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Pyrrhic Victory? Right Diagnosis, Wrong Patient (Better a Castles victory than O'Donnell defeat?)
American Thinker ^ | 09/19/2010 | Randall Hoven

Posted on 10/09/2010 5:44:49 PM PDT by WebFocus

I would like to speak for the math-challenged, self-indulgent, and irresponsible wingnuts who wanted Christine O'Donnell to beat Mr. 52-Lifetime-ACU-Rating in the Delaware senatorial primary. I know that geniuses like Mark Murphy and Charles Krauthammer are better than I am at predicting elections. So when the lights of the firmament say O'Donnell is "unelectable," I will accept that premise (for argument's sake). But the story does not end there.

Assume the geniuses are right. In fact, assume the worst case: O'Donnell loses the general election and the Senate ends up 50-50, with the tie-breaking vote going to Joe Biden. If we wingnuts hadn't screwed things up by electing O'Donnell in the primary, the Senate would be majority Republican in 2011-12. How much better would a majority-by-one outcome be?

We do not have to hypothesize such a situation. Exactly that happened in 2001. And this is what happened: Jim Jeffords, nominal Republican, left the Republican Party to caucus with the Democrats, putting them in majority control for the remainder of that Senate term.

Jumpin' Jim had gone through an election just eight months prior to his defection. All that time, the geniuses told us Republicans to support guys like Jeffords. He's running in Vermont, for goodness' sake -- whaddaya want? You can't expect a Jim DeMint Republican to win in the Northeast. We need such "moderate" Republicans in order to control the Senate.

January 2001 was the first time in 46 years that the president, the House, and the Senate were Republican. That state of affairs lasted from January 20 to June 6. After that, meaning after Jumpin' Jim's jump, the Democrats controlled the Senate and blocked everything that might have been worthwhile coming from the Republican House and ready to be signed by President Bush.

When we really, really needed him, Jumpin' Jim jumped. To be clear, all of the good do-bee Republicans who supported our "moderate" Republicans from the Northeast still got screwed. They lost the money they sent him and lost the Senate anyway. Strike one.

Move to the next northeast state, Pennsylvania. Pat Toomey ran against Arlen Specter in the GOP primary in 2004. There was nothing wrong or "wingnut" about Toomey. He had served in the House for the previous six years. He was a Harvard graduate, for goodness' sake. But he wasn't the choice of the Republican Party geniuses. The geniuses knew their incumbent, Arlen. And Arlen proved, if nothing else, that he could win elections in Pennsylvania. So Arlen got the GOP money, the GOP backing, and President Bush's endorsement.

Then, when we really, really needed it -- when it might have been possible to filibuster Obama's stimulus in 2009 if a mere 41 GOP senators could hang together -- three GOP senators, all from the Northeast, broke ranks: Susan Collins, Olympia Snowe, and Arlen Specter. Strike two.

Then, when we really, really, really needed him to defeat ObamaCare by filibuster, Arlen did Jumpin' Jim one better and became an out-and-out Democrat. He ended up voting for ObamaCare as a Democrat. He took GOP money when he ran in 2004, and then voted against the GOP when it counted most. Strike three. And I'm out.

It does the GOP no good to be in majority "control" of the Senate if that majority is lost when the votes really count. And every time the votes really counted, we could count on a wet Republican like Jeffords, Specter, Collins, or Snowe to flip sides.

Even more frightening, the 2000s taught us conservatives that the GOP is not the conservative party; it uses conservatives to win elections. As much as I loathe the Jeffords, Specters, and Crists of the world, the GOP itself has shown that it couldn't care less about limited government or fiscal responsibility. Those were merely nice-sounding themes for the back-home troglodytes during campaign season.

I'll give you a giant case in point. Back in 1995, when Bill Clinton was president, the GOP-controlled Congress passed a significant Medicare reform bill. It was a good bill, with genuine reform, not tinkering at the edges or a layering-on of benefits. It would have helped control the otherwise out-of-control entitlement growth. Clinton vetoed it.

Why, then, in 2003, when the GOP again controlled both houses of Congress, did it not simply pass this bill again for George W. Bush to sign?

The GOP not only did not do that, but it came up with Medicare Part D and jammed it down our throats in 2003 just as much as the Democrats jammed ObamaCare down our throats seven years later.

Medicare Part D was no minor tinkering. It had all the beauty of a Democrat bill. (1) It would cost a trillion dollars over a decade (but decades in the future). (2) It was passed by a slim and partisan vote, literally in the dark of night, using high-pressure politics otherwise known as bribery. And (3), its costs would not really kick in until those who passed it were safely out of office or long forgotten for the vote.

