Posted on 11/25/2012 8:54:02 AM PST by drewh
The battle lines are being drawn. The fight for the GOP is on. The seemingly eternal struggle between the right and the Republican establishment has entered its newest phase. In the wake of Mitt Romney being end-run by Barack Obama, GOP get-alongs want to double-down on failure. Moderation -- the odor of it -- is in DC's air like cheap, fetid perfume.
The point being: why would establishment Republicans want to move left (to the center, in their vernacular) precisely at the time when the America created by Woodrow Wilson and FDR is faltering -- groaning under its own enormous weight and falsity? Because polling and focus groups tell the GOP to do so? Because a bare majority of voters are able to be bought off by a political party that never outgrew Tammany Hall or the Pendergast Machine? Or because portions of President Obama's majority coalition persists in the delusion that the nation's troubles are exaggerated? We've seen the woeful result of willful denial throughout human history.
Conservatives can't count on the Republican establishment to have the boldness to push for an American renaissance. Establishment Republicans have too much invested in the "game," and that includes livelihoods, careers, and stature. The push for conservatives is to assume full control of the GOP.
Like Martin Luther, conservatives' first step is to nail their equivalent of the 95 Theses to the door of the Republican National Committee -- and then to the door of the White House... and then to the doors of colleges and universities and to every mainstream media outlet around.
The time has come for conservatives to proclaim, confidently, truthfully, and fearlessly. Dire times call to conservatives to do so; it falls to conservatives to be the instigators of a great American renaissance.
If not conservatives, then who
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
You're right. Let's instead keep supporting a Republican National Committee that opposes conservatism and cannot win a national election.
There are two reasons to start a third party:
1) To bring the Republican Party to the realization that it will lose its power and its influence, which are the real reasons it exists, if it continues to ignore its base. If that leads to discussions about how to genuinely improve the Republican Party, great.
2) To supplant the Republican Party as the home of conservatives and conservative Democrats (i.e., the Reagan Coalition). If goal one is not reached, the Republican Party deserves to go the way of the Whigs.
Or, we could do it your way, keep nominating losers like John McCain and Mitt Romney, and keep losing national elections. Up to you.
Youre right. Lets do the third party. Lets give 25% to that party, 25% to the RNC and hope the computers counting the votes malfunction and the DNC candidate loses.
__
You’re right. Let’s instead keep supporting a Republican National Committee that opposes conservatism and cannot win a national election.
There are two reasons to start a third party:
1) To bring the Republican Party to the realization that it will lose its power and its influence, which are the real reasons it exists, if it continues to ignore its base. If that leads to discussions about how to genuinely improve the Republican Party, great.
2) To supplant the Republican Party as the home of conservatives and conservative Democrats (i.e., the Reagan Coalition). If goal one is not reached, the Republican Party deserves to go the way of the Whigs.
Or, we could do it your way, keep nominating losers like John McCain and Mitt Romney, and keep losing national elections. Up to you.
Maybe people just dd not believe Romney as he has been on both sides of pretty much every issue at some point in his political career. Romney also could not talk much about Obamacare as he is the founder of the blueprint for it. I voted for Romney only becuase he is not Obama. I did not vote for hm because I believed he had really changed from being the liberal north eastern politician he is.
I don’t live in that environment on the hill, nor lived during the time England established their House of Commons and House of Lords and whatever else the lawyers established to rule England (besides Monarchy), but I do know that history shows the “bargining” we see between our Repubs and DemocRats is a holdover from when our ancestors left. Why else would lawyers give so much power to Congress (who happen to be lawyers) in the beginning?
And today I’m seeing the persona of “monarchy” in the attitude of our elected officials.
I think the bottom line is that GOP has abandoned American citizens in favor of compromise so that their feelings won’t get hurt when liberals call them names.
Or maybe liberalism has infiltrated the GOP?
Here’s what scares me more...both Repubs and DemocRats seem to care more for foreign entities and illegal immigrants than they do for the legal American citizen that I’m afraid the conservative voice will be silenced forever.
Don’t forget, there are those here to take over the country...communist? Progressives? Mexico? Muslims? We have to be more aware of those we elect.
That's literally how the Republican party was founded out of an amalgam of remaining Whig parties at the state level and Abolitionist groups who never quite became political parties on their own.
Make war on the RNC by taking away their state supporters.
That leaves a third party with 0% and no votes at all!
If the third party looks to be successful, it will simply attract enough factions from the other two parties that it becomes the big player with 50% + 1 vote. The remaining parties will then coalesce to beat this new upstart.
The very design of our federal system, combined with our ancient traditions, allows only 2 parties ~
It's the math, not the law!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.