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Posts Tagged ‘Pat Toomey’

Palooka Party: Part Three

by Flyovercountry ( 122 Comments › )
Filed under Politics, Republican Party at April 11th, 2013 - 11:00 am

Political Cartoons by Nate Beeler

Palooka – A prize fighter who accepts a cash bribe in exchange for throwing a fight, a bum, or a loser.

This weeks hands down winner of the Palooka of the week competition, ongoing within the Republican Party, is none other than Pat Toomey, for this little gem here. Honestly, when I wrote my original screed, The Palooka Party, I meant it as something to be taken at least half way as tongue in cheek. While I was, as I suspect like a lot of folks, frustrated with the frequency with which Republicans seemed intent on pulling defeat from the jaws of victory, I had no idea that I would be supplied continuously with examples of such moronic behavior. So, I salute Pat Toomey, this month’s living embodiment of the Republican Palooka.

From the Red State Post:

Sources inside the Senate tell me that the Republican Conference is scared to death of the tactics of Senators Lee, Cruz and Paul – that it is supposedly putting them in a tough spot.

Several of the Republicans are using the Manchin-Toomey compromise plan as an excuse to cave on the gun filibuster. They claim that Senators Lee, Cruz, and Paul are running ahead of the conference in their insistence on a filibuster.

What they fail to see is that the cloture vote is the vote to stop the gun legislation from passage.

Several Republican Senators intend to vote against the filibuster, but then vote against the overall bill. This is too clever by half. The GOP does not control the Senate as the GOP is want to say every time they don’t want to fight.

Their only power to block a gun control bill is to unite and filibuster.

Voting for cloture is voting for the gun control bill because, again, as the GOP reminds us, they are not in the majority. The only way to stop it is to filibuster.

For those of you from West Virginia, please note that Toomey is throwing this fight, which the President himself had largely given up on by the way, to Joe Manchin, your Senator who ran a campaign ad that featured him firing a high powered assault rifle, using a copy of the Cap and Trade Bill as a target. So much for his promised defense of the Second Amendment. The political left is laughing at your gullibility. Keep Joe Manchin in your thoughts for the next time he faces reelection. I’m certain he’ll try the same, “conservative Democrat,” shtick.

Another thing worth noting here is the supposed Toomey Conservative Bona Fides. He ran as the true Reagan Conservative, who was chosen by those of us on the right to oust a previously despised Palooka who went by the name of Arlen Specter. The Conservatives hand picked Toomey precisely to put an end to this type of chicanery. I think that my frustration level has hit an all time high.

So, without further ado, I am now announcing a Palooka of the month ongoing contest, which will highlight the greatest Republican dive of the previous month. March’s winner was hands down Steve LaTourette. April’s winner is Pat Toomey, and we’ll see for May. Please feel free to hit the contact page in order to nominate who you feel worthy of such a coveted Republican only recognition.

Of course we’ll name one of these bums as Palooka of the year!

Just for reference, here’s last months’s winner of the Republican Palooka of the month, Steve LaTourette.

Cross Posted from Musings of a Mad Conservative.

The GOP has lousy starters but a great bench

by Phantom Ace ( 189 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Elections 2010, Elections 2012, Progressives, Republican Party at March 15th, 2011 - 8:30 am

The Republican class of 2010 was probably the single greatest amount of political talent ever elected at the same time. People like Marco Rubio, Allen West, Pat Toomey, Rand Paul, Kristin Noem, Niki Haley, Raul Labrador, Scott Walker and many others are the new face of the GOP. They come from a generation that influenced by Ronald Reagan style Conservatism in the 1980’s. The regime of Barack Hussein Obama opened the way for this flood of fresh blood. They have joined liked minded Conservatives like Paul Ryan and Eric Cantor. The sad part is, this talented pool was not elected a few cycles ago and are not ready for 2012. Instead the possible GOP Presidential candidates for next year are retreads and damaged goods.

It’s not just that the starting lineup is weak.  Their backups are incredibly strong.  The names bandied about as attractive vice presidential options impress more than the presidential candidates who might select them.  Might the party be better served by a sort of political double-promotion?

Republicans won in 2010 not by carting out retreads, but by infusing fresh blood into the party.  Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal—to name just four from a deep Republican bench—exhibit charisma, vigor, and likeability largely absent from those visibly seeking the presidency.  Of greater importance, they have shown fidelity to the limited-government principles currently animating the Republican Party.

They are flawed.  They lack experience.  But remember that Romney served just one term as governor, Palin, not even that.  And, as evidenced by the thin curriculum vitae of the 2008 Democratic nominee, voters, at least outside of GOP primaries, don’t cast ballots on experience.  What the new bloods truly lack is familiarity.  But even familiarity isn’t an unmitigated blessing.  To know Newt or Sarah, particularly after the New York Times gets through with them, isn’t necessarily to love them.

Read the rest: Republicans Need New Blood to Win the Presidency

The Republicans are in a dilemma. Any of the newly elected new bloods, would clobber Obama in an election. However, they promised to serve their constituents and they just were elected. The current crop might be able to beat Obama, but it will be tough. I have said that I might sit 2012 out. I’m talking junk any way, I despise the Obama regime. I just want to vote for someone I like and not against I don’t like. None of the current front runners are offering anything different than the Post Reagan era GOP. Most of them are Rockefeller Republicans or would be manipulated by advisers with agendas.

Obama must be defeated, but I want it to be someone who will turn this nation around. Let’s keep our fingers cross that someone arises who can bring back the Reagan era optimistic Conservatism. The future of our nation depends on it.