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How To Fix The Republican Funk (Its Not Becoming Democrat Lite, Stupid Alert)
Townhall.com ^ | 05/14/2007 | Star Parker

Posted on 05/13/2007 10:31:31 PM PDT by goldstategop

The $64,000 political question is what, if anything, will energize the Republican Party?

An undercurrent attitude is taking hold that it's inevitable that the White House in 2008 will follow the Congress and fall into the hands of the Democratic Party.

Republicans, already in a funk, get deeper into it as they contemplate this prospect, and are radiating a sense of impotence about what to do. The existing field of presidential candidates is not inspiring confidence and the question seems to be who will be the sacrificial lamb rather than who will be the contender.

Dollars are flowing in record proportions to Democrats. Democratic presidential candidates raised 50 percent more funds than Republicans in the first quarter.

The Wall Street Journal reports that Democrats are getting the majority of contributions from corporate Political Action Committees for the first time since 1994. According to the Journal, Democrats, who pulled in around a third of corporate PAC funds in the previous election cycle, got 56.5 percent of these funds in the first quarter of this year.

Inside the Washington political establishment, high-powered lobbying firms are retooling and bringing in new Democratic partners to get ready for the new era.

Fred Thompson's recent lethargic performance at the Lincoln Club in Orange County, Calif., didn't help. Thompson sounded more like a concerned elder statesman contemplating the country's problems over cigars and brandy than someone who is losing sleep about the direction of the country.

So what's the diagnosis? Can anything be done or must Republicans resign to an inevitable ebb and flow of history and accept that, for the time being, their time is up?

It's here where the supreme, and most grating, irony lies.

Republican success since the rise of Reagan has been defining a bankrupt Democratic Party, out of step with American values of freedom and limited government, and offering an alternative.

To recall Reagan's oft-quoted observation at the CPAC conference in 1985, "The tide of history is moving irresistibly in our direction. Why? Because the other side is virtually bankrupt of ideas. It has nothing more to say, nothing to add to the debate. It has spent its intellectual capital."

The difference between the Democratic Party in 2007 and 1985 is absolutely zero.

Democrats have not generated a single new idea. They're all about government and taxes today as they were in 1985.

What's new now is Republicans, not Democrats. Republicans have purged the alternative vision that made their party fresh and exciting.

Back to Fred Thompson's speech in Orange Country as case in point.

The former senator from Tennessee devoted a good portion of his remarks to boilerplate phrases and buzzwords that appeal to a conservative crowd ("Wouldn't it be great if, instead of worrying so much about how to divide the pie, we could work together on how to make the pie bigger?")

But Thompson did take a brave step into substance and this was most revealing and concerning. "...there is nothing more urgent than the fate that is awaiting our Social Security and Medicare programs." What's his answer? "If grandmom and granddad think that a little sacrifice will help their grandchildren when they get married, try to buy a home or have children, they will respond to a credible call to make that sacrifice..."

Thompson is supposed to be the guy to fill the Reagan void. Can anyone imagine Reagan saying anything like this?

I'm not talking about peddling any free lunches to deal with the $70 trillion Medicare-Social Security overhang. I'm talking about the courage to be honest about what's wrong with these programs that has gotten us into this mess. Government planning and social engineering.

What happened to the Reagan message that too much government is our problem, restoring ownership and choice, and applying this truth to the entitlement monster and public education as we did when we reformed welfare?

Americans can walk and chew gum. We can talk about things beyond the war. But to do so requires that our politicians display the same courage at home that we're asking our young men and women to put on the line overseas.

The social engineering experiments that our country took on in the last century are failed and busted. Republicans need to get back on message. They seem to have lost the conviction and fortitude to do this, which is why the thrill is gone.

But if Republicans insist on morphing into Democrats, Americans will vote for the real thing.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008election; conservatism; democratlite; fred; fredthompson; gop; liberalism; ronaldreagan; runfredrun; starparker; thompson; townhall
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To: Baladas

Remember that funny store about Chelsea begging her mother to take her to the White House for a visit about 1985. HRC told Chelsea, according to the legend, that she would have to wait until somebody “more respectable” held the office before Chelsea could visit the White House. What hath AR and NY wrought!


41 posted on 05/14/2007 7:07:29 AM PDT by Theodore R. (Cowardice is forever!)
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To: goldstategop
[.. Dollars are flowing in record proportions to Democrats. Democratic presidential candidates raised 50 percent more funds than Republicans in the first quarter. ..]

WHy vote?... Multi millions of proto democrats Voting as illegals AND legals from accross the border, from many countrys will ensure democrats winning.. 2008 will be the election stolen by voter fraud and voter malaise(republican).

Federal republican officials could care less about voter fraud I mean massive voter fraud.. On the other hand republicans NOT VOTING EN'MASS will make a statement. A statement thats never been made before..

I wonder if many are considering seriously, civil war?.. For reasons far beyond all the jobs going to India and China.. And America being looted like a blind cowboy alone watching the cattle..

42 posted on 05/14/2007 7:16:39 AM PDT by hosepipe (CAUTION: This propaganda is laced with hyperbole....)
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To: goldstategop

thanks for posting this.


43 posted on 05/14/2007 10:17:01 AM PDT by cyn
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To: BubbaBasher
The Bob Dole thing was embarrassing. That was the best the Republicans could find? I suspect it was a big setup to get Clinton reelected - and he still couldn't pull off a majority of the popular vote!

