► Show Top 10 Hot Links

Posts Tagged ‘John McCain’

The Republican Civil War

by Phantom Ace ( 46 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Elections 2010, George W. Bush, Liberal Fascism, Politics, Progressives, Republican Party, Tranzis at April 23rd, 2010 - 7:00 pm

After the election of Barack Hussein Obama many pundits declared Conservatism was over. They claimed that in the elections of 2006 and 2008, Americans rejected Conservative policies in favor of Progressive ones. Leading the chorus were Rockefeller Republicans like David Brook, Chris Buckley and David Frum. They wanted the Republicans to emulate the Progressive-Conservatism of David Cameron’s Tories. Well in the UK, the Tories have blown a 15 point lead and are now slightly behind or tied with the Far Left Liberal Democrats. This clearly is not a path to imitate here in the United States.

Since the election of Obama, the Republicans have won elections in Virginia, Massachusetts and New Jersey. The Tea Parties have lead a resurgence of Libertarian-Conservative principles. The Republicans are leading in the polls for the Congressional elections because of this Authentic Rightwing resurgence. What the voters rejected in 2006 and 2008 was The Leftist Compassionate Conservatism. Now all throughout America, Conservatives are rising up and taking the Republican Party back from the Progressives. This is leading to a necessary Civil War to remove the Leftist elementsfrom the GOP. The Battle in Florida between Marco Rubio and Charlie Crist is ground Zero in this struggle.

Marco Rubio appeared on a Sunday talk show this month to say something remarkable. The Republican running for Florida’s Senate seat suggested we reform Social Security by raising the retirement age for younger workers. Florida is home to 2.4 million senior citizens who like to vote. The blogs declared Mr. Rubio politically suicidal.

 

The response from Mr. Rubio’s primary competitor, Gov. Charlie Crist, was not remarkable. His campaign slammed Mr. Rubio’s idea as “cruel, unusual and unfair to seniors living on a fixed income.” Mr. Crist’s plan for $17.5 trillion in unfunded Social Security liabilities? Easy! He’ll root out “fraud” and “waste.”

 

Let’s talk Republican “civil war.” Not the one the media is hawking, that pits supposed tea party fanatics like Mr. Rubio against supposed “moderates” like Mr. Crist. The Republican Party is split. But the real divide is between reformers like Mr. Rubio and Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, who are running on principles and tough issues, and a GOP old guard that still finds it politically expedient to duck or demagogue issues. As Republicans look for a way out of the wilderness, this is the rift that matters.

Read the rest: The Real Republican Civil War

The era of Big Government Progressive Compassionate Conservatism is over. It is now time for Libertarians and Conservatives to put a nail in the coffin of this failed Ideology. In order to defeat the Tranzi Totalitarian Progressive Democrats, we must offer a clear alternative. The likes of Leftists like David Frum or David Brooks, who is lamenting the fall of Obama’s popularity need to be relegated towards the path. Like The Rockefellers of old, they no longer fit with the GOP. Let them come out the closet and join the Democrats. We don’t need them and we will defeat them!

McCain Losing Ground to JD

by Deplorable Macker ( 116 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2010, Polls, Republican Party at April 18th, 2010 - 1:00 pm

Methinks Senator McCain is starting to panic. His bulls**t ads flood the airwaves all over Arizona, as Rasmussen’s latest poll has him only five points ahead of former Congressman and former talk show host JD Hayworth.
As things stand right now, McCain leads Hayworth 47% to 42%, with 8% undecided, and 2%  preferring some other GOP candidate.  This should fire up the hearts and minds of every conservative in the 48th State, as well as those from the rest of the country who despise Senator McCain for his constant efforts to reach across the aisle.
I met JD at the Tea Party Express rally in Phoenix a few weeks ago. I spoke to him for a few seconds, and he didn’t shake my hand like, say, for example, Президент Оба́ма would. He shook hands AS A MAN! He is confident and he is ready to fight for Arizona and, more importantly, for the USA. Keep this man in your prayers and thoughts.

