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Our Task Going Forward

With much drama and suspense, John Boehner was reelected as Speaker of the House today by the slimmest of margins.  The entire focus of the vote was centered on the brewing conservative rebellion.  Ultimately, only 12 Republicans either declined to vote or voted for someone other than Boehner (Garrett, Bachmann, and Blackburn initially declined to vote, but voted for Boehner upon the second call), just shy of the requisite number to force a second vote.

It takes enormous courage to publicly stand up and oppose the Speaker of your own party.  It required even more courage for freshmen like Tom Massie, Ted Yoho, and Jim Bridenstine to vote against Boehner.  The abstentions of Mick Mulvaney and Raul Labrador were particularly powerful and symbolic.  When leadership tossed off a couple of conservatives from committee assignments, they pointed to the promotions of Mick Mulvaney and Raul Labrador (to the Financial Services and Judiciary Committees) as proof that there was no purge.  It’s heartening to see that these guys did not take the bait and did not allow leadership to drive a wedge between conservatives.

We salute all those who had the courage to voice their opposition.

With that said, this is all a red herring.  This was never about Boehner or those who would vote for him.  There is no doubt that there are at least 30-35 solid conservatives who would have rather voted for someone else, if presented with a viable option.  There is also no doubt that conservatives have nothing near a majority in the conference to elect a conservative Speaker.  There is a systemic problem in the Republican Party.  As Erick has pointed out, Cantor, McCarthy, and McMorris-Rodgers are probably worse than Boehner.  Also, the entire structure of committee chairmen, leadership posts, and party spokesmen are filled with the ranks of those who don’t believe in conservatism, are incapable of articulating it, or too scared to pursue it.  The majority of the conference stands with them.

Folks, this is a long game.  The reality is that we can’t successfully shoot at the king until we assemble our own army, large enough to overpower the current system.  This is a long process that will take several election cycles.  If we want to change the entire face of leadership (not just the Speaker), we need to engage in the primaries, particularly in red states and districts, over the next 20 months.  Only after we elect more people like Massie/Mulvaney/Bridenstine etc. will we have the leverage to turn our protest votes into viable alternatives.

The direction of the party will be determined by all of us who are actually frustrated with the status quo.  If each one of us would channel our frustration into helping elect committed conservatives in the 120 or so most conservative districts, we will control the majority of the majority of the most consequential body of government.  It doesn’t take much to knock off a vulnerable Republicans in a low-turnout midterm primary if all the activists in the district remain focused.  Just ask Ted Yoho and Jim Bridenstine.  Yet, there are still dozens of solid red districts represented by big government types.

For my part, I’ll be working on recruiting and highlighting conservatives here at Red State, the Madison Project and together with other conservative organizations.  If you live in one of the many conservative districts represented by a pale pastel Republican, please email me at Daniel@madisonproject.com with your thoughts and ideas of organizing early and often for a viable alternative.

If we all work together on a consequential and attainable goal, we might be looking at a different election for Speaker on this day in 2015.

Cross-posted from The Madison Project

COMMENTS

  • General_Confusion

    With John Boehner’s re-election to the speakership the GOP
    at the Federal level has officially fled the field*. Obama basically has clear sailing for the
    next two years.

    * Technically what we witnessed was the final rout by the R/D Statius
    party over last of the remaining small government conservatives. The gains of 2010 amounted to nothing.

  • devan95

    Let’s not forget the Senate. Lamar Alexander, R-Tennessee, has gone over to the dark side and votes more like Jim Sasser than Fred Thompson. He should be primaried so his positions should at least be drawn out. This was not done with the recent campaign of Bob Corker and now we are paying a terrible price as he too voted to increase taxes and spending. Again, let’s not forget the Senate RINOs in the next “opportunity.”

  • http://madisonproject.com/ Daniel Horowitz

    Absolutely. But the House is even more important because you can control it with a simple majority. It’s also easier to elect our guys to house seats. But yes, we must shoot at any opportunity.

  • MiamiDave

    As a native of Tennessee (who was proud to cast his first Florida ballot for Marco Rubio) I am appalled that Corker and Alexander represent my home State in the Senate. No better than “Taxby” in South Carolina and only marginally more conservative than their Democrat opponents, both these men should be primaried and replaced with solid fiscal conservatives who are willing to stand up against, and not cater to, the inside-the-Beltway types who dominate our Party. We lost our chance at primarying one of them in 2012…but 2014 is just around the corner.

