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1 posted on 01/24/2012 4:33:38 AM PST by RoosterRedux
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To: RoosterRedux

Screw these guys. I love it!


29 posted on 01/24/2012 4:59:42 AM PST by mmanager (Reagan Revolution + Republican Revolution = Bury Obama in 2012 - Go Newt!)
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To: RoosterRedux
This dumb klunk (whoever he/she is)--and the rest of 'em too--have vastly UNDERESTIMATED THE ABJECT FURY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE!!!!!
30 posted on 01/24/2012 4:59:47 AM PST by Savage Beast
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To: RoosterRedux

Notice that nobody mentioned Santorum as an alternative.


31 posted on 01/24/2012 5:00:45 AM PST by ari-freedom (If SOPA passes, we will lose our Free Republic.)
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To: RoosterRedux

And we all know how often the Republican party checks in with Andrea Mitchell! This is another “red herring” at best. The DNC has been messing with our process since it began, why would they stop now? It is silly for her to believe anyone will take her seriously.


33 posted on 01/24/2012 5:05:09 AM PST by marstegreg
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To: RoosterRedux
IF the Republicans do this they will be killing themselves as a viable party for years to come if not forever.

READ MY LIPS: if Newt rolls through the primaries and they jettison Romney for some other milquetoast squishy can't we all just get along RINO moderate I will be done with the Republican party. I WILL NOT VOTE FOR THEIR NOMINEE and any down ballot votes will be for whatever candidate I like the best no matter party affiliation or chance of winning.

And they can put that into their pipes in their smoke filled room and smoke it. F 'EM ALL!

35 posted on 01/24/2012 5:07:12 AM PST by commish (Freedom tastes sweetest to those who have fought to preserve it.)
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To: RoosterRedux
Go ahead GOP. Make my day.

Rebellion will no longer be brewing. It will boil over.

40 posted on 01/24/2012 5:13:45 AM PST by TADSLOS (Gingrich-Palin FTW!)
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To: RoosterRedux
Conservatives are the most intelligent group of people in the United States.

The biggest miscalculation that the Democrats AND the Republican Elites are making is not to comprehend this!

Democrats have made the very serious mistake of believing their own Propaganda--that "Conservatives are stupid!"

Republican Elites have made the very serious mistake of believing Democrat Propaganda.

All this is the the advantage of Conservatives and the benefit of the United States!

IT IS AN ADVANTAGE TO BE UNDERESTIMATED!

48 posted on 01/24/2012 5:20:23 AM PST by Savage Beast
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To: RoosterRedux

Jeb Bush the candidate emerging from a smoke-filled room?

The GOP truly is suicidal.


49 posted on 01/24/2012 5:21:58 AM PST by 9YearLurker
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To: RoosterRedux
Yeah, because the country is dreaming of another Bush presidency.

Seriously, I don't care if Jeb Bush were the greatest politician with the best plan for putting the country not only on track but into a station filled with gold, there's no way on God's Earth that another Bush will be elected in the next 50 years.

58 posted on 01/24/2012 5:37:14 AM PST by Tanniker Smith (I didn't know she was a liberal when I married her.)
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To: RoosterRedux

Well I guess the party elites are just not going to let us get away with this little rebellion. Trying to nominate a guy who will make significant changes and actually attempt to cut the size of govt. The very thought of it is just too much for them to stand. Their safe cushy lives depend on the status quo.

Trying to trot out Mitch Daniels or Jeb Bush at this point in time is really desparate. Mitch Daniels has all the charisma and appeal of a walnut. Jeb Bush is a non starter with almost all conservatives. Maybe they will try to ressurect TPaw.

Personally I think the GOP establishment went a bridge too far in 2008 when they literally force fed Juan McStain down our throats. It was so hard to support and vote for the guy that nobody wants to take that path again.


59 posted on 01/24/2012 5:40:04 AM PST by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped.)
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To: RoosterRedux
I'd love to see an FR poll - If Romney gets the nomination, will you stay home or vote third party?

Two weeks ago, I might've towed the line like I did with McCain, but the more I see of these elites, the more I want Newt to win. When Newt first won in SC I have to admit I was a little disappointed - I'd have preferred Santorum. But Newt's winning me over, or more accurately, I'm being pushed towards him by these a-holes who think they can annoint the next nominee.

The mistake the elites are making is listening to the liberal friends' cocktail party talk. They believe the libs when say they'd vote for a moderate like Romney. The truth is none of them will go into that voting booth and pull the lever for Romney anyway. Rich liberals are a lost cause. They'll ALWAYS vote Dem. They just don't want to come across as closed minded to their Republican friends.

