According to David Limbaugh:
Let me tell you — in a nutshell — why I believe Republicans must not succumb to their fear and compromise on the $61 billion and why my conservative colleagues should not be squeamish about this path.
—It’s not clear that Republicans lost the PR war over the budget battles of the ‘90s — a point Michael Barone made in a recent column.
—Besides, today is radically different from 1995-96, especially in terms of the catastrophic financial crisis that hangs over this country as the flames of hellfire hung over readers of Jonathan Edwards’ “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.” Even the co-chairmen of the bipartisan budget commission acknowledge this.
—Voters understand that we are in a crisis, and they cast their votes accordingly — resoundingly — in the November congressional elections.
—A government shutdown wouldn’t be pleasant, but it would not be the end of the world. Essential services would remain in operation. On the other hand, our failing to get the financial crisis solved would be the end of the prosperous and free America we love.
—If a shutdown occurs, it will not be the Republicans’ fault, and we don’t have to accept a narrative to the contrary. For the first time since 1974, Democrats, despite their control of Congress, did not pass a budget last year, and it is their failure that has led to all the wrangling over these continuing resolutions. Moreover, the Democrats have not acted in good faith toward our national debt crisis, particularly respecting the trillions of dollars of unfunded liabilities with our entitlements programs.
—The liberal media have lost both credibility and clout since the ‘90s, while the alternative media have gained in both. Also, an information explosion has occurred, making facts instantly available — universally. Facts are on the Republicans’ side.
—Obama and the Democrats have lost immeasurable popularity and credibility in the past few years, especially concerning the nation’s financial health and the economy.
—Obama has been exposed for presenting recklessly erroneous information on his 10-year budget proposal (understated by $2.3 trillion) and Obamacare (understated by hundreds of billions of dollars). He has been AWOL on these budget negotiations and presented no plan for entitlement reform.
—Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., was caught saying that the Democrats’ strategy was not to compromise with Republicans, but to torpedo them. Reports also surfaced that other Democratic leaders are strategizing for a shutdown because they have no authentic plan and have no ammunition against Republicans apart from demonizing them.
—Polls have shown that most people would prefer a government shutdown to Congress’ failing to resolve the budget crisis. Separate polls have shown that even independents would favor a shutdown.
—What moderate conservatives fail to understand is that there is little downside to Republicans sticking to their guns but an enormous downside to their caving. The media will vilify Republicans as uncompassionate, whether or not there’s a shutdown; just wait for the debate over Ryan’s budget. But if Republicans breach their promise to make these cuts, there will be hell to pay with the base.
You don’t defeat the Democrats by picking your battles; you fight them at every turn — thereby gaining political capital, not using it up.
I have to agree on point one, in particular. How did the Republicans get hurt by the 1995 shutdown? They won the House and Senate in 1996, and the only reason Clinton won re-election was because he was running against Bob Dole, a horrible candidate. And Clinton only got 49%, didn’t even top 50%. Voters aren’t going to toss out Republicans in 2012 over this. It’s only if they don’t cut spending and stand up to 0 and the Dems.