.
NY Times last endorsed a Republican for president in 1956.
11/5/14, "Establishment GOP Wants to Purge Party of "Extremists"," Rush Limbaugh transcript
"I'm holding here in my formerly
nicotine-stained fingers a piece from today's New York Times (11/5) written by
Jeremy W. Peters and Carl Hulse. "Republicans’ First Step Was to Handle Extremists in Party." The premise of this story is the Republican
victory depended entirely on the Republican establishment silencing and
eliminating any Tea Party candidates. Cory Gardner and Joni Ernst not
included, and some others.
(NYT): "It was late spring, and Republican leaders knew that if they wanted
to win the Senate, they needed to crush the enemy: not Democrats, but
the rebels within their own party. And Chris McDaniel, a Senate candidate
from Mississippi who had a history of making sexist and racially
insensitive remarks, was a problem."
Notice Nancy Pelosi is never an extremist. Harry Reid is never an
extremist. Dick Durbin, never an extremist. No, no, no. Hillary
Clinton, never. No, no. The only extremists are in the Tea Party, in
the Republican Party, and the Republican Party is well aware. And the
only way the Republican Party can win is to kill off the Tea Party, as
epitomized by Chris McDaniel.
(NYT): "Candidates like Scott Brown, running for the Senate in New
Hampshire, called the National Republican Senatorial Committee to
complain that if Mr. McDaniel was not stopped, he could drag the whole
party down."
This would be Scott Brown who lost again in a race for the
Senate, this time in New Hampshire, to an absolutely corrupt woman by
the name of Jeanne Shaheen who we have learned worked hand in hand with
Lois Lerner to target the Tea Party at the IRS.
Jeanne Shaheen was one of the US senators, along with Al Franken and
others, encouraging the IRS to deny tax-exempt status to Tea Party
fundraiser groups. We couldn't mention that, of course; that would be
partisan.
(NYT): "In June, the party establishment--just barely--vanquished Mr.
McDaniel, reaching a turning point in their dogged campaign to purge the
party of extremists and regain power in the Senate." And again, it's
funny, ladies and gentlemen, how we never hear of any extremists in the
Democrat Party....
We only hear of extremists as named
by other Republicans.
We don't hear of one Democrat, even after they have just received
another historic shellacking. But nobody ever dares suggest the
Democrats need to dial back some of their extremists. No, no. Harry
Reid can go make fools of himself all day long, and it's mainstream.
And Pelosi and Debbie "Blabbermouth" Schultz, who define radical
extremist kook cases, are free to say and do whatever they want, and
they're considered brilliant strategists.
Back to the New York Times piece: "Republicans’ impressive showing
Tuesday night...was the result of methodical plotting, careful
candidate vetting and abundant preparation to ensure that the party’s
candidates would avoid repeating the same devastating mistakes that cost
them dearly in 2010 and 2012." Because, you see, only conservative
extremists make mistakes."...
["Cost them dearly?" 2010 was a GOP landslide, a gain of 64 House seats and 6 Senate seats. GOP House majority became largest since 1946. In 2012 the GOP E lost 11 Senate races and the presidency with their own hand-picked candidates. ed.]
(continuing, Rush): "If only conservative extremists make mistakes, then Joe Biden must be
the biggest conservative out there because he's one of the biggest
extreme radical dummkopfs that we have. But when he does it, it's just
old Joe, you know, that's just Joe. Making fun of the Indians at
7-Eleven, that's just old Joe. There's not a racist bone in old Joe's
body. .
(NYT): "In interviews, more than two dozen lawmakers and strategists
described the meticulous efforts."
Why in the world are Republican establishment wizards of smarts going
off to the New York Times to explain their brilliant strategy of
limiting "extremists" in their own party?
.
Why aren't the wizards of
smart in the Republican Party going to the New York Times and describing
the extremists in the Democrat Party and explaining to the New
York Times why the Democrats just lost?...
.Republican leaders in this
story are telling the New York Times that the meaning of the election
is: The voters want us to work together to solve problems.
(NYT): "Party leaders managed to elbow aside insurgents like Mr. McDaniel
and Liz Cheney, the daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, who
had planned to challenge Senator Mike Enzi of Wyoming on the grounds
that he was insufficiently conservative." Liz Cheney is a dangerous
extremist, in the New York Times piece. Liz Cheney is a dangerous
extremist, as called out by Republican leaders in this piece?...
.
"But in the end," says the New York Times proudly.
"In the end, the disciplined approach by the Republicans worked. No
Republican imploded with the kind of fatal campaign gaffe that crushed
the party's hopes in the last two elections.
(NYT): "Every establishment candidate prevailed in the primaries.
Republicans credited this to their rigorous training program...Fake
trackers would even surprise candidates at the curb outside the airport
when they flew into Washington to meet with National Republican
Senatorial Committee officials."...
.
And
this is why they won, because of the brilliance of the Republican
strategists who figured out how to keep the Tea Party from being
involved. That's the media's job this week.
The media's job this week is to give everybody a totally
wrong-headed, incorrect reason why the Republican victory took place,
and it wasn't because they kept out the Tea Party, and it wasn't this or
that. It doesn't matter what the Republicans stood for. They were the
other guys, and the American people want these Democrats stopped....
They weren't elected because they want people to work together. They
weren't elected because of compromise. They weren't elected because
they weren't conservative, 'cause they didn't have any identity....Nobody knew what the Republicans were on a national
basis. I'm gonna say this over and over again because the Republicans
stood mute. They didn't tell anybody anything about themselves.
They didn't articulate one policy. Individual candidates did, but the
national Republican Party had no identity. Purposely!...
You really think that people went to the polls yesterday, and as they're marking their ballots...are actually saying...I'm gonna vote for
Republicans this time because I don't remember any stupid things some
guy in Missouri said. Yeah! Yep! Yep! That's it.Vote Republican...." This was not on their minds.
They walked into the polling place, they walked up to the ballot box,
and the only thought on their minds was:
"This is our only chance as
stopping what is happening to our country"...
And that means stopping the people who are causing it.
That happens to be Barack Obama and the Democrats.
And that's all this election was about."
=====================
11/5/14, NYT: Republicans’ First Step Was to Handle Extremists in Party
==========================
11 US Senate races lost in 2012 by GOP E hand-picked candidates, a must win election (in addition to their must have, hand-picked presidential loser, Romney):
1. Connie Mack IV-Fla.
2. Denny Rehberg-Montana
3. Linda Lingle-Hawaii
4. Dean Heller-Nevada
5. Heather Wilson-New Mexico
6. Rick Berg-North Dakota
7. George Allen-Virginia
8. Tommy Thompson-Wisconsin
9. Josh Mandel-Ohio
10. Scott Brown-Mass.
11. Charlie Summers-Maine
===================
Thursday, November 6, 2014
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