60 posted on 01/24/2012 5:40:24 AM PST by old and tired
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To: RoosterRedux

He didn’t buy them off. He is ONE of them.

If these bastards pull this, all Tea Party People and conservatives should exit the GOP, form their own party and screw the 2012 elections.

Let the Obamabastard win.


62 posted on 01/24/2012 5:43:46 AM PST by ZULU (LIBERATE HAGIA SOPHIA!!!!!)
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To: RoosterRedux

How much is Romney paying this dufus? This will never happen.


63 posted on 01/24/2012 5:44:27 AM PST by Round 9
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To: RoosterRedux
For months now I have been writing and speaking about the battle for the heart and soul of the Republican Party. It is a Cold War, about to go hot. The struggle is not so much between competing factions among GOP members but between the party base on one side and its leadership on the other, who are presently pulling in opposite directions.

Get the popcorn ready. This year's convention is going to be a wild affair - like nothing you've ever seen before.

66 posted on 01/24/2012 6:02:03 AM PST by andy58-in-nh (America does not need to be organized: it needs to be liberated.)
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To: RoosterRedux
Romney Adviser Said ... Romney Can't Win ... So The Party Elites and I Will Try And Do Everything We Can To Screw The GOP Electorate And Find An Alternative To Newt ... dammit!

There ... fixed it.

70 posted on 01/24/2012 6:19:07 AM PST by Servant of the Cross (the Truth will set you free)
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To: RoosterRedux
Romney Adviser Said Party Elites Will Find Alternative If Romney Can't Win Florida

Yes, I just bet they will...

74 posted on 01/24/2012 6:26:22 AM PST by Jim Noble ("The Germans: At your feet, or at your throat" - Winston Churchill)
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To: RoosterRedux

77 posted on 01/24/2012 6:31:33 AM PST by EternalVigilance
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To: RoosterRedux

Anything to ensure that the TEA Party Movement won’t have any effective voices at the table in DC.

We know their agenda. bttt

(Hot links within links below):

Trent Lott [R] on Tea Party candidates: ‘As soon as they get here, we need to co-opt them’
http://blogs.ajc.com/jay-bookman-blog/2010/07/19/trent-lott-on-tea-party-candidates-as-soon-as-they-get-here-we-need-to-co-opt-them/
12:27 pm July 19, 2010, by Jay

The money quote from a Washington Post piece on the Tea Party and Washington’s GOP establishment:

Former Senate majority leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.), now a D.C. lobbyist, warned that a robust bloc of rabble-rousers spells further Senate dysfunction. “We don’t need a lot of Jim DeMint disciples,” Lott said in an interview. “As soon as they get here, we need to co-opt them.”
But Lott said he’s not expecting a tea-party sweep. “I still have faith in the visceral judgment of the American people,” he said.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/17/AR2010071702375.html?hpid=topnews

<>

Republican lawmakers gird for rowdy tea party

By Shailagh Murray
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, July 18, 2010

So who wants to join Rand Paul’s “tea-party” caucus?

“I don’t know about that,” Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) replied with a nervous laugh. “I’m not sure I should be participating in this story.”

Republican lawmakers see plenty of good in the tea party, but they also see reasons to worry. The movement, which has ignited passion among conservative voters and pushed big government to the forefront of the 2010 election debate, has also stirred quite a bit of controversy. Voters who don’t want to privatize Social Security or withdraw from the United Nations could begin to see the tea party and the Republican Party as one and the same.

Paul, the GOP Senate nominee in Kentucky, floated the idea of forming an official caucus for tea-party-minded senators in an interview in the National Review as one way he would shake up Washington. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), one of the movement’s favorite incumbents, filed paperwork on Thursday to register a similar group in the House “to promote Americans’ call for fiscal responsibility, adherence to the Constitution, and limited government.”

In six states — Kentucky, Nevada, Florida, Utah, Colorado and Minnesota — tea-party-backed Republican Senate candidates have won nomination or are favored in upcoming primaries. They are attracting outsize attention not only from Democrats and the media, but from conservative leaders such as former Alaska governor Sarah Palin and Fox News host Glenn Beck.

Republicans such as Paul and Sharron Angle in Nevada may hold provocative views, but “they’re our nominees and I think we ought to get behind them 100 percent,” said Sen. John Cornyn (Tex.).

“The candidates are not ours to choose,” said Cornyn, chairman of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee. “They’re the choice of the primary voters in the states, and I think we should respect their choices.”

