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Republicans Had Best Have A Compelling Message.

Despite the DeMarxists headlong rush to oblivion in November, we cannot count on our Republican leadership not to blow it. They need to show something that has been sadly missing thus far, in my opinion… leadership.

To date, they’ve failed in the first big test of whether they have the intestinal fortitude to be the majority in 2011. Elena Kagan should have been stonewalled out the gate. She has zero qualification for the Supreme Court. She’s an Obama creation. A political hack. A statist mouthpiece.

Did the Republican leadership stand as one and say ‘hell no’? Of course not. They went immediately into accommodation mode, giving Kagan all the wiggle room she needed to play cutesy games and not give one substantive answer to any of the really weak-kneed, almost pandering, questions by the committee. They’ve displayed themselves as indecisive and fragmented, when they should show the American Patriots, whose favor they curry, that they can stand for what we believe in.

Conservative opinion was unmistakeably against Elena Kagan’s appointment. We told the leadership from the outset that we wanted her appointment filibustered. There were comments such as ‘Obama deserves his appointments’. Flashback to Lindsey (I’ll go which ever way the wind blows) Gramnesty… and the Sotomayor hearings. As I recall, the nomination proceedings were scarcely under way and Graham was telling her, in front of the open hearing, that she ‘is going to be confirmed’. That’s enough to make a skunk gag. Sotomayor is far to left of anyone on the Court, and Kagan is to the left of her.

Somehow, the Republicans have gotten the idea that if we don’t make nice with the DeMarxist nominees, we can’t get our own through when the time comes. In the Marine Corps we’d call it ‘cowardice in the face of the enemy’. In the case of the so-called Republican leadership, it’s ‘folding before the enemy is engaged’.

I see that John McCain has come to the party late… a little like his new-found religion on illegal amnesty and border security. The point is that if the Republicans can’t show leadership on this, can we trust them to lead? We still remember, all too well, the pathetic Republican performance of the Bush years. It’s one of the reasons incumbents have been dropping like flies. There will be more!

You cannot expect us to get behind an incoherent and fragmented message. We’ve been there and done that. There’s too much at risk this time. We have to stop and derail this DeMarxist rush to tyranny at any cost, and we have to do it now! Here is a golden opportunity for the Republicans to articulate a clear, simple message. We have to return to the Reagan model. The conservative message resonates every time that it’s clearly defined… and every time it’s followed, it’s a success.

Semper Vigilans, Semper Fidelis

© Skip MacLure 2010

COMMENTS

  • fpete13527

    We had better see some strong articulate GOP conservative leadership fast or the expected “landslide GOP victory,” which I support, either won’t happen or won’t matter.

  • http://www.theprecinctproject.wordpress.com ColdWarrior

    No, we can’t trust them to lead.

    Right now, the Republican “leaders” have no incentive to fight to protect and preserve our individual rights as the Opuppet and the Dems decimate them through their legislation, czar appointements, Supreme Court and other federal court appointments, etc.

    Put yourself in the shoes of any Republican incumbent. All things being equal in the Republican Party grass roots precinct committeemen ranks, with only half of the PC slots nationwide filled and with them split nationally about 50-50 ideologically, if this status quo remains unchanged, every incumbent Republican has a greater than 90 per cent chance of being elected. The Republican incumbents see what happened to Bob Bennett in Utah as an aberration. They see the come-from-out-of nowhere win of Sharron Angle in the Nevada primary as an aberration.

    You mentioned McCain seeming to have become a conservative all of a sudden. Why is he acting like that? Because (1) he’s got a conservative challenger (two, actually) in his Republican primary and (2) because the number of elected precinct committeemen in Arizona has jumped significantly state-wide, from fewer than one third of the slots having been filled in 2008 to now almost 50 per cent being filled (which is still pathetic). With a conservative challenger, and more conservative precinct committeemen rallying around McCain’s challengers, McCain HAS TO become more conservative or he will LOSE his all-important, traditionally-very-low-turnout primary election. Because conservative PCs are in the BEST position to Get Out The Vote for conservative challengers in the primary elections. Every incumbent knows they must win their primary, first, before even getting onto the general election ballot.

    McCain has stumbled upon the obvious — if the Republican Party becomes more conservative at the grass roots, precinct level, by more conservatives becoming precinct committeemen, then more conservative Republicans will win the primary elections. Sadly, that obvious fact seems to be lost on most blogging conservatives, because precious few write about it or urge their fellow conservatives to become precinct committeemen — maybe because so few of the blogging conservatives are, themselves, precinct committeemen.

    If you want to change how the incumbent Republicans behave, if you want to motivate them to act courageously, give them some incentive to do so. Become a Republican Party precinct committeeman and get every conservative Republican you know to do the same. Then help the Sharron Angles of the world win their primaries. Help the Bob Bennetts of the world lose theirs. And maybe, meanwhile, you’ll motivate the Republican “leaders” to grow spines.

    For Liberty,
    ColdWarrior, PC (that

  • eburke
  • acat
  • hickorystick

    as well. They should just speak up and say what’s on their own minds. If it doesn’t match what their constituents believe, well they were not a good fit anyway. Having political office is not a lifelong right.