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Friday, May 09, 2008
John Hawkins :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Republican Party's Real Problem In A Nutshell
by John Hawkins
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It goes without saying that the GOP is taking a dreadful thrashing right now. Conservatives are unmotivated, Democrats are obliterating Republicans in the fundraising arena, and the GOP's poll numbers have dropped off a cliff.

George Bush, the face of the Republican Party, has an approval rating of 30% and according to Rasmussen Reports, one of the best polling agencies in the business, 41.4% of Americans consider themselves to be Democrats while only 31.4% say they are Republicans. Worse yet, voters trust the Democrats more than Republicans on the economy, government ethics, the war in Iraq, health care, Social Security, education, immigration, and abortion. Yes, the GOP still has an edge on taxes and national security, but how are Republicans going to compete in 2008 if they cede all those other issues to the Dems?

That's something Republicans in Congress are just going to have to figure out. How do you win elections when your supporters are unenthusiastic, people are sick of your political party, and money is in short supply? Unfortunately, in 2006, the answer was, "You don't."

In 2006, Republicans lost 6 seats in the Senate and 30 seats in the House. Although it's far too early to say for sure, judging by the direction the political winds are blowing, it wouldn't be the least bit surprising if the GOP loses another 4-6 seats in the Senate and an additional 10-15 House seats this time around.

So, why does the GOP seem to be trapped in this recurring political nightmare?

There are a plethora of different reasons for it: the war in Iraq, gas prices, a soft economy, George Bush's lack of communication skills, corruption scandals, the illegal immigration brouhaha, nominee John McCain, out-of-control spending -- you can go on and on.

However, there is one overriding problem that dwarfs all the others, a problem that few people in the leadership of the Republican Party seem to have come to grips with. That problem is that conservatives, who are the heart and soul of the Republican Party, no longer believe that the GOP has their best interests at heart.

That's not to say that there's no difference between the two parties -- because there is. That's not to say that the country would be better off if John McCain loses; it most certainly wouldn't be. That's not to say that the Republican Party isn't more conservative than the Democratic Party; without question, it is.

That being said, does the Republican Party adequately represent conservative interests? No. Do George Bush and John McCain's values and beliefs match up well with those of the average conservative in the Party? No, they do not. Does the machinery of the Republican Party -- the RNC, the NRCC, NSCC -- treat conservatives fairly and do a good job of representing conservative interests? Not at all.

In other words, to many conservatives, the Republican Party has ceased to be an organization that serves their interests and has become merely an allied organization that shares many, but not all, of the same critical goals.

That may seem like a small distinction, but it's an important one. Conservatives will stay up late volunteering for a campaign, give until it hurts, and crawl over broken glass to put candidates in Washington who're "on their side." Continued...

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About The Author
John Hawkins is a professional blogger who runs Conservative Grapevine and Right Wing News.
Subject: sucks
Here is a link says: ead all 390+ items. Clicked it;

NOTHING HAPPENED

This thing now officially sucks!

Conservatives need a homeport and must
take over the Republican party once and for all. Democrat-lite politics is like lukewarm oatmeal; the only logical response is to spit it out.

If both parties are similar, then one is unnecessary. Republicans need to grow a spine or some other tissue and tell us in clear, conservative principles what their doctrinal differences are from the Democrats and why we should vote for their candidates. If they don't commandeer some face time in front of a camera (above the heads of the major media) soon, the train wreck and bloodbath predictions will come to pass.

What we have is an absolute void of leadership on the part of the Republican "establishment/ country clubbers." They need to be broomed to make way for truly conservative principled statesmen who aren't afraid to confront and use bare-knuckle politics to DEFEAT their political adversaries. Calling them "friends" and reaching across the aisle to their ideology has been their undoing and will be the same outcome for John McCain.

Perhaps Republicans are more comfortable with being in the minority, having been in that situation for 40 years before their 1994 take-over of Congress. They are used to being steamrolled by the Dems and have shown they would rather appease and placate them and their allies in the dominant media than to get out front and LEAD in the mold of Ronald Wilson Reagan. They didn't know what to do with the high ground when they had control of it, and deserve to be beaten for their weakness and ineptitude.
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