Posted on 01/27/2010 10:10:23 PM PST by neverdem
NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE www.nationalreview.com
The Doddering Old Party
Is there a Scott Brown hiding out in Connecticut?
Call him “Senator.” Richard Blumenthal, Connecticut’s attorney general, beats his Republican opponents — Rob Simmons, Linda McMahon, and Peter Schiff — by 20 points in Rasmussen Reports’ latest poll. But some conservatives still think Blumenthal, who has never faced a serious challenge in his 27-year career, sports a glass jaw, and they’re looking for the prizefighter who can shatter it. Is there a Scott Brown hiding out in Connecticut?
If so, who? It’s not clear that a conservative can win the race and — more to the point — it’s not even obvious who the conservative in the race is.
Simmons, former representative of Connecticut’s second congressional district, is a classic New England moderate. He wants to suspend payroll taxes to stimulate the economy and to lower corporate taxes to spur growth. He pledges to withdraw government from the banking system, from the housing market, and from the automotive industry. Unfortunately, he was a high-rolling congressman. Last month, D. Dowd Muska, a contributor to the Waterbury Republican-American, lambasted Simmons for telling the New London Day in 2004, “I like to go out and deliver the money.”
Tea Partiers distrust his spendthrift ways. Bob MacGuffie, co-founder of Right Principles, a group that organizes conservative activists, says, “We’ve got problems with his congressional voting record. He voted with Planned Parenthood on partial-birth abortion. He opposed drilling in Alaska. He voted for McCain-Feingold and for the Medicare drug plan.” Still, MacGuffie adds, “We certainly believe in redemption.” Simmons is atoning. In October, he renounced his previous support of card-check and cap-and-trade.
Conservatives remain wary. “He cast some very bad votes which he has yet to fully explain,” cautions Tom Scott, a former state senator. In his defense, Simmons cites his time as state business advocate, during which he visited over 400 businesses. “I got an earful about energy costs, an earful about the costs of labor, an earful about problems with unionization. With the economy down, we can’t afford cap-and-trade and card-check,” he tells National Review.
Some conservatives are sympathetic: “He is more conservative than his voting record,” argues Joe Markley, a former state senator.
McMahon, former chief executive officer of World Wrestling Entertainment, seems more conservative in many ways. She agrees with Simmons on some issues: On the economy, McMahon tells National Review, “I certainly think tax incentives for small businesses would be the way to go.” On health care, she supports reforming the tort laws, allowing insurance companies to compete across state lines, and encouraging small businesses to pool risk. But she parts with Simmons in breaking right on other issues: On abortion, for example, she favors parental notification and opposes partial-birth procedures.
But her core convictions remain a mystery to many observers. “You really don’t know where she stands on things,” says Rick Green, a columnist for the Hartford Courant. Take the Supreme Court. Asked if she would have voted to confirm Sonia Sotomayor, McMahon could only say, “In her full scheme of judgments, she showed me that she had let more of her personal background into her decisions. There were other jurists who had less of that kind of implication.” Not exactly stirring stuff.
Conservatives worry that she would come under the wrong influences in D.C. “As soon as she got to Washington, she’d go RINO in 30 seconds,” MacGuffie says. They wonder about the $15,000 she gave to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee — then led by Rahm Emanuel — in 2006. McMahon defends her donations: “Ari Emanuel is CEO of William Morris Endeavor Entertainment, which represents WWE. I contributed to the campaigns of his brother Rahm. The donations were not politically motivated, and I’ve given more to Republicans than to Democrats.” (Never mind what a non-politically motivated political donation means.)
Worse for Tea Partiers, McMahon appointed former governor Lowell Weicker, who sired the state income tax, to the board of her company. “This guy did more damage to the Connecticut economy than any other man in my lifetime. How can you reward that man, who isn’t even a pleasant fellow?” Markley asks. “When that becomes well known, that will be every bit as damaging to her among rank-and-file Republicans as the fact she gave tens of thousands of dollars to leftists,” Scott concludes. McMahon may be too bipartisan for comfort.
Then you have Schiff, who is an ideological libertarian. His economic proposals radically differ from those of his rivals. “We need to abolish departments, cut entitlement spending, remove regulations. We need the Fed to be independent. We need higher interest rates. We can’t rebuild savings if there’s no return on them,” he says. He is the only one to propose a new chairman for the Federal Reserve: “We have a Fed chairman who’s a political hack. Put Paul Volcker in there. He knows what needs to be done.”
He does not share most conservatives’ foreign-policy commitments, being a classic libertarian non-interventionist. “I don’t even think we should be in Afghanistan. We went in there to get Osama bin Laden, but he’s not even there anymore. I was against going into Iraq from Day One. My foreign policy a) doesn’t bankrupt the nation, and b) defends the nation. We don’t need to build an empire in 160 countries.” This stance poses problems for more mainstream conservatives, to say the least.
On social issues, he refers to the Constitution: “If I’m asked to vote for something that there’s no constitutional authority for, I’m going to vote against it. I don’t think abortion is an issue that has anything to do with the federal government. If the states want to pass laws that restrict access to abortion, that’s up to the states. It’s not up to the federal government. I also think there’s nothing in the Constitution that authorizes spending money on abortions. I would vote against federal funding for abortion.”
If the first question is “Who’s the conservative?” then the second is “Who can win?” Again, the picture is murky.
Simmons has some advantages. “He has a significant geographic base,” Scott said. “His congressional district is roughly one-fifth of the state population, and geographically it’s larger than a fifth. While the second congressional district is not as rich in registered Republicans, it still is a significant base where he still commands a loyal following across the board in the Republican party.” His biography resonates with voters. “He’s a former Vietnam officer. He’s a patriot; he served his country,” MacGuffie says.
