Posted on 11/20/2010 3:07:16 PM PST by rabscuttle385
More than a year ago, Pollster Frank Luntz stood before a group of about 40 House Republicans in a cramped conference room. I need to tell you something, he said. Ive been looking at polling data from Congressional districts across America for the last three months. Im convinced that you are going to be in the majority next year. After a long pause, he added, This time, please dont screw it up again.
I dont think we will.
The message of the last two elections could not be louder or clearer. Great parties are built upon great principles and they are judged by their devotion to those principles. From its inception, the core principles of the Republican party have been individual freedom and constitutionally limited government. The closer it has hewn to these principles, the better it has done. The further it has strayed from them well, my God!
In the aftermath of the Bush debacle, House Republican leaders resolved to restore traditional Republican principles as the policy and political focus of the party and they achieved something no one at the time thought possible: they united House Republicans as a determined voice of opposition to the Left and rallied the American people. Republicans rediscovered why they were Republicans, and Republican leaders rediscovered Reagans advice to paint our positions in bold colors and not hide them in pale pastels.
(Ironically, in Reagans home state, Republicans tried to campaign to the left of the Democrats and the result was disastrous. While the rest of the country was celebrating historic Republican gains -- including a shift of at least 61 U.S. House seats, 6 U.S. Senate seats, 680 state legislative seats, 19 state legislatures and six governors -- the statewide Republican ticket in California imploded. Republicans nationally now hold more state legislative seats than in any year since 1928. In California, they hold fewer than at any time since 1978!
House Republicans were unfairly criticized as the party of No. When somebody is driving you off a cliff, no is a handy word to have in your vocabulary. But it cant be the only word in the national debate over the future of the country and Republicans know it.
Over the last two years, House Republicans laid out detailed plans to revive the finances of our government and the prosperity of our economy, to return freedom of choice, competition and affordability to health care, to restore the integrity of our borders, and to return to our states their rightful powers and prerogatives.
A Republican House cannot alone enact such laws, but it no longer must labor in the obscurity of minority irrelevance. It now has the opportunity to elevate the national debate by putting forward these plans at a time when Americans are alert to the danger facing the nation and eager for an adult discussion about the fundamental mechanics of freedom how freedom works and how we can put it back to work.
In 1858, Lincoln warned the nation that two antithetical philosophies, freedom and slavery, competed for the future and reminded us that a house divided against itself cannot stand. I do not believe the house will fall, he said, but I do believe that it will cease to be divided. Today two incompatible philosophies, freedom and socialism, compete for our future and the stage is set for one of the greatest debates in the history of the American Republic.
Upon the outcome of that debate rests the question of whether the United States of America will fade inexorably into history or whether it will begin its next great era of expansion, prosperity and influence.
Rep. Tom McClintock was first elected to the California 4th Congressional District by a margin of 1,800 votes in 2008 and re-elected by a margin of 70,000 votes in 2010.
Now that the House, in January, will have the majority I expect nothing. Absolution nothing.
Actually, McClintock is making a name for himself by being himself. He doesn’t need a ‘leadership’ post. And, he’s probably better off without one. Being part of the ‘in crowd’ has its own drawbacks.
The problem with McClintock is his eyes, they look like they're each staring at something different. It's a bit unnerving looking at McClintock on TV.
-PJ
Wish he could have been our Gov
As a fellow ‘face for radio’, can’t help but agree.
He's a nice looking man, but I do know what you're talking about with his eyes. He does well on TV as long as they have him in a side shot like they did in this video from last year, but face on, he's a little scary. (The first few minutes of the video he talks about H1N1, then he talks about the healthcare bill and Afghanistan.)
Thank you!
George Herbert Walker Bush used to say it was "that vision thing." I'd sure put Tom's vision up against most anyone's in the GOP, wouldn't you???
His eyes have to be that way for his secret "over the horizon" political vision capability!!!
Costa ranches on the east side of the valley were water comes from pumping the underground. No minnows down there.
-PJ
I would like to be ON the McClintock ping list, thank you.
I would like to be ON the McClintock ping list, thank you.
Hey, get off the crusading horse. I love the guy, he’s my Rep. I’d elect him POTUS if I could because I don’t care about that stuff. But most people do and someone who doesn’t know him would hold it against him. We live in a very superficial age.
“His favorite women, Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina, whom he endorsed and campaigned for and who ran to the Left of the Democrats - lost.”
They did NOT run to the left of their democrat opponents, both of whom were essentially incumbents.
You think DeVore would have done better than Fiorina, when he couldn’t win the (closed) primary?
Palin was right supporting Fiorina. She had the best chance, in an uphill situation.
BTTT
It almost makes you long for the days of Nixon. What a looker he was! LOL
You’ve been added to the list.
(It’s a rather infrequent ping list - but worth it.)
When I met him in person, I thought him a rather handsome man and a fiery orator. He will stand up for rural people, against over-regulation of the natural resource industries and for responsible use of our public lands. Look forward to his contributions to the House Natural Resources Committee Republicans http://republicans.resourcescommittee.house.gov/ We are lucky to have him.
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