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Will 16 House Republicans be brave enough?
12/13/12, "The Republicans Have Failed the Nation," Erick Erickson, RedState.com
"The present leadership of the Republican Party has gone from making
the case that government is the problem and the American people are the
solution to making the case that Democratic controlled government is the
problem and Republican controlled government is the solution.
By giving up on making the case that government is the problem and
pivoting to “Democrats are the problem,” the Republican Party has failed
the American people. Historically, when parties lost, their leadership
went and hid for an appropriate amount of time under a rock after an
acceptance of blame and a resignation.
The present Republican leaders in Washington, instead of hiding under
a rock, have taken to standing on the rock and demanding conservatives
self flagellate. Neither John Boehner nor Mitch McConnell are
visionaries. They are survivors. They survive by recognizing the
biggest threat to them and trying to befriend it or neutralize it.
Right now, both see conservatives as their biggest threat, not Barack
Obama. Why? Because while Barack Obama maintains the White House,
John Boehner and Mitch McConnell maintain their positions of power.
They exist for power, not for vision. The visions they articulate are
routinely backpedaled. Remember the pledge to nowhere the House
Republicans concocted in 2010 as a second coming of the Contract With
America? Within two months of returning to the majority they’d already
ditched their pledge faster than a frat boy fleeing a one night stand.
Only conservatives wish to hold them accountable for their breach of
trust,
thus conservatives are the threat.
The very same Republican leadership who paved the way for the rise of
the Democrats in 2006 through moral opaqueness on the role of
government in the lives of Americans now seek to shut up and shut out the conservatives who continue to loudly point out that the size and scope of the federal leviathan has grown too unwieldy. More troubling, with the removal of the several of
the critics within the party from key committees and a clear message
that loud voices of conservatism will not get plumb committee
assignments, the incoming freshman class and even the current
conservative leaders in the House of Representatives have rolled over....
Obsequious praise for small government does the Republicans no good
when they too are in favor of big government in their actions. And
having two leaders as the face of the party who have both been in
Washington since 1986 does no good restoring credibility when these
multi-decade residents of the swamp wink and smile that they really do
think Washington is the problem.
Is it any wonder the American people have come to the conclusion that
government isn’t so bad when the party of small government keeps
expanding it too? The leaders of the party are the message, not the
words. And the message does not resonate because they do not practice
what they preach.
Until the Republicans change their message, they will keep losing.
Changing the message means changing the men. Will 16 Republicans in the
House be brave enough to stand up and say the party needs a new Speaker
of the House?
This is not about the compromise. This is not about the fiscal
cliff. This is not even about removing Amash, Huelskamp, Schweikert,
and Jones. This is about
beginning again anew
— a process that cannot
happen when the faces of the Republican leadership have been in
Washington since 1986 expanding government while preaching the need for
limiting it."
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