McMahon has the message: She is an outsider, a businesswoman who could no longer “sit on the sidelines.” She has the resources, and has pledged to spend up to $50 million of her money on the campaign. Finally, she has the right touch. “The impression I’m getting is that she has taken to campaigning,” Kevin Rennie, a former state senator, says. “She seems to understand that politics is about drudgery. So far, she seems to be making a positive impression.”
She may prove popular. “In this state, we’ve proven that an Irish woman of a certain age from Fairfield County is attractive. Jodi Rell won by landslides,” says Vincent Giandurco, who blogs at Connecticut Local Politics. “She’s a government outsider. The core Republican voter has changed over the last 25 years. In the ’80s, it was a coupon-clipping bond owner from Greenwich. Today it’s a small-business owner. She’s a role model,” Giandurco says.
The most outside of outsiders is Schiff. The general feeling is that he’s unelectable. “He’s too prickly. He’s too know-it-all. It’s all a little bit too Ayn Rand for me,” Giandurco says. Tea Partiers wonder whether he’s serious. “He’s certainly raising money, and that’s always important, but he has a very thin campaign schedule,” Scott says. Schiff rejects the notion that he’s not ready for the majors: “I’m very serious. . . . I’m putting together an organization. I just opened headquarters. I’m interviewing consultants. The primary isn’t till August.”
So conservatives are split. Markley divides the electorate thus: “Economic libertarians go with Schiff. Optimists who believe what they want to believe go with McMahon. People who think ‘How do we win this election?’ go with Simmons.” He is maybe a little tough on McMahon, but his diagnosis is probably correct. Conservatives need more time to consider their options. Republicans do not have as good a chance to win against Blumenthal as they did against Chris Dodd. If conservatives want to knock out the “senator-elect,” they’d better pack a punch.
— Brian Bolduc is a senior at Harvard College. He can be reached at bolduc@fas.harvard.edu.
Ping
Thanks for the heads up on this one, neverdem. ;-)
Thanks, neverdem!
Peter Schiff ping!
paper coming out on simmons soon
At this point, Schiff sounds pretty good. I suspect a Libertarian has much better prospects of winning in Connecticut than a conservative who is a foreign policy hawk. I fall into the later group, but I can get along very well with the former.
Thanks for the ping Magna
Schiff is the only one calling for big cuts in spending and higher interest rates to promote savings. The Palin-cultists lately claim I am a Paulist but I am a Schiff-ist. (None of them have picked up on that.)
Then they will point out that someone like Schiff will have low poll ratings compared to our ‘the one’. Of course, you get elected by promising an ‘all candy’ diet. But isn’t that what Obama promised last night?
Offer the people a clear choice, "I will be the 41st vote." comes to mind. Enough with running RINOs because "they can win". That isn't going to play in this election.
No Blumen Way !
Blumenthal is vulnerable as a global warming dupe and proponent of economy killing expensive energy. He was a petitioner in the Supreme Court decision calling carbon dioxide a pollutant.
Yes, but it’s still a long way to November. If the repubs are smart, a conservative candidate will hammer Blumy on the points you make. It all depends if the GOP has the guts to fight or if they go the “safe” RINO route. The RNC had pretty much written Brown off so whoever the nominee is better be prepared for a hard lonely campaign.
Sorry if this posts twice.
Lovely graphic!
You are very welcome! Thanks for using my 'real' name!
Of course, you get elected by promising an all candy diet. But isnt that what Obama promised last night?
Not only an all candy diet, but an all candy diet with no cavities and no weight gain. But, to tell the truth, I couldn't take 0bummer for more than about 15 minutes.
It’s from http://schiffforsenate.com/
Somehow, I suddenly feel embarrassed. I know what! I will nap until that feeling goes away.
Then we have the wealthy,intrepid Linda McMahon, who is still a bit of a question mark and probably an easy target for the arrogant Connecticut Democrats who, at this moment, are probably compiling 'dirt' they can use to smear her, should she win the GOP nomination, which seems unlikely.
Then we have Peter Schiff, a pull-no-punches libertarian. A fact that seems to make some folks positively giddy. However, Mr. Schiff is probably going to fall short of securing the Republican nomination, unless the Independents decide to abandon the Democrats and vote for a libertarian.
Beating Richard Blumenthal, who, I believe is truly vulnerable, with his decades-long attacks on businesses and brittle personality, can be done. I would not have thought this a month ago. Not in deep-blue Connecticut. That was before the Scott Brown 'Miracle in Massachusetts'.
Frankly, I fear that the usually moribund Connecticut GOP will take the well-worn path of least resistance and back Simmons, assuming only a Democrat-Lite wearing the GOP label could possibly win an election to the senate in Democrat-heavy Connecticut. They will be wrong.
Yes, we need a Scott Brown. A candidate with some charisma and most important, a conservative message that he believes, not that he adopts when it appears as if this is what people want to hear - today. I don't see that in Simmons, McMahon or even in Schiff, despite his anti-government stances. Of course, as the candidates all say (one way or another), it's over seven months until the primary and ten months until the election. A lot could happen and it probably will, under the reckless, ideologically-driven Obama administration. Mr. Schiff may end up being just what the voters want. Mrs. McMahon could prove to be far more conservative and appealing than she seems, today. Even Rob Simmons could conceivably convince folks like me that he really isn't another Connecticut RINO, 'playing conservative' to win the primary, then quickly reverting to Democrat-Lite, as many conservative, suspect he would.
Still, I'm not inspired or very enthusiastic about any of these wannabes but I'll be watching them and hoping that if they disappoint, as I believe they will, 'another Scott Brown' really does emerge from the shadows and pulls another Republican upset in a very 'blue' state. Hey, it could happen.
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