► Show Top 10 Hot Links

Posts Tagged ‘John McCain’

Shadegg warns New Republicans: don’t betray the people

by Phantom Ace ( 109 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Elections 2010, Elections 2012, George W. Bush, Republican Party at December 30th, 2010 - 8:30 am

1994 was supposed to have ushered in a new era of Conservatism. Analysts at the time said this was the Congress Reagan never had. Unfortunately, they were lead by Newt Gingrich who saw himself as Prime Minister and was out maneuvered by Bill Clinton. Then in 1998, instead of going after Clinton for giving China military technology, they went after him for a blow-job. In the 200’s the Republicans went along with Bush’s big government Rockefeller Republicanism. The result was that in 2006 and 2008, the GOP was  slaughtered at the polls. Luckily, the Democrats went Far Left and thanks to the tea party, the Republicans won a huge victory in  2010.

John Shadegg who in 2006 challenged The weak willed Rockefeller Republican John Boehner, but lost to him. He warns the newly elected Republicans to stay true to fiscal conservatism and don;’t make the same mistakes the 1994 class did.

If the Tea Party movement had come along four years ago, John Shadegg might now be the incoming Speaker of the House.

The Arizona Republican ran for majority leader in 2006 but was beaten by John Boehner, the Ohio Republican who has been minority leader since the fall of 2006 and is now set to take the gavel from Democrat Nancy Pelosi in one week’s time.

Shadegg, who in 2006 was the choice of National Review magazine and the conservative blog Redstate, is going home to Arizona. He decided to retire after 16 years in office.

Shadegg, 61, has a unique perspective on conservative Republican politics. He came to Washington as part of the Republican Revolution of 1994 that swept the GOP into control of the House for the first time since 1954.

Read the rest: Shadegg warns House GOP newcomers: Don’t ‘betray’ grassroots like we did

It’s a shame that John Shadegg didn’t defeat the cry baby John Boehner. He would of been a more effective leader and one who would go toe to toe with Barack Hussein Obama. Unfortunately, with the metro-sexual Rockefeller whiner Boehner, Obama will eat the Republicans lunch. If this occurs, The Tea Party Republicans should launch a coup and get rid of that loser and send him home crying and replace him with Eric Cantor. I will never understand why the GOP since Regan selects elitist left of center pushovers like the Papa Bush, Bush Junior, Bob Dole, John McCain and Mitch McConnell as their representatives.
The GOP should heed Shadegg, he has seen how Republicans blow it. If they don’t come through and revert to Rockefeller style Progressive-lite, a new party will emerge.For too long they have used Economic and Social Conservatives as playthings. The time for this must cease and either they come through and fight, or its time for  party purge.

McCain to miss Feingold

by Phantom Ace ( 146 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections 2010, Progressives, Republican Party, Tea Parties at November 30th, 2010 - 9:00 pm

John McCain is a Conservative once every 6 years (Channeling Kirly), when he has to run for re-election. As usual, when the election is over he reverts to his Progressive nature.  He is now lamenting that his “true friend” Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold, was defeated in the last election. Rather than be happy the Republicans picked up his seat, he is sad about it.

John McCain said a reluctant goodbye to his longtime Senate colleague and “true friend” Russ Feingold on Tuesday.

“I have to confess I think the Senate will be a much poorer place without Russ Feingold in it,” McCain said in a floor speech.

Read it all: John McCain: Senate ‘poorer’ without Russ Feingold

I wonder if John McCain would say this about a Conservative Republican who was defeated. Somehow I doubt it since McCain goes after the right harder in an election than he does leftists. AN example was his smear campaign against JD Hayworth. If McCain had been as ruthless that way with Barack Hussein Obama, he might have won in 2008. Instead John laments that Russ Feingold was defeated. This shows his true colors and political instincts. Make no mistake, John McCain is a Progressive Republican.

Lessons from the Landslide

by Mojambo ( 106 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections 2010, Republican Party at November 12th, 2010 - 9:16 am

I agree that Nikki Haley’s campaign should be a model for future GOP candidates on what to do – while the Angle/Buck/O’Donnell/Miller  fiascos are textbook examples on how not to run a campaign.  Haley was smeared by the GOP Establishment with claims of adultery, yet she was experienced enough to stick to the issues and not get dragged down int0 the mud and you would never see her in a commercial declaring “I am not a witch”.  We should not  be surprised that populist campaigns are often rife with amateur mistakes, however we need to draw the right lessons from them.  South Carolina  is a good example  of a dilemma – on the one hand you have Lindsey Graham who is an obstructionist and a pseudo liberal who follows the John McCain playbook, on the  other hand you have Jim De Mint who made the outrageous comment that you cannot be a fiscal conservative without being a social conservative thereby telling Independents and libertarians to take a hike, he also said he would rather have only 30 Republican Senators as long as they thought like him – a prefect game plan for permanent minority status.

by J.R. Dunn

It’s taken a good part of the past week for the breadth of the conservative achievement in the midterms to sink in. Over sixty new House seats, six Senate seats (we can safely say, no matter what occurs in Alaska, since Murkowski is a member of the Murkowski Party representing only Murkowski), thirty-plus statehouses, and no fewer than twenty “trifectas” — that is, states in which the GOP owns the House, Senate, and governorship. The 2010 election was a victory both broad and deep, one that will be paying dividends for years to come.