Yet some Republicans worry that tea-party candidates are settling too comfortably into their roles as unruly insurgents and could prove hard to manage if they get elected. Paul, who beat GOP establishment favorite Trey Grayson in Kentucky’s primary, told the National Review that he would seek to join forces with GOP Sens. Jim DeMint (S.C.) and Tom Coburn (Okla.), “who are unafraid to stand up” and who have blocked numerous bills advanced by both parties deemed by the pair as expanding government.

“If we get another loud voice in there, like Mike Lee from Utah or Sharron Angle from Nevada, there will be a new nucleus” to advocate causes such as term limits, a balanced-budget amendment and “having bills point to where they are enumerated in the Constitution,” Paul said in the interview.

Former Senate majority leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.), now a D.C. lobbyist, warned that a robust bloc of rabble-rousers spells further Senate dysfunction. “We don’t need a lot of Jim DeMint disciples,” Lott said in an interview. “As soon as they get here, we need to co-opt them.”

But Lott said he’s not expecting a tea-party sweep. “I still have faith in the visceral judgment of the American people,” he said.

Sen. Robert F. Bennett (R-Utah), who failed to survive his party’s nominating process after running afoul of local tea-party activists, told a local Associated Press reporter last week that the GOP had jeopardized its chance to win Senate seats in Republican-leaning states such as Nevada and Kentucky and potentially in Colorado, where tea-party favorite Ken Buck has surged ahead of Lt. Gov. Jane Norton in their primary battle.

Bennett warned that such candidates are stealing attention from top GOP recruits such as Mike Castle in Delaware and John Hoeven in North Dakota, both of whom are favored to win seats held by Democrats. Nor are they helping the Republican Party to resolve its deeper identity problems, he said.

“That’s my concern, that at the moment there is not a cohesive Republican strategy of this is what we’re going to do,” Bennett told the AP. “And certainly among the tea-party types there’s clearly no strategy of this is what we’re going to do.”

Democrats are hopeful that voters will focus on the potential consequences of tea-party proposals as they decide whether to hand over control of Congress to Republicans. Democratic Party officials said their easiest target, given the recent economic meltdown, is the push to privatize Social Security. A recent NBC News-Wall Street Journal poll found that 48 percent of voters were “very uncomfortable” with the idea of private retirement accounts, while another 18 percent had reservations.

In Nevada, when state Sen. Joe Heck told a local reporter that he was open to a limited and voluntary version of Social Security privatization, his Democratic opponent, Rep. Dina Titus, declared he had endorsed “Sharron Angle and her radical agenda.” The Senate candidate has said she wants to phase out Social Security and Medicare as government programs.

Democrats also are trying to tarnish Ron Johnson, a DeMint-endorsed businessman who is backed by tea-party groups and establishment Republicans in his bid take on Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.). When Paul raised his caucus idea, Democrats put the question to Johnson.

“The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee is asking Tea Partier Ron Johnson to tell Wisconsin voters if he would join Rand Paul’s ‘tea party caucus,’ “ read a DSCC statement released Thursday. Johnson’s campaign did not respond to The Post’s request for comment.

The Democratic National Committee seized immediately this week on a billboard sponsored by a local tea-party group in Mason City, Iowa, depicting President Obama next to Adolf Hitler and Vladimir Lenin. “Republicans keep saying that they aren’t extremists — but they keep doing things like this,” wrote DNC Executive Director Jennifer O’Malley Dillon in a fundraising letter.

The billboard also forced Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), who faces a tough challenge from Democrat Roxanne Conlin, to issue a careful rebuke. “I believe that you should always leave personalities out of it and talk policy,” he said in an interview.

But Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin (D-Md.) said he’s still not sure of the tea party’s broader political impact. “I don’t know whether it causes a fracture in the Republican Party or provides more energy,” Cardin said. “But there are a lot of Republicans who are uncomfortable, and my gut is, at least in the short term, that will cause some problems.”

<>//<>

GOP Empire’s Plan to Crush Tea Party Rebels
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/politics/2011/10/gop-empires-plan-crush-tea-party-rebels/43582/
Reuters Elspeth Reeve Oct 12, 2011

The Republican establishment is no longer terrified of the Tea Party, The New York Times’ Matt Bai reports. It’s now figured out how to absorb them like a slow-moving but powerful star that’s swelling into a red giant. How to take these political hooligans over? There are a couple steps.

Step 1: The first rule of the establishment is: Do not admit you are part of the establishment! Bai talked to Fred Malek, a longtime Republican fundraiser who now raises money for the Republican Governors Association. He has photos of himself with various presidents on his wall.