HAT TIP: Blogmocracy Readers

Agitated McCain: Don’t call me a maverick

by Mojambo ( 89 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2010, Politics, Republican Party at April 15th, 2010 - 9:00 am

BWWWAAAAHHH – so Juan McAmnesty McCain  is now running away from the term “Maverick” and according to his girlfriend Miss Lindsey Graham it is all cynical politics. Well I hope that Arizona Republicans remember the contempt that he holds them and their  party in. Someone tell me again how exactly that flatlulent old bastard became our standard bearer?

hat tip Weasel Zippers

by  Manu Raju and Jonathan Martin

John McCain — who built his political persona and his 2008 presidential campaign around the claim that he’s a “maverick” — told Newsweek recently: “I never considered myself a maverick.”

When POLITICO asked McCain about the contradiction at the Capitol this week, the Arizona Republican grew visibly irritated and snapped: “I’ve been called a thousand things. It’s absolutely ridiculous.”
He said 48 percent of the homeowners in his state are underwater on their mortgages. He said he’s always “done what’s best for my state and the nation.” Then he said it again, adding, “People can consider me whatever they want.”

And then he darted into the Senate chamber without explaining himself further.

But if McCain won’t say why he’s abandoning the “maverick” title now, some of his closest associates will: It’s politics.

“When you’re running for president, you show the public at large that I’ll put the country ahead of the party,” said South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, McCain’s closest friend in the Senate and the Republican who has played the deal-maker role ceded by the Arizonan. “When you’re in a primary, you’ve got to prove to people you’re a good conservative. That’s the difference in the forms. John has a record of conservatism that’s being highlighted now because he’s in a Republican primary. When you’re running for president, you highlight that part of your record, and it shows you’re willing to govern the country as a whole.”

When he ran for president in 2008, McCain needed to distinguish himself from an unpopular Republican incumbent and a deeply tarnished GOP brand, so he picked an outsider as a running mate and described the duo “a team of mavericks.” Now, as he faces a primary challenge from the right, he needs to pivot back and convince conservatives in the Republican base that he’s a GOP loyalist just like they are.

“John’s got a primary,” said Graham, “and he needs to be focused on his election.”

The view that McCain is rejecting the term as part of a political survival instinct is shared privately by some of his former top aides. But few want to discuss the matter on the record for fear of offending a man they still respect — or of hampering his primary campaign against former Rep. J.D. Hayworth.
McCain’s current advisers insist the senator is objecting only to the M-word and not to the concept that he’s a man who puts principle over party.

“He’s only talking about the term ‘maverick,’” said Fred Davis, the senator’s adman now and in the 2008 campaign. “He’ll be the first to tell you that he’ll still go against anybody in power, regardless of party, if he thinks what they’re doing is wrong for the country. Some call that a maverick, some that call that being a statesman — there’s lots of terms for it.”

Since losing his presidential bid, McCain hasn’t acted much like a maverick but more like a loyal party man. On big-ticket issues ranging from the stimulus to health care reform, he has been a leading critic of President Barack Obama. And on issues where he once gladly took on his own base, such as immigration reform and climate change, he’s been mum.

But that wasn’t the case after McCain captured the GOP nomination in 2008 and especially after he tapped Sarah Palin as his vice presidential nominee.

“The original mavericks,” McCain’s campaign team deemed them in one ad.

At rallies, McCain noted with pride that he and his running mate had been called a “team of mavericks.”
And in high-profile settings, McCain gladly embraced the word.

“I’ve been called a maverick,’ he said in his nomination acceptance speech.

In outlining his differences with the Bush administration at his first debate with Obama, McCain described his record as an “independent and a maverick of the Senate.”

And he added: “I’m happy to say that I’ve got a partner that’s a good maverick along with me now.”
The paper trail is so extensive and the identity so firmly cemented that Jon Stewart — no McCain ally but on whose show the senator has gladly appeared — didn’t even bother with his usual clips earlier this month.

