Posted on 05/23/2006 10:28:53 PM PDT by Reagan Man
Over the last few weeks, the conservative blogosphere and punditocracy have been aiming a wave of venom at the GOP in Washington thats so wide and deep that you could practically surf on it. The grumbling over out-of-control spending, the Gang-of-14 compromise, Harriet Miers, the Dubai Port deal, and most of all, illegal immigration, has become ceaseless and increasingly bitter.
The dismay at the performance of Congress has gotten so bad that a conservative stalwart like Peggy Noonan has actually begun speculating that the White House has decided it actually doesnt like the base, while in other quarters, the idea that the GOP might benefit long-term from losing power in the elections later this year has already started to jell into conventional wisdom.
This is understandable because the GOP in Washington, President Bush included, has been stinking it up since the 2004 election. To be fair, the House has shown some signs of life on spending and illegal immigration since Rep. John Boehner has become Majority Leader, but the same cant be said of the Senate, which has performed abysmallyor Bush, who, in his second term, has shown about the same level of political competence as a fourth grader running for hall monitor.
Since thats the case, its not hard to see why so many conservatives have become dispirited and angry about the performance of our elected representatives. However, if theres one thing Ive learned about politics, its that the solution to the GOPs problems is never, more Democrats.
That doesnt mean that we conservatives should engage in a bunch of fake rah-rah or refuse to criticize Republicans if they deserve it, but it does mean that when November rolls around, conservatives should show up at the ballot box and pull the lever for the GOP.
Philosophically, that doesnt sit well with some conservatives. They believe, with some justification, that if we dont punish these wayward Republicans, their performance will continue to disappoint. But thats only half the equation. Its not about just the Republicans whod be losing, its about the Democrats whod be taking their place. Would we be better off replacing the most wishy washy Republicans with Democrats who believe that taxes are way too low and that Rep. John Murtha would make a fantastic Secretary of Defense? I think not.
Now, some people point to the divided government of the nineties and believe that if we once again had different parties in power, that wed see less spending as a result. But, what people need to remember is that was a unique situation. Newt Gingrichs revolution featured Reagan Republicans getting into power for the first time in decades, in part because they promised to restrain government spending and, indeed, they were highly motivated to wrestle down government expenditures.
However, the Democrats, being Democrats, believe in bigger, more expensive government, not shrinking the size and cost of the beast. So, if they got in power, wed be much more likely to see a situation like the eighties, where we had a President who believed in smaller government overpowered by Democrats who just couldnt spend enough of our money.
We also must keep in mind that Republican philosophy up on the Hill has changed for the worse as well. Today, if the Democrats want to spend $100 millioninstead of saying, no way, the Republicans are more philosophically inclined to say, How about $50 million instead? Then after the new boondoggle becomes law at $50 million, they pat themselves on the backs for, taking an issue away from the Democrats, and saving the taxpayers $50 million. That is not exactly a formula for reducing the size of the budget, especially when we have a President who has never vetoed a single bill for having too much pork in it (or for any other reason).
So, what can we do to get the deficit under control? Fight for a Balanced Budget Amendment? Good idea. Support members of Congress like Sen. Tom Coburn and Rep. Mike Pence whore fighting tooth and nail against pork? Yes. Insist on having a presidential candidate in 2008 who believes in cutting spending? Absolutely. But, replacing spendthrift Republicans with Democrats whove never met a program they thought was overfunded? Lets just say thats not the best way to handle the situation.
We also cant forget about judges. The Gang-of-14 deal is no longer in effect after the November elections. If Stevens or Ginsburg retires and being willing to pull the trigger on the nuclear option turns out to be the difference between getting another Samuel Alito through or having to settle for an Alberto Gonzales, do you want more or less Republicans in the Senate?
Then theres impeachment. The liberals in Congress are absolutely chomping at the bit to impeach Bush for anything and everything they can come up with. Thats not only because they absolutely despise him, and because their base is demanding it, but because they want payback for Bill Clinton. Would two years of politically motivated impeachment threats be good for the country?
How about taxes? Do you think they would go up or down under a Democratically controlled Congress? Do you think Bushs tax cuts, which have helped revive the economy and have been one of his greatest achievements domestically, would survive if we had House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid?
Perhaps most importantly, we shouldnt forget about the war. Could we see the Democrats put enormous pressure on Bush to force him to pull out of Iraq before the situation on the ground merits it? Sure. It might destabilize the country and render the sacrifices our troops have made meaningless, but they could blame the resulting disaster on Bushand quite frankly, thats probably all that would matter to a lot of the Democrats in Congress.
