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Today, Brown is Golden
· Thursday, January 21, 2010
On Tuesday, the voters of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts sent an incredibly powerful message to the Democrats in Washington that their out-of-control spending and efforts to rush through healthcare legislation will not be tolerated by the electorate. In a stunning upset, Republican Scott Brown defeated his Democratic opponent in the bluest of blue states to capture the United States Senate position left vacant by the passing of the late Ted Kennedy.
Only a year ago pundits across the nation were proclaiming the Republican Party dead in the water -- causing many Democrats to feel they had free rein. However, things are about to change in a different direction than anticipated by the president just one year ago.
There’s just no way to oversell this victory. Massachusetts hasn’t fielded a Republican Senator for 31 years. Senator-elect Brown will be the only Republican in the entire state delegation to Congress. Less than a year and a half ago, Barack Obama took Massachusetts by 26 points, which makes Scott Brown’s triumph a 31-point reversal.
Today, many Democrats are rushing in to do damage control -- claiming that this was a case of a bad candidate in a challenging local environment, as was also claimed after Republican victories in Virginia and New Jersey earlier this year. However, coming into this race, Martha Coakley was not an unknown commodity who was quickly cast on the most public of stages. Rather, she came into this general election only after having earned her party’s nomination due, in part, to her position as a popular statewide figure who had previously received over 78 percent of the statewide vote earning her the commonwealth’s attorney general position. And she also had one of the strongest political machines in the country at her disposal. No, this was not a case of a bad candidate struggling in a tough local environment. (How anyone could call Massachusetts a tough local environment for a Democrat while maintaining a straight face is beyond me.) This was clearly a rebuke of the Democrats’ national agenda.
And not only did Scott Brown win a political race -- he may have helped delay or defeat one of the most dangerous pieces of legislation to sniff passage in decades. And for Democrats who may hold on to the hope that the Massachusetts results were not about the Democrats’ national agenda -- they only need to be reminded the Republican candidate Brown was victorious in Ted Kennedy’s own precinct.
I don’t often give advice to my friends across the proverbial political aisle, but I feel compelled to do so today. Democrats need to step back and realize that a wave of populism is taking hold in this