I think of myself as a 1994 Republican, because those are the political values I identify with. I can't recognize the Republicans of today. To be fair, Bush isn't entirely to blame because the GOP started getting into the spending game during Clinton's term. But Bush has tarnished the Republicans' image and made it much, much harder to recover.
44 posted on 05/14/2007 10:22:43 AM PDT by billybudd
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To: Theodore R.
Somebody (I think Bill Quick) compared Bush to Nixon - he inspires the extreme hatred of liberals while actually being one of them.

So far, Alito and Roberts are ok. As you say, time will tell.
45 posted on 05/14/2007 10:26:02 AM PDT by billybudd
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To: Theodore R.

I think what’s happening is that your mainstream, not-so-political conservative person sees what’s happening and think’s “they’re WORSE than the damn democrats.”


46 posted on 05/14/2007 10:29:27 AM PDT by ichabod1 ("Liberals read Karl Marx. Conservatives UNDERSTAND Karl Marx." Ronald Reagan)
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To: goldstategop
"what, if anything, will energize the Republican Party?"

Easy. Bush to announce the surge worked, Iraq is standing up and troops are coming home.

47 posted on 05/14/2007 10:29:40 AM PDT by ex-snook ("But above all things, truth beareth away the victory.")
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To: billybudd

I really don’t think Dole’s nomination was a setup to get Clinton reelected. I think Dole just lacked the fire in the belly to be competitive. Some think Clinton had “skeletons” he was waiting to bring out of Dole’s closet if Dole got too strong at the end.

At any rate, E. Dole of NC has been much more conservative than I expected. I don’t think she was to blame at all for the loss of six Senate seats in 2006. She couldn’t help it if she could not find candidates to compete in places like ND.


48 posted on 05/14/2007 10:31:41 AM PDT by Theodore R. (Cowardice is forever!)
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To: hosepipe

No matter how bad things get, the people can’t figure out how to go back to constitutional values to solve the majority of problems. They are just too hooked on name ID, celebrity stauts, big government, etc.


49 posted on 05/14/2007 10:33:35 AM PDT by Theodore R. (Cowardice is forever!)
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To: Darkwolf377
The President is also head of his party. If Rudy becomes President, the GOP will no longer have a place for conservatives. So, while electing Rudy might be a short-term gain (he ain’t Hillary! or Obama), it is a long term loss (the ‘Pubbies become a Left-Center party).
Also, don’t bet on “strict constructionist” judges that Rudy promised - he thinks abortion and gun-control are “strict constructionist” positions.
Basically, if you want any conservatism left in the ‘Pubbie party, we can’t allow Guiliani to be elected. It would just prove that conservatives can be taken for granted.
50 posted on 05/14/2007 10:33:42 AM PDT by Little Ray (Rudy Guiliani: if his wives can't trust him, why should we?)
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To: Little Ray

Even Nelson Rockefeller allowed “conservatives” a “conservative” lieutenant governor, didn’t he? It was a meaningless gesture though. It seems that Giuliani may be to the left of Nelson Rockefeller, who later picked up Goldwater’s support.


51 posted on 05/14/2007 10:37:28 AM PDT by Theodore R. (Cowardice is forever!)
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To: ex-snook

Chuck Hagel, the popular Cornhusker, said today that he may run as an independent for President if GWB doesn’t get out of Iraq by the end of the year.


52 posted on 05/14/2007 10:38:36 AM PDT by Theodore R. (Cowardice is forever!)
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To: Theodore R.
We won’t even get a gesture for a Guiliani GOP - except maybe being told to “put some ice on it.”
Guiliani as President doesn’t get us much in the short run, and, in the long run, is a disaster for conservatives.
53 posted on 05/14/2007 10:43:03 AM PDT by Little Ray (Rudy Guiliani: if his wives can't trust him, why should we?)
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To: Darkwolf377

Very well said!


54 posted on 05/14/2007 1:28:06 PM PDT by alwaysconservative (If you don't have borders, you won't have a nation- Mark Steyn)
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To: goldstategop

This article is another attempt to demoralize the GOP into not voting in 2008, or dividing us so that her Heinous can sweep into power.

Be very afraid.


55 posted on 05/14/2007 1:29:55 PM PDT by alwaysconservative (If you don't have borders, you won't have a nation- Mark Steyn)
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To: teldon30
Unavoidable risk of being cliche, I lay the majority of this on Bush, he’s our leader and he’s not leading the Conservative movement. I understood he wasn’t a true conservative when I voted for him, he is still better than the alternatives and I had hope.
56 posted on 05/14/2007 1:41:57 PM PDT by stevio ((NRA))
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To: stevio

Bush’s lack of leadership is resulting in a solid leftist if not outright pro-communist South America. The Gulf States, Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Kuwait and even Saudi Arabia are making obvious efforts to begin a rapprochement with Iran. The dedicated anti-capitalists and anti-christians have been immensely strengthened by the wavering and indecisive Bush Presidency. This president has been an unmitigated disaster for the conservative movement with his total betrayal of fiscal conservatism, his “just get along at any price” with the Kennedy faction of the democrat party. In their wildest dreams the liberals could not have injured the conservative movement more than GWB.


57 posted on 05/14/2007 2:11:20 PM PDT by brydic1
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To: Little Ray
If Rudy becomes President, the GOP will no longer have a place for conservatives.

So President Rudy will just "decide" what the party is, even though the majority of the party doesn't agree.

Wrong.

58 posted on 05/14/2007 3:12:57 PM PDT by Darkwolf377 (Anti-socialist Bostonian, Anti-Illegal Immigration Bush supporter, Pro-Life Atheist)
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