Posted on 05/16/2008 9:17:02 AM PDT by vmorgs
There are many ironies associated with Ronald Reagans Eleventh Commandment, but perhaps the greatest irony of all is that this outdated Republican Party maxim didnt originate with the Gipper.
Those famous words Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican were actually conceived by former California GOP Chairman Gaylord Parkinson, largely to spare Reagans 1966 gubernatorial campaign from the same liberal Republican attacks that sank the 1964 presidential bid of Barry Goldwater.
Yet nearly a half century later, with an increasing number of Republicans wandering further than ever off of the Reagan reservation, the Eleventh Commandment has not only outlived its usefulness, its script has been flipped on the conservatives principles which Reagan used to build the modern GOP.
Originally intended to protect ideologically pure Republican candidates like Reagan from a barrage of left-leaning, Rockefeller-style attacks within the GOP, the Eleventh Commandment in recent years has morphed into bulletproof shield for big-spending Republican politicians whose fiscal policies would make the former President roll over in his grave.
In fact, the national GOPs blind allegiance to party label not party ideology is directly responsible for the fiscal abuses which led to the current Democratic majority.
Former Rep. Pat Toomey of the conservative Club for Growth summed up the predicament neatly in a recent column in The Wall Street Journal:
A Republican majority is only as useful as the policies that majority produces, Toomey wrote. When those policies look a lot like Democratic ones, the base rightly questions why it should keep Republicans in power. As the party gears up for elections in the fall, it ought to look closely at the losses suffered under a political strategy devoid of principle. Otherwise it can look forward to a bad case of déjà vu.
Indeed, the Republican disaster of 2006 in which exit polling suggested that 40% of voters in swing states viewed the GOP as the party of big government seems destined to be repeated in 2008, with recent polling suggesting that support for Republican candidates is at a sixteen-year low.
Rather than stand firm on their partys founding principles, Republicans fell victim to the same pork barrel, special interest excesses that defined previous Democratic majorities.
In fact, from 2001-2007, Republicans added $3 trillion to the national debt a 60% increase that drew howls from former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, among others.
The Republicans in Congress lost their way, Greenspan wrote in his 2007 memoir, The Age of Turbulence. They swapped principle for power. They ended up with neither. They deserved to lose.
Sadly, that lesson remains completely lost on the national GOP leadership, which continues to defend dozens of Republicans in Name Only whose fiscal recklessness is what cost the party its Congressional majority in the first place.
Even as the National Republican Congressional Committee was busy losing three more safe House seats in Illinois, Louisiana and Mississippi in special elections this year, the light bulb still hasnt gone off.
Rather than rallying Republicans around common sense, Reagan-esque values (at a time when our national economic outlook clearly dictates such an approach), GOP leaders like Rep. Tom Cole are instead fumbling around in the dark for their core principles and trashing fiscally conservative groups like the Club for Growth as stupid.
Frankly, based on the wholesale implosion of Republican ideology and the ongoing electoral disaster it has created, I would refer Mr. Cole not only to the wisdom of Reagan, but also that of Forrest Gump:
Stupid is as stupid does, sir.
Restoring Americas economic potential means recommitting ourselves to a core set of limited government principles, not some outdated commandment whose only purpose is protecting those politicians who have sold its underlying principles down the river.
Yes they did.
And with the GOP putting global warming cap and trade on their main website, they deserve to continue to lose. 'Pod.
Yes they did.
And with the GOP putting global warming cap and trade on their main website, they deserve to continue to lose. 'Pod.
Concerning the Mississippi loss, there was a hard fought Republican primary just a few weeks before the first Childers runoff. Both Republicans candidate went very negative with one another (Davis ran that McCullogh was a Clinton lackey at the TVA), and with Davis coming back late to win by a couple 100s of vote, I don’t think many of McCulloghs people came back to Davis’s defense.
Part of that I feel was geography, as Davis was from the west part of the district (many in Mississippi don’t consider Southaven, Mississippi as it is a Memphis suburb, with many Memphis relocates, which was wrong about Davis as he is a native.) and the east where McCullogh was from, which is less affluent.
Davis faces Childers again in November, and hopefully the McCollugh supporters could possibly forgive and forget the Davis camp with Obama at the top of the ticket.
But in all truthfulness the Big Tent has fell and squashed the elephant IMO.
Don’t forget the Prescription Drug Plan. That was to put the seasoned citizens in the GOP for years to come, but it never materialized.
“the Eleventh Commandment has not only outlived its usefulness”
The Republican Party has outlived its usefulness to liberty-minded conservatives.
Ford won, became a one term president, and Reagan won the Republican nomination and went on to serve two terms.
The previous was based on a post by Michael Shedlock at 11:25 AM May 9, 2008 "Hillary's Scorched Earth Policy"
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2008/05/hillarys-scorched-earth-policy.html
Sorry, typing too fast.
Should read:
Ford won the nomination in 1976 , but lost the race. Carter was a one term president, and Reagan then won the Republican nomination and went on to serve two terms.
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