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Sunday, May 03, 2009
Salena Zito :: Townhall.com Columnist
Steele eyes grassroots
by Salena Zito
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Michael Steele wanted to rebuild the Republican Party after two crushing national election defeats because he has “a passion for a party I believe in.”

“When the opportunity presented itself,” Steele said in his office, just blocks from the Capitol, “I saw it as a chance to help take the elephant by the tail and turn it around in a new direction.”

That direction is not turning away from principles and values that have defined the party since 1854 but “in a direction that those principles and values can be relevant in the 21st century.”

At first, Steele, 50, might seem an unlikely figure to lead the GOP out of its political wilderness. Yet his scrappiness — in life and in politics — may be perfect for the task.

Born in Maryland, he grew up in Washington; his mother worked as a laundress, his stepfather as a truck driver, to raise him and a sister.

He majored in international relations at Johns Hopkins University, then spent three years as a seminarian at Villanova University. He left before taking vows as a priest and instead earned a law degree from Georgetown University.

The first black to win statewide office in Maryland (lieutenant governor, 2003-07), he is the first to chair the Republican Party — and only the second to head either party.

He beat five rivals in six rounds of voting in January to be the 63rd GOP chairman.

He won, he believes, by reminding committee members that he began at the party’s grassroots, as a committee chairman.

“I have knocked on doors and licked envelopes. I know what it takes to win an election from the ground up,” he said. “I also know what it is like to have a lot of those doors slammed in my face.”

He isn’t just kidding, after all, when he talks about the challenge of being a black Republican in the District of Columbia.

Parallels to a Democrat

The past four months have brought highs and lows.

Steele raised an impressive $6.7 million in March, far more than Democratic Chairman Tim Kaine — but a string of media mini-gaffes sent him into a month of self-exile.

Steele’s challenge is not unlike one that faced another Democratic chairman: When Howard Dean took over his party in early 2005, it had won no more than 16 states in the last two presidential elections; morale was rock-bottom.

Everyone questioned if the party could ever again be a national player.

The parallels are not lost on Steele: “I so empathize with Dean at that moment. I remember watching him go through that purging in 2005, and it wasn’t pretty.”

Dean wrested control from three divisive party factions — its “Clintonista” establishment, its moderate Democratic Leadership Council and its far left. His best move was to couple the Machiavellian thinking of party figures Rahm Emanuel and James Carville with pro-life, pro-business, pro-Second Amendment candidates who won in key areas of the country.

“They brought them to our turf, played and won … a place they were not expected to win,” said Steele, a former college fencer who favors sports metaphors.

Similarly, he intends “to take the party where we have not gone before … to be present to the people of this country where they are. We are not going to sit back and tell them to come to us.”

Democratic strategist Steve McMahon has worked with Dean for years and has known Steele since his days as a Maryland Republican committeeman. He says the new GOP chairman must adopt a 50-state program, as Dean did, to get his party back on track.

“His challenge is to recapture independents without pushing out the base,” he explained. The hardest part is pushing against the party’s nay-sayers who favor winning here and there rather than taking time to build for the future.

“Steele has to remain focused,” McMahon said. “Do that, and the GOP will compete not just regionally but across the board again.” Continued...

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About The Author
Salena Zito is a political analyst, reporter and columnist.
 
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The problem with conservatives
The problem with conservatives, and social conservatives especially (a label I wear proudly), is that we have allowed the left to frame the debate, and we argue from their set of presuppositions.

Take abortion, for example. I am pro-life, but a mistake pro-life conservatives make is even allowing this to be a national debate topic. Where in the Constitution is the federal government given any authority over the issue? It is a state issue. So conservatives need to take the Constitutional position, not a pro-life/pro-choice position.

Most of the social and moral positions we hold dear are not within the realm of the federal government's Constitutional authority.

The battle between the left and right is now about who will be in charge of the federal government; liberals or conservatives. The debate actually needs to be about whether we really want the federal government micro-managing our lives...or managing them at all, for that matter.

The problem the GOP has is that they want to be the ones in power, rather than returning the power to the people and to the states, as the Constitution requires.

Can't Be AN INDEPENDENT HERE!!
I have always been an Independent, albeit a Conservative one, until I retired from the Military.. Wv does not permit Independents to vote in the Primaries and in most cases there are no Repubs running.. So out of Self Preservation, I have to Register as a Dem in order to, hopefully, weed out the worst in the Primaries.. I never voted a STRAIGHT TICKET in my life until LAST ELECTION but I will in the future if I have to pencil myself in..CHEERS
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