“Now, normally, this is obviously where we toss to a montage of John McCain calling himself a maverick, but I don’t even f—ing need to,” Stewart quipped in response to the Newsweek story.

In distancing himself from the “maverick” brand, McCain is not only attempting to downplay what was the GOP ticket’s central theme in 2008 but trying to excise what made him an American household name and defined him for the past decade.

Since running as an insurgent in 2000 — where his preferred analogy was Luke Skywalker flying out of the Death Star — McCain has portrayed himself as the rare elected official who is not afraid to go his own way for what he thinks is right — party or politics be damned.

And even if he didn’t routinely use the word to describe himself until he plucked Palin from Alaska, he also didn’t steer away from it.

An edition of his 2003 book, “Worth the Fighting For,” was subtitled “The Education of an American Maverick, and the Heroes Who Inspired Him.”

But truth be told, McCain has always donned the maverick mantle as a convenience.

He was a standard-issue Reagan conservative during his years in the House, to which he was elected in 1982, and in his early Senate career. Aside from campaign finance reform, there were few examples of apostasy as he began his 2000 presidential run.

But with George W. Bush winning much of the party’s establishment support, McCain’s best political bet was to play up his penchant for candor and wisecracks as a refreshing alternative to his opponent’s more conventional approach to the campaign. And after he returned to the Senate in 2001, his voting record began to mirror his rhetoric. He gleefully opposed the Bush administration and the conservative base on a variety of issues and even flirted with switching parties.

But in trying to win the GOP nomination in 2008, McCain played up his conservative stances on issues such as spending and the Iraq war and, on the issue of immigration reform, where he had been a key player, said plainly that he had gotten the message from his party’s base.

Read the rest


Establishment Elitist Republicans under seige

by Phantom Ace ( 94 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2010, George W. Bush, Politics, Progressives, Republican Party at April 6th, 2010 - 7:00 am

The great Conservative rebellion is finally aiming at a target that needs to called out, the Elitist Establishment Republicans. This faction of the GOP, called Rockefeller Republicans or Compassionate Conservatives, has held back the Right and it’s ideas for too long. Typified by political eunuch Sen. Lindsey Graham, these Elitist have collaborated with the Democrats on Progressive issues. Make no mistake about it, these Establishment Republicans are Progressives and agree with Democrats that government must solve our problems. Now GOP voters are rejecting the quislings and like the deer in a headlight, they don’t know what to do.

For years, establishment Republicans have urged the party’s conservative wing to get over its obsession with social issues and focus on fiscal issues. Well, in 2010 they are getting their wish. The nation is experiencing a popular backlash against the expansion of government and runaway federal spending, and across the country fiscally conservative candidates are taking advantage of this popular groundswell — in some cases to the detriment of establishment Republican candidates.

In Texas, for example, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison challenged Gov. Rick Perry in the Republican primary and started out with a commanding lead. But Perry successfully portrayed Hutchison as having become part of the Washington establishment — dubbing her “Kay Bailout” and running an ad tagging her the “Earmark Queen” (to the tune of Abba’s “Dancing Queen”). Hutchison responded by declaring that her success in bringing money home for Texas should be “celebrated and appreciated.” Apparently, Texans are not in a celebratory or appreciative mood. She lost to Perry 51 percent to 30 percent. (Indeed, anti-Washington sentiment in Texas is so strong that a little-known, underfunded Tea Party candidate garnered 18 percent of the vote).

Read the Rest: For old-school GOP, a hard lesson on fiscal issues

For a long time these GOP moderates claimed to be Economic Conservatives and Social Liberals. In reality, they were Economic Progressives who masked as Conservatives because they were not as far Left as the Democrats. The Tea Party movement is exposing the Elitist Establishment Republicans as the charlatans they are. The era of the Lindsey Graham, John McCain, Georg Bush and David Frum Republican is over. Paul Ryan, Marco Rubio and Sarah Palin are the future of the Republican Party. Real authentic Conservatism based on individualism and economic freedom and a foreign policy based on American interests is what the New Right is about.