It could have been better. Anything, in this imperfect world, can be better. The failings, needless to say, have drawn the attention of the media and the left, along with renegades such as David Frum, who have crowed over them as triumphs, as if retaining Harry Reid is something to be proud of. This has convinced the Democrats to continue banging their collective head against that same leftward stretch of wall. Evidently, both Reid and the most successful speaker since Cicero, Nancy Pelosi, are to be retained as party leaders. That too is a product of victory.

It’s quite true that Sharron Angle should have beaten Reid and that Joe Miller should have beaten the repellent Murkowski (with Specter and  Grayson gone, certainly the most odious politician of either party) in a walk. Neither came anywhere near. In Colorado, Ken Buck was barely edged out, which can happen under any circumstances. As for Christine O’Donnell, she never really had a chance in hyper-liberal Delaware, quite apart from the fact that “endearingly odd” is not a compelling senatorial persona.

Could these defeats have been avoided? With the exception of Christine O., I think so. What we’re dealing with is the type of error that comes with lack of experience. The failings in the cases of both Angle and Miller were self-inflicted, involving gaffes that an experienced candidate would have known to avoid. This is something that future Tea Party candidates — that is to say, candidates emerging from outside the traditional political class, and lacking the experience of that class — will need to consider and overcome.

Most of these difficulties involved presentation. A number of TP candidates made remarks that they came to regret. Rand Paul’s notorious comment on the unconstitutionality of the 1964 civil rights act might have sunk him if he’d followed it with anything similar. Luckily, he seems to have realized this (or perhaps Dad straightened him out), and he sailed through with no more such errors, praise be to Aqua Buddha.

Not so with Sharron Angle, who made an entire series of obtuse blurts culminating in a remark to a classroom of Hispanic children that she “didn’t know what country they were from,” a comment unworthy of her and one which helped seal her defeat by the obnoxious Harry Reid. This has been widely attributed to personality flaws on Angle’s part, but I don’t think that’s entirely fair. There’s a tradition among populist movements, of which the Tea Parties are the latest example, to speak forthrightly without self-censorship as a contrast to the euphemisms and verbal formulae of the political establishment. While there is nothing intrinsically wrong with this, it can lead to problems. It is often abused, as is constantly seen in public meetings where someone gets up and starts bellowing about “wetbacks” or the like, embarrassing the entire assembly and enabling the media to label all present Neanderthals. Or, as we saw in this recent campaign, populist candidates forget that the general public is not familiar with populist usage and may mistake straightforward comments for something else, which is precisely what happened with both Paul and Angle. We need to keep in mind that discretion is not an evil in and of itself and that forthrightness is a tactic not suitable to all circumstances.

[…]

Consider Nikki Haley in contrast. Haley was badgered even more consistently and vilely by her establishment Republican opponents. She scarcely acknowledged the attacks and ran a classy campaign, so doubts never crystallized around her despite the best attempts of the media to run with the adultery stories. Future Tea Party candidates should closely study the Haley campaign, which in many ways can serve as a model on how to prevail in a universally hostile political environment.

They should also pay close attention to experienced politicians and operatives, whether they fully share their views or not. These people possess a universe of irreplaceable knowledge that must not be thrown away. Tea Party candidates are in the position of amateurs who must develop professional capabilities without losing their amateur virtues. Professional political figures can aid immensely in this task. While the GOP handled many TP candidacies poorly, in the wake of 2010, this is not likely to recur. There has been a lot of loose talk since the election calling for open warfare on GOP figures for trivial reasons or none at all. This is asinine — nothing can save the left at this point other than a civil war on the right. Much of this chatter appears to be coming from provocateurs, mixing as it does sheer vituperation with obvious ignorance of conservative politics. It would be best to simply ignore it.

[…]

And yet this ultraconservative state features one of the most ultra-liberal political establishments in the country, typified by the RINO sisters, Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe. Nobody foresaw this as changing anytime soon, and certainly not as early as 2010. But changed it has with the gubernatorial victory of Paul LePage, a Tea Party man, along with the conquest of both legislative houses. The state of Maine has come under Republican control for the first time in fifty years.