The Government Accountability Office, way back in 2006, put the total liabilities of the federal government at $50.5 trillion at that time. (That was before the great financial crisis, before the Great Recession, and when deficits were in mere triple-digit billions.) Medicare Part D, something that did not even exist prior to 2003, was $7.9 trillion of that, more than the liability of future Social Security payments.

This is a big point, so I want you to have the source: a presentation by David M. Walker, Comptroller General of the U.S. at that time. Medicare Part D, a new entitlement forced on us by the leadership of the Republican Party, would account for 16% of all future federal liabilities -- more than future Social Security payments! Eight. Trillion. Dollars.

Now why did the Republicans do that? It simply added to Medicare; it did not reform it in any way, shape or form. It added to entitlement costs -- a lot. The GOP's conservative base never asked for it and never wanted it. "Wingnuts" like Rush Limbaugh were outright against it. Yet the Republican Party fought the Democratic Party, its own conservative base, and many of its own members to get it passed.

Here is what Rush Limbaugh had to say about it in 2006:

The Democratic Party is the party of entitlements; but the Republicans come up with this Medicare prescription drug plan that the polls said that the public didn't want and was not interested in. That is not conservatism.

And here is what President Obama had to say when defending himself against charges of being a socialist.

I did think it might be useful to point out that it wasn't under me that we started buying a bunch of shares of banks. It wasn't on my watch. And it wasn't on my watch that we passed a massive new entitlement -- the prescription drug plan -- without a source of funding.

Do you now get why Newsweek said, "We're all socialists now"?

For those who call Christine O'Donnell's victory a Pyrrhic one, our truly Pyrrhic victories were in 2002 and 2004. More such victories, and we are undone.

Medicare Part D in 2003. TARP in 2008. The Obama stimulus in 2009. ObamaCare in 2010. Trillions, trillions, trillions, trillions. And the debt goes up, up, up. Hello PIIGS, here we come.

This is not about maintaining a slim and slippery numerical majority in the U.S. Senate, especially when Obama wields the veto and Democrats wield the filibuster. This is about a revolution in thinking inside the Republican Party leadership. If that doesn't happen, none of the rest matters.

Randall Hoven is the creator of Graph of the Day. He can be contacted at randall.hoven@gmail.com or via his website, randallhoven.com.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: christineodonnell; delaware; mikecastles; pyrrhic
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1 posted on 10/09/2010 5:44:53 PM PDT by WebFocus
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To: WebFocus

Normally the GOP in Delaware functions as a place holder for the politically connected class in a liberal state. O’Donnell does not fit that mold.


2 posted on 10/09/2010 5:54:03 PM PDT by Anti-Bubba182
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To: WebFocus

I don’t understand your add on to the title. Seems to me the article is in favor of Christine and against Castle, because he would cozy up with the Dems on critical votes like the other prior RINOs mentioned in the article. At least that’s my take, lol.


3 posted on 10/09/2010 5:54:24 PM PDT by KJC1
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To: WebFocus

Unfortunately, that was the plan all along. Globalists sure as Hell don’t want people like DeMint, Boehner, O’Donnell and Angle running the senate where they can stop or slow down the drive towards one-world government, socialized everything and the peonage of the middle class.


4 posted on 10/09/2010 5:55:31 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (Palin/Bolton 2012)
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To: KJC1

RE: I don’t understand your add on to the title. Seems to me the article is in favor of Christine and against Castle


Did you see the question mark at the end of the add on?


5 posted on 10/09/2010 5:56:05 PM PDT by WebFocus
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To: WebFocus
Randall Hoven makes some good points.

Now it's up to the Delaware conservatives to get out there and vote for O'Donnell. No excuses. No hemming and hawing.

It better be 99.99% of registered voters. Anything less is a damn shame.

VOTE!

6 posted on 10/09/2010 5:56:11 PM PDT by FroggyTheGremlim
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To: WebFocus

Amen!


7 posted on 10/09/2010 6:00:25 PM PDT by Tennessean4Bush (An optimist believes we live in the best of all possible worlds. A pessimist fears this is true.)
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To: WebFocus

Well said. I can’t improve on it.


8 posted on 10/09/2010 6:00:25 PM PDT by ChildOfThe60s (If you can remember the 60s, you weren't really there.)
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To: WebFocus

These GD RINO’s have been screwing the conservatives(and this country) for years. After leaving Murkowski in a power position by our RINO Senators, and getting a call from the Michael Steel group, I sent Joe Miller more money. Christine is next to get cash!!!!


9 posted on 10/09/2010 6:02:10 PM PDT by radioone ("The bigger the government, the smaller the citizen.")
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To: WebFocus
I would like to speak for the math-challenged, self-indulgent, and irresponsible wingnuts

Sorry, that's as far as you get.