Malek belongs to the Alfalfa Club, whose 200 or so members, the old-line political and business aristocracy in both parties, expect the president to attend their annual dinner, and he occasionally gives exclusive parties at his home overlooking the Potomac River in McLean, Va. — including one in 2009 that brought together Sarah Palin and the party’s Washington elite.
“You think I’m an establishment Republican?” Malek asked me.
When I said that I did, he let forth a lyrical string of expletives that, sadly, are not printable here. “My dad drove a beer truck delivering beer to taverns in Cicero and Chicago, Ill.,” he said. “I’m the first one in my family to go to college. No, I don’t consider myself part of the establishment.”

Bai adds, “George Will recently said there is no such thing as the Republican establishment.” George Will wears a bow tie. He wears a bow tie so much he’s on Wikipedia’s “List of bow tie wearers.” He started wearing bow ties as an anti-hippie statement in the 1960s and now, when he doesn’t wear one, people ask him where his bow tie is. You can’t get away with wearing a bow tie if you’re not part of the Republican establishment.

Step 2: Disarm them with praise. Republican lobbyist Scott Reed tells Bai that the Tea Party’s influence is “waning,” because Republican leaders have embraced the Tea Partying members of Congress, instead of calling them “those people.”

Did he mean to say that the party was slowly co-opting the Tea Partiers?
“Trying to,” Reed said. “And that’s the secret to politics: trying to control a segment of people without those people recognizing that you’re trying to control them.”

Step 3: Moderate whoever they pick as the 2012 nominee. Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol tells Bai that the Republican presidential nominee merely has to be conservative enough.

Kristol told me just after Perry entered the race, a development that essentially ended [the more radical Michele] Bachmann’s brief ascent. Establishment Republicans may prefer Romney to Perry, but their assumption is that either man can be counted on to steer the party back toward the broad center next fall, effectively disarming the Tea Party mutiny.

Step 4: Teach them about compromise. Vin Weber, who was elected to Congress in 1980, was “part of a group of rebellious young conservatives who rose up against their affable minority leader, Bob Michel,” Bai explains. Weber was “the Bachmann of his day,” Bai says, and Weber tepidly agrees. But he’s trying to teach them what he learned about Washington since he first arrived 30 years ago.

“I think I know what they want to accomplish, and I agree with most of it,” [Weber] said. “But if they want to accomplish it, they need to ‘rise to the level of politics.’ I mean, you can’t just stand there and take a stand and say, ‘I’m not going to compromise on my position.’ Because you won’t achieve anything.”

Likewise, Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, whom many wished would run for president, told a conservative conference earlier this year, “Purity in martyrdom is for suicide bombers.”

Step 5: Never forget reality. Say all the nice things you want about the activists, but don’t forget who’s really running the show. Lobbyists and former House aide John Feehery told Bai, “The thing I get a kick out of is these Tea Party folks calling me a RINO ... No, guys, I’ve been a Republican all along.

You go off into your own little world and then come back and say it’s your party. This ain’t your party.”

Given all the comparisons between the Tea Party and the Occupy Wall Street protests, liberals should take note.

The New Republic has a new editorial condemning the activists in lower Manhattan for their silly utopian ideals. It would be smarter to follow the Weekly Standard’s strategy: pat them on the head and praise them for caring so much, then use their energy to pass your standard center-left legislation.

<>

GOP Senator: Tea Party Challenges ‘Killed Off’ Chances for Republican Majority in Senate
The Blaze ^ | December 25th | Madeleine Morgenstern
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2825119/posts?page=26#26

Sen. Dick Lugar said challenges by Tea Party candidates are partly to blame for the Republicans not having a majority in the Senate.

“Republicans lost the seats before in Nevada and New Jersey for example and Colorado where there were people who claimed that they wanted somebody who was more of their Tea Party aspect, but in doing so they killed off the Republican chances for majority,” he said. “This is one of the reasons why we have a minority in the Senate right now.”


79 posted on 01/24/2012 6:38:05 AM PST by Matchett-PI ("One party will generally represent the envied, the other the envious. Guess which ones." ~GagdadBob)
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To: RoosterRedux

The RNC and the DNC are corrupt.


81 posted on 01/24/2012 6:41:31 AM PST by hope
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To: RoosterRedux
The "elites" are going to zot the robot if it doesn't perform. Romney is the "new and improved" wax model GHWB 2.0..and it ain't flying.

My guess is they jump to the lower rung and tap Jeb. Man..these people are so not getting it.

83 posted on 01/24/2012 6:44:53 AM PST by Earthdweller (Harvard won the election again...so what's the problem.......? Embrace a ruler today.)
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