Heres my advice: set your emotions aside and think long and hard about what a Democratically controlled Congress would really mean. Is the satisfaction of, teaching the Republicans a lesson, worth the price? Think back to the Clinton years: conservatives certainly stuck it to Old Read My Lips, but the price turned out to be eight years of, It depends on what the meaning of the word is is. In my book, that wasnt such a great trade-off and keep in mind, when youre talking about congressmen and senators, it could be worse. Incumbent politicians are tougher to get rid of than a cockroach infestation and 40 years from now, do you really want to be sitting around, remembering how you stayed home and helped the next Robert Byrd get into office? Folks, be mad at the GOP if you dont think theyre doing a good job. Call your senator, call your congressman and give em hell if they deserve it. But, when November rolls around, make sure to vote because theres more on the line than you might think.
Unfortunately, for conservatives, the solution doesn't seem to be more Republicans either.
Citizens are overwhelmingly in favor of controlling the border in a manner consistent with having a country in the first place. The best they are beginning to hope for is that the Congress do nothing. I think a lot of conservatives are in shock at this point.
Maybe the British would sack D.C. again, if we asked them nicely...
Never again...Never give the GOP a blank check. The GOP has taken conservatives for granted and they will stop doing this only if conservatives clearly doemnstrate that there are consequences.
"Bush, who, in his second term, has shown about the same level of political competence as a fourth grader running for hall monitor."
Good line.
Yep, and FR has recently been loaded full with these vocal emotional "liberal acting" conservatives.
Damned if I'm sitting out the primary! I get to vote FOR a conservative and AGAINST that freaky Ralph Reed with one vote!
Sorry about the D-word there Moderator, but an opportunity like this only comes along so often in a man's life.
I guess if Ralph wins the primary, I'll have to vote FOR a Democrat in the general election for the first time in twenty years.
Sadly, that seems to be the case.
willwright
Since May 2, 2006
Welcome to FR and tell your friends at DU that im not buying it.
And why would they listen?
Saxxon, it's not that simple. I'm probably just a simplistic, emotional extremist. And I don't have the sophistication of the wise folks who always understand why the R's shouldn't stand for anything. But here's a crack at why the 'punishment' approach comes from more than just a bunch of emotional cranks, however warm that notion may make you feel. Hint, you have to read all the way to the end.
The problem is not just that we have a bunch of RINOs running the country. The problem is WHY we have a bunch of RINOs in office instead of conservatives, who generally (not always) represent the interests of the R base better than RINOS.
Don't you ever wonder how it is the party regularly and consistently puts up folks who are far to the left of the people that elect them in primaries.
It's not just chance. It's the "wise people" in the RNC and the state parties. They also happen to be the folks who control the money spigots in the party.
The principal qualification for support from the National and State parties is a willingness to 'go along' with the party establishment. Anyone will to buck the party establishment--eg Tom Tancredo and Bob Schaffer in Colorado--get slapped down hard (the party hasn't been successful with Tancredo as he has a safe seat and noone can win a primary agains him). But W won't appear on the same stage as Tancredo and two years ago, the RNC tried to find someone to primary Tancredo. Schaffer was destroyed by the party establishment when he ran for Senate two years ago.
So the issue is not just voting for the most conservative person around. It is how do we start making the party establishment behave itself and let us have actual conservatives to vote for in the general election. Because if they keep running the same faux-conservative scam every two years and we keep sending our money and votes, they will never change because, well, it works so well.
I understand all the arguments about how disastrous it would be to let the dems have the wheel and I agree. But how do we change the R establishment without any leverage? It's like blacks trying to change the D's. Won't ever happen because the D's correctly assess the black vote as safe.
Why is this a big problem? Because the failure of the 'conservative' party to advance conservative interests will have devastating effects on our nation in the long term. When the D's get power, they have no hesitation swinging government hard to the left. But when we get power, we keep things about where we got them. So there's a long-term leftward ratchet in effect as long as the 'conservative' party does not aggressively advance conservative principles when it has power.
So don't dismiss those who want to punish the party establishment. It deserves punishment. And the argument about whether punishment is the correct strategy is a pretty difficult tradeoff between: (a) short term losses (HRC for president); and (b) accepting that, in the long term, America's steady, downward drift into decadence and socialism (lead enthusiastically by the left) is not something we expect to halt--only to slow the ratchet down a little.
Assessing that tradeoff is messy and it is not clear to me where the balance lies at any given time. I tend to tilt to not punishing right now as we are at war. But the wise folks always seem to find that, no matter what, the balance is in favor of continuing the current R establishment in power. And as a result of that, we find ourselves in a right proper mess.
The article is correct. More Democrats won't help the GOP, but more conservatives certainly will, assuming a true conservative would accept a nomination to public office from today's GOP. The question in my mind is, "If the GOP is not being operated by a 50 year old cabal of socialist twerps (formed when they all attended the same private elementary school in Upstate New York, met at a family reunion, the SAE rush..., etc. ), how come they NEVER support or nominate a true conservative for any office?".
There are no conservatives in the Bush family. They only look that way compared to their second cousins, the Kerrys.
Conservatives saying they are going to vote for Democrats because Republicans aren't conservative enough is like adding salt to your coffee because it is not sweet enough.
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