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To: Conservative Goddess

My tagline says it all.

We shape the parties in the primaries, and give the parties power in the general election. It is far, far easier to shape the Pubbie party than to create and empower a new one from whole cloth.

If you can't shape the Republican Party in the primaries, it is ridiculous to think you would be able to empower a new party. Channel your frustration more productively into promoting libertarian and conservative ideals within the Party.

It's the Rats party that is having the far more serious problems addressed by this opinion piece.


13 posted on 10/22/2006 9:01:47 AM PDT by TheDon (Angry at the Republican Party = Democrat Tool)
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To: TheDon
"It's the Rats party that is having the far more serious problems addressed by this opinion piece."

Your whole post is well-put.

101 posted on 10/22/2006 9:48:48 AM PDT by Redbob
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To: TheDon
We shape the parties in the primaries, and give the parties power in the general election.

Great idea! Now if we can only let the party HAVE a primary without them squashing us!!!

119 posted on 10/22/2006 9:56:26 AM PDT by smokeyb
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To: TheDon
We shape the parties in the primaries, and give the parties power in the general election.

The problem is, we rarely "shape" the party in the primaries, unless of course the primary is open. Knocking off an incumbent Republican is occasionally possible at the State Legislative level; at the Congressional level it fails 99% of the time.

I know of one organization in Texas that specifically focuses on Republican primary elections, Heritage Alliance. If we are serious about this kind of thing and wish to pay it more than just lip service, many more of these organizations are needed. I can tell you that the head of Heritage Alliance PAC is among the most feared and reviled men in the Republican Party (one of the reasons I like and respect him), because he foments vicious intra-party battles in primaries which officeholders have a tendency to believe are mere formalities on their way to another election victory. Even a close race can cause a self-interested politician to change his ways.

But this costs money, and a lot of it. Are Republicans prepared to do this - to risk splitting their party in the primary in order to put conservatives into general elections? Or when Republicans say, "The time to change the party is in the primaries, not the general" are they just trying to keep Republicans on board, safe in the knowledge that nothing will really change in the primaries?

What say you?

435 posted on 10/22/2006 12:29:15 PM PDT by Zack Nguyen
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To: TheDon
My tagline says it all.

How about a new one:

Being a RINO=Democratic Tool

519 posted on 10/22/2006 1:51:04 PM PDT by smokeyb
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