  • http://llphsecondrevolution.wordpress.com/ spoasteph97

    I want to give a shout-out to all who had the guts to vote in opposition. I especially want to applaud Representatives Bridenstine, Yoho, and Massie. What they did took a lot of courage (I saw some of Speaker Boehner’s allies taking notes…believe me, these three are going to be watched on very closely…we need to encourage them!)

    But I see bright future for the conservative movement as Reps like Bridenstine, Yoho, and Massie and more join with others like Amash, Huelskamp, and others to fight for fiscal responsibility and the Constitution!

  • Viet71

    I say, get over the tax bill. It’s a bunch of political hoo-hah, which is what every tax bill ever has been about (I’m a student of U.S. tax law). Yes it sucks. Yes it sticks it to upper-income earners. But guess what? They’ll do just fine.

    If you got the energy and adrenaline, fight the fight on spending. That’s the problem, we all know. It’s in that arena where Republican giveaways really matter to the country.

  • tngal

    Alexander’s not Fred and he’s no Marsha Blackburn either. He was governor for awhile and there’s a tendancy for lifelong politicians (such as himself) to bend over backwards and promise anything to the other side of the aisle to frame themselves as bipartisan.

  • lonelyinthemiddle

    >> The gains of 2010 amounted to nothing.

    I find it interesting going into the archives back to 2010 and reading about how conservatives should approach politics and governing. What’s most striking, is the comments in the blogs are quite similar to what you can read today. Just pulling a couple out:

    http://www.redstate.com/erick/2010/11/30/gays-in-the-military/
    http://www.redstate.com/erick/2010/03/30/sean-hannitys-conservative-victory/

    So over 2 years later, what RESULTS have the current approach at conservative governing principals reaped? Keeping gays out of the military? Avoiding an Obama re-election? Reducing the deficit? Traditional marriage protection? 1. Failed, 2. Failed, 3. Failed and 4. Failing.

    So a rational person might ask, given the results, does the approach change prior to 2014? Rhetorical I know, but curious about how the true conservatives (which I admit that I cannot count myself among) on this blog feel in this regard.

  • kipling

    Have you even paid attention? The issue is not whether upper-income earners will do fine or not. The issue is removing capital from the private sector and then squandering it on government waste, inefficiency, and low-return giveaways that will only further enlarge the dependence class.

    Is it okay to take covet and steal money from someone because they will do fine anyway? Many of these people will not do just fine. They will curtail their economic output to match the tax increases. They will layoff employees or reduce them to part-time to avoid the penalties and regulation. They will shut their doors.

  • ceili_dancer

    First off, then why are you here? Second, we have yet to try a true conservative approach. It has been shot in the foot any time it’s broached. Cutting spending by 100 billion, nope. Repeal Obamacare?… nope. The leadership is afraid to try a conservative appoach, probably because of some negative press and mean questions on the Sunday shows.

  • lonelyinthemiddle

    >> First off, then why are you here?

    Fair question. At first, it was that I’m fascinated by politics, and enjoy having a better understanding of why people think/act/talk/vote the way they do. Over time, I’ve learned a lot about the root of conservative principals, and have indeed been won over on some issues by coherent arguments I’ve found here.

    Lately, I’ve been more concerned about the country evolving into a single-party state due to the lack of a viable, results achieving alternative viewpoint. I honestly worry that the conservative movement in it’s zeal to remain ideologically pure will lose any practical governing power, ceding all policy to the left. In short, end up politically irrelevant.

    It’s worth it to me to occasionally be called a “troll” or “libtard” or something worse in order to better understand the conservative movement, one that would never accept a relative moderate like me in it’s ranks.

    On your second point, that was kind of what I was getting at. The current political approach clearly isn’t getting results that conservatives want, citing the examples you put forth. So I’m interested whether there is any willingness to make minor adjustments to the messaging and approach, in order to gain more folks like me who are persuadable, thus increasing the likelihood of conservatives being elected into office.

    ‘Cause speaking as an self professed outsider, it seems like you guys are getting your clocked cleaned right now, and I think that is bad for our country.

  • commonsenseobserver

    The $4 trillion in tax hikes would have been even worse for wealth creators, and it would have given Obama more than he had asked for, by default. Look at the bright side. :)