the elite. OUR debates run OUR way. Conservatives decide which constitutional candidate wins our support and then we pull together and throw all our support to him.
It’s obvious some on the thread are not reading the article.
Worth repeating in bold italics.
It’s an interesting approach.
Sort of set of primary contests for the primaries.
Another great suggestion would be to run the primaries in the order of their Republican percentage in the previous POTUS election. Instead of starting off with Democrat states like we do now which help guys like Romney build an early lead.
We have traveled this road to tyranny for a long time now and nothing ever changes except for the worse.
We have heard repeatedly that “we can’t do anything until after the next election” blah, blah, blah.
The next election happens and the cycle repeats itself. You would think by now with all that has been lost that we could actually see how ridiculous it all is.
Apparently not, or else we fear facing the truth. After all, there is always the next election and all will be well.
Kind of hard for me sometimes to work up any enthusiasm. it is like a mental treadmill.
It’s called “Normalcy Bias” and most Americans have a fatal case they are unaware of.
God says His people would be destroyed for a lack of wisdom, (Hosea 4:6) because the people would only want to hear smooth and easy things instead of the hard truth (Isaiah 30:10).
I hope the Republicans nominate a Ted Cruz limited government Christian conservative type. But I am NOT holding my breath.
The real question is, what is the smartest way to vote, the best way to help conservatives in Congress, in the 2016 presidential if it's another 2012 scenario of Dem vs Dem Lite?
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