This naturally leads us to ask: if Maine, why not West Virginia and Arkansas? The GOP has for far too long followed a policy of leaving liberal control of such states unchallenged. Why, I’m not sure. Perhaps out of judicious husbanding of resources, perhaps out of fear that the Dems would retaliate. Whatever the case, the recovery of Maine proves any such policy to be mistaken and shortsighted. Arkansas and West Virginia should be targeted as soon as 2012 and remain on the list until they are flipped at last. The Tea Parties are the perfect vehicle for carrying out such a strategy. Nonpartisan, impeccably middle-class, untainted by Republican flaws, capable of persuading where career pols would fail, the TPs can go where formal political parties cannot. The Maine example must not be ignored. There should be no privileged sanctuaries where the likes of Robert Byrd can set themselves up as state Grand Kleagle in perpetuity.

[…]

Read the rest: Learning from the Landslide

Anatomy of the Obama Crackup

by Mojambo ( 23 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Progressives at October 9th, 2010 - 2:00 pm

Scroll down for the NCAA Football Open, Week 6


VDH shines his keen analytical skills on the Obama meltdown and what caused it. As he writes (and as we have said), Obama had a “perfect storm” of circumstances come together for him in 2008 (including a loser Republican opponent who preferred the purity of losing nobly to winning and probably did not even vote for himself). Hubris always meets Nemesis in the end.

by Victor Davis Hanson

Had the Obamites been sober and circumspect after the 2008 election they would have realized that Obama had pulled off what McGovern, Mondale, Dukakis, and Kerry had not, due to a once-in-a-century perfect storm of about six events:

1) The September 15, 2008 financial meltdown that destroyed John McCain’s small, but steady lead.

2) The fascination with a possible landmark election of an African American candidate.

3) The inept McCain campaign that at times seemed more to wish to lose nobly than to win in a messy fashion.

4) The adroit Obama campaign that stressed centrist, “across the aisle” issues and style.

5) The “tingle in the leg” biased media coverage.

6) The first election without an incumbent or vice president since 1952 in which both candidates ran against the status quo Republican record.

Instead, Obama — egged on by obsequious advisers, an out-of-touch, hard-left base, and a toady media — decided that he had done what other Northern liberals had not, either because (a) the country was at last ready for European-style socialism, or (b) his singular charisma and talents could convince it that it was even when it was clearly not.

The result was that our Oedipus/Pentheus rushed headlong into socialized medicine, mega-deficits, needlessly polarizing appointments of the Van Jones type, and various federal takeovers, coupled with quite unnecessary editorializing about largely local matters — from the Skip Gates mess to the Arizona immigration law and Ground Zero mosque.

[…]

And now? After November, Obama can only hope that he can outsource the messy work of cuts and budget balancing to the congressional Republicans. Chances are he will demagogue them as heartless while taking credit for an economic rebound once investors, businesses, and corporations see an end to Obamism and its gratuitous slurs against the wealthy, and thus start using their stockpiled trillions to rehire and buy equipment in 2011.

In the meantime, an entire generation of Democratic House members and senators are going to pay a heavy price for falling for a clearly inexperienced, untried, and often petulant candidate amid the exuberance of the 2008 hope and change wave.

Read the rest here: Anatomy of the Obama meltdown

As a special weekend treat you are going to get two VDH columns.  Professor Hanson points out that a Republican congress, by doing the tough and responsible work that Obama refuses to do,  might actually save his presidency. The thing is that Obama is too much the ideologue to stop trying to push his socialist agenda through and cannot remain passive by playing rope-a-dope.

by Victor Davis Hanson

After 2010, will he be Carter or Clinton?

That is the ongoing parlor game now played among pundits over how President Obama will react to a probable shellacking of the Democrats in midterm elections next month.

Jimmy Carter stuck to his liberal agenda after suffering a modest rebuke in the 1978 midterms amid sky-high inflation, interest rates and unemployment. He didn’t take voters’ hint and went on to get clobbered two years later by Ronald Reagan.

In contrast, after his party was slaughtered in the 1994 midterms (losing 51 House and eight Senate seats), a triangulating Bill Clinton moved to the center and handily won re-election in 1996.

So what will Obama do if he loses a Democratic majority in the House and quite possibly the Senate, as his approval ratings tank to 40 percent?

Most likely, he will stick to his liberal orthodoxy — but in a way unlike Carter. Yet, like Clinton, Obama may still have a good chance at re-election.

[…]

But if Republicans take over Congress, they — not Obama — can be blamed for the failure to enact the liberal dream. Obama can nostalgically soar with hope-and-change platitudes about his aborted left-wing vision, with the assurance that there is absolutely no chance he will offend the majority of Americans by seeing any of it passed.

[…]

Read the rest here: The Obama Rope-A-Dope


Scroll down for the NCAA Football Open, Week 6