10 posted on 10/09/2010 6:03:25 PM PDT by kanawa (Obama - "The only people who don't want to disclose the truth are people with something to hide.")
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To: KJC1

It does support O’Donnell imho.

“O’Donnell loses the general election and the Senate ends up 50-50, with the tie-breaking vote going to Joe Biden. If we wingnuts hadn’t screwed things up by electing O’Donnell in the primary, the Senate would be majority Republican in 2011-12”

That is a specious neocon argument. People have had it with the neocons. They need to wake up and smell the TEA brewing.


11 posted on 10/09/2010 6:05:06 PM PDT by stilloftyhenight (Don't make me use uppercase.)
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To: WebFocus
We do not have to hypothesize such a situation. Exactly that happened in 2001. And this is what happened: Jim Jeffords, nominal Republican, left the Republican Party to caucus with the Democrats, putting them in majority control for the remainder of that Senate term.

Uhh, sorry. Jeffords jump turned a 50-50 split (with Dick Cheney casting the deciding vote) into a DEMOCRAT majority. Totally different than what he's talking about here, with a 50-50 split with a DEMOCRAT VP to break ties. A jump of a Republican does NOTHING in terms of control of the Senate.

Even more frightening, the 2000s taught us conservatives that the GOP is not the conservative party; it uses conservatives to win elections. As much as I loathe the Jeffords, Specters, and Crists of the world, the GOP itself has shown that it couldn't care less about limited government or fiscal responsibility. Those were merely nice-sounding themes for the back-home troglodytes during campaign season.

BS! This is a VERY common line that "conservatives" put forth, and it's a straight Dem-talking point. HERE'S the facts:

When the GOP controls the Senate AND House, deficits drop and go away. PROVEN. When Congress is split or controlled 100% by the Democrats, deficits go up.

Does not matter who sits in the White House; Congressional control by the GOP WILL reduce deficits - it has done so in the past, and would do so in the future.

12 posted on 10/09/2010 6:07:31 PM PDT by PugetSoundSoldier (Indignation over the Sting of Truth is the defense of the indefensible)
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To: WebFocus
When we really, really needed him, Jumpin' Jim jumped.

To be exact, he was bribed. Or rather, Bill Clinton's publisher suddenly offered a $300,000 "book advance" to Jeffords for a book than no one ever read.

13 posted on 10/09/2010 6:09:35 PM PDT by denydenydeny ("Tolerance becomes a crime when applied to evil." Thomas Mann)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Unfortunately, that was the plan all along. Globalists sure as Hell don’t want people like DeMint, Boehner, O’Donnell and Angle running the senate where they can stop or slow down the drive towards one-world government, socialized everything and the peonage of the middle class.

Of course, that leadership only happens if you actually elect GOP members. Nominating and running unelectable GOP candidates does nothing to further the leadership of DeMint or Boehner, because the Senate stays in the hands of the Democrats.

A Snowe, Collins, or Castle is defanged if you have Conservatives in control of the Senate, and heading the committees (where the real power resides - deciding what will come to the floor for even a vote). But they are VERY useful in voting to put the GOP - and those conservatives you list above - in power in the first place.

14 posted on 10/09/2010 6:10:01 PM PDT by PugetSoundSoldier (Indignation over the Sting of Truth is the defense of the indefensible)
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To: WebFocus
Randall Hoven hits it.
15 posted on 10/09/2010 6:10:25 PM PDT by Tribune7 (The Democrat Party is not a political organization but a religious cult.)
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To: kanawa

That was about as far as I was going to get, too...
Then I realized the first two paragraphs were very well disguised satire. Read the rest of the article.


16 posted on 10/09/2010 6:10:40 PM PDT by CedarDave
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To: WebFocus

Christine O’Donnell has put a face on the state of Delaware. Until her campaign, Delaware was Timbuktu to most peeps. What face would Delawarians rather have...a bearded marxist face or Christine?


17 posted on 10/09/2010 6:12:38 PM PDT by biggredd1
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To: PugetSoundSoldier

Maybe, unless a Snowe, Collins or Castle defects, as did Jeffords and Spector. Then you’re back to square one, aren’t you?


18 posted on 10/09/2010 6:13:56 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (Palin/Bolton 2012)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Square 2 is Lieberman jumping to Repubs for a chairman seat.


19 posted on 10/09/2010 6:15:40 PM PDT by biggredd1
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
When I heard that Obama and Biden were the first people Castle talked to after the Primary, I figured he had planned all along to jump. He would have given control back to the Dems anyway. O'Donnell has an outside chance. She just needs to run ads with Harry Reid calling Coons his ‘pet’ and highlighting Coons’ fiscal irresponsibility.
20 posted on 10/09/2010 6:18:58 PM PDT by originalbuckeye
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