Posted on 01/04/2013 3:01:48 AM PST by SueRae
Ted Cruz, a Republican, represents Texas in the Senate.
Since Election Day, much energy has been spent analyzing why Republicans did so poorly. Many have urged that Republicans must moderate their views, by which they mean we should adopt more policies of Democrats.
That advice misdiagnoses the problem. The 2012 election did not reflect popular approval of the Obama policies of out-of-control spending, taxes, deficits and debt. To the contrary, 51 percent of voters on Election Day agreed that government is doing too many things better left to businesses and individuals.
Nor did the election reflect satisfaction with the paltry economic growth that President Obamas abusive regulatory approach has produced. Voters are rightly unhappy with the anemic growth in gross domestic product the past four years; the average, just 1.5 percent, is less than half of our historic average since World War II, but 53 percent of voters believed the economy was George W. Bushs fault.
Why did voters believe that? Obama repeated it relentlessly, and Republicans never responded.
First you win the argument, then you win the vote, Margaret Thatcher famously admonished. Republicans did neither. Nothing better illustrates that failure than 47 percent. Not the comment itself nor the good and decent person who uttered it, but, rather, the overall narrative of Republicans. Voters were convinced that the GOP is the party of the rich and that Democrats are the party of everybody else.
That characterization is false, but as long as a majority of Americans believe that Republican policies do not benefit them, Republicans will continue to lose.
And far too many Republicans believe it as well.
So let me suggest an alternative course: opportunity conservatism. Republicans should conceptualize and articulate every domestic policy with a single-minded focus on easing the ascent up the economic ladder.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
In my opinion - the ONLY way to get things back on track is when the 10% who pay the vast majority of the bills that these scumbag politicians rack up - stops shouldering the ever growing burden. If the beast is fed (no pun intended) it WILL grow. Starve the beast and it will eventually lose its grip on the minority of real producers.
We can change our messaging, we can get better at combating the smears, we can educate more effectively - but none of that means anything to an addict that's high on power and intoxicated with money. There is only one thing that is under your total control - how much of your money that you give to the beast. Other than that - it's up to someone else to fix the insane number of problems with our government at every level.
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