Posted on 03/13/2009 1:08:18 PM PDT by pissant
I read David Frum's cover piece in this week's Newsweek magazine, "Why Rush is Wrong: A Conservative's case against Limbaugh," and I've been thinking about it ever since. Frum is a former Bush #43 speechwriter, and has started a great website, newmajority.com, that I found on Michael Barone's recommendation a few weeks back. Frum's article is the must-read of the week for Republicans. I agree with most of what he says, and here's the part that makes the most sense to me:
Look at America's public-policy problems, look at voting trends, and it's inescapably obvious that the Republican Party needs to evolve. We need to put free-market health-care reform, not tax cuts, at the core of our economic message. It's health-care costs that are crushing middle-class incomes. Between 2000 and 2006, the amount that employers paid for labor rose substantially. Employees got none of that money; all of it was absorbed by rising health-care costs. Meanwhile, the income-tax cuts offered by Republicans interest fewer and fewer people: before the recession, two thirds of American workers paid more in payroll taxes than in income taxes.
We need to modulate our social conservatism (not jettisonmodulate). The GOP will remain a predominantly conservative party and a predominantly pro-life party. But especially on gay-rights issues, the under-30 generation has arrived at a new consensus. Our party seems to be running to govern a country that no longer exists. The rule that both our presidential and vice presidential candidates must always be pro-life has become counterproductive: McCain's only hope of winning the presidency in 2008 was to carry Pennsylvania, and yet Pennsylvania's most successful Republican vote winner, former governor Tom Ridge, was barred from the ticket because he's pro-choice ...
Above all, we need to take governing seriously again. Voters have long associated Democrats with corrupt urban machines, Republicans with personal integrity and fiscal responsibility ... After Iraq, Katrina and Harriet Miers, Democrats surged to a five-to-three advantage on the competence and ethics questions. And that was before we put Sarah Palin on our national ticket.
Every day, Rush Limbaugh reassures millions of core Republican voters that no change is needed: if people don't appreciate what we are saying, then say it louder. Isn't that what happened in 1994? Certainly this is a good approach for Rush himself. He claims 20 million listeners per week, and that suffices to make him a very wealthy man. And if another 100 million people cannot stand him, what does he care? What can they do to him other than ... not listen? It's not as if they can vote against him.
But they can vote against Republican candidates for Congress. They can vote against Republican nominees for president. And if we allow ourselves to be overidentified with somebody who earns his fortune by giving offense, they will vote against us. Two months into 2009, President Obama and the Democratic Congress have already enacted into law the most ambitious liberal program since the mid-1960s. More, much more is to come. Through this burst of activism, the Republican Party has been flat on its back.
I couldn't agree more on that last point. It's time to move past Rush Limbaugh, on many levels, and I think there are a lot of conservatives who feel the same way. For Republicans, it's time to evolve.
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The Republicans should run on a platform of free healthcare for all, a ten million dollar stimulus in cash for every household, and free porn on every TV channel.
They should promise a 10,000 square foot house for all families, a free chef in every household, and free meals three times a day at your choice of Red Lobster, Outback, and Olive Garden.
They should promise a new hot babe every night for every man, and three maids for every woman.
Double all this for blacks.
Triple all this for immigrants already here.
Quadruple all this for everybody else in the world.
The Republicans should offer the vote to anybody alive anywhere in the world.
They’d win every election. (We’ll, they’d win the first and only election.)
Winning elections is easy.
Proper governence takes a little more than Frum has to offer.
“Conservatives, Republicans Must Evolve”
Conservatives are strict Constitutionalists, and until that
precious document itself evolves , I think we’ll stay right where we are.
I don’t see how free market health care reform and tax cuts are antithetical. Why not both? And why shouldn’t there be a voice for fiscal restraint and for encouragement of private investment and economic growth? As for same sex marriage and abortion, the party should stand up for the preservation of marriage as traditionally defined and for human life, regardless of how “popular” those stands are among “young people”. There should be a voice in their defence because they are the right positions. Moreover, the pro-same sex marriage people have shown here in Massachusetts that they are willing to make public schools promote and normalize same sex marriage without any opt out for parents who disagree. There are fundamental religious freedom issues at stake that need to be spoken out against.
Just another yuppie who has spent too much time schmoozing in Georgetown.
I will rot in hades or just not vote before voting for her version of the New Republican Party. I swore an oath to myself that I will never again vote for another rino McCain.
I swore that same oath ages ago. That’s why I wrote in Duncan Hunter of POTUS. :o)
Seems these kind of Repubs are evolving into liberal Democrats. In which case, Mary Whoever, there is already a party for you.
We don’t need another.
The Republican party needs to reach out to family working class voters. The GOP need not quit on abortion or gay marriage. The GOP won with the Reagan Democrats but lost them because the GOP refused to hear the job sucking sound over the cash jingling on Wall Street. McCain could have won if the put on a hearing aid and listened to the middle class.
I don’t change my positions based on public consensus. While there may be some issues I would be willing to compromise on, my core principles and beliefs are non-negotiable. If that means never winning another election-then so be it.—JM
This whole “Republicans must change/evolve” thing is a whole lot of hooey. We weren’t crushed last November, and if the economy hadn’t imploded in September, McCain might still have won. Obama certainly wouldn’t have won by seven million votes. These “experts” are looking at a fluke and thinking it’s decisive. It isn’t. In three years Obama won’t be looking so hot to panicky voters who bought the hoax that Republicans blew the economy and Obama was the man to save it. If anything Republicans must make sure that a candidate with a conservative message gets it out effectively to the public before 2012.
That’s why I stand 1000% with the Duncan Hunter wing of the party. A promoter of American industrial superiority and America first.
As we conservatives drag the remnants of our movement into the wilderness with no idea how we will emerge or whether we will ever emerge as an electoral force in America which is recognizable by my generation, we must inevitably engage ourselves in the most soul- searing inquiry of what went wrong. This will be an agony but equally it will be effective only to the degree that it hurts. It will not succeed without bloodshed. There must be finger-pointing and bloodletting. We must carve to the bone. The process must be Darwinian. Those whose ideas are false must be bayoneted on the trail.
The object is to find our soul - nothing less. In a come to Jesus sense we must get absolutely clear what it means to be a conservative. Only at this point do we look to the tent flaps and open them. Those who cannot subscribe to the hard-won consensus, to a confession of faith as to what is a conservative, should walk out through that flap. Those who are attracted from the outside to the core message of conservatism should be encouraged to walk through the flap and enlarge the tent. What the left wants us to do is to expand the census in the tent prematurely and thus turn a movement into a menagerie. The Soul-searching must be conducted by conservatives without the earnest ministrations from liberals like those of Politico. This article, of course, has nothing whatever to do with explaining why Republicans lost 2008 election across the board, it has everything to do with first efforts by the left to sabotage the rebuilding process on the right which must be done exclusively by the right.
We have not lost the 2008 election because we were excessively partisan while Obama was enlightened and transcendental. We actually lost the election because George Bush and Karl Rove betrayed the soul of conservatism. A party without its soul is like an army which does not believe in itself, it cannot win the next contest. A party which had abandoned its principles and so lost the last two elections and frittered away both its power as the ruling coalition and its status as the majority philosophy of the nation, cannot expect to swell its ranks by recruiting to a lost cause. The party must first know what the cause is and only then can it recruit. To again borrow the military analogy, a party like an army disintegrates without a mission. Armies are assigned missions but a political party finds its mission only through soul-searching.
As this process occurs we will be told by the left that only a big tent party can win and that to become a big tent one must move to co-opt the center. That is not how it works. That is the reverse of the way it works. The center is not peopled by voters with fixed notions about the exercise of power who wait for one of the great political parties to surrender their values and embrace the tempered and resolute opinions of the middle. That happens with splinter parties but not with the mushy middle. When an unaffiliated voter bestirs himself to enter the polling booth he is confronted with one of two options: right or left. He does not consider who has moved the farthest geographically from right to the left or left to right any more than he commits because of his own long held political beliefs. He votes for the fella who best tickles his fancy at the moment. Put more charitably, he votes for the candidate who persuades that he is the best, and has the best to offer.
If we as conservatives do not believe that we have the best to offer we should get out of the business. A candidate, like a party, who is centered on his philosophy has integrity and is persuasive. And that philosophy must first have a vertical spiritual component which finds expression and out working in a horizontal governing philosophy.
Because of his race, Obama was asked only to demonstrate that he could walk and talk like a president. Obama has won the middle, not because he pandered to them, which he did, but because he had the wind at his back.
As John McCain reverts from titular head of the Republican Party to United States Senator, it falls to the rest of us to contrive a governing philosophy which he, unfortunately, did not own and therefore could not bequeath to us. We had such a legacy from Ronald Reagan but we squandered it. We must construct our own. We must do it in the wilderness. We must do it unaided by intermeddling liberals. Their's is the serpent's way, the easy way, a pander to the superficially popular, the accommodation to the middle. The bed of birth has always been a bed of pain. The pain must be embraced if we are to receive a new life.
Evolve to communism??? No thanks. Forget it. I want a new party. Of course it will lose at first. I do not care. The Democrats are now communists. Republicans are socialists. Iwant a capitalist party!!!
“We need to put free-market health-care reform, not tax cuts, at the core of our economic message.”
The free market and low taxes go hand in hand. Health care reform will only work if it is done via the free market, which is at the core of Republican philosophy. The conservative movement is about core ideas, not putting our wet finger in the air to see which way the wind is blowing. Republicans always win when they put their core ideas out there and measure them against the way things are. They always lose when they try to compromise with the left by supporting ideas that rely on government solutions, albeit smaller big government.
Where's the outcry from their side?
I want to join NOW!
So, the idea is not to oppose abortion but just to demand less of it. Now there is a winning idea.
Not this crap again. Hey Frum and the Frumettes, stop wasting words and energy and just adopt the following slogan:
“If you can’t beat em, join em, our plan for conservatism’s future.”
Afterall, it is what you and your ilk are saying without, of course, coming out and saying it.
did the olson twin with the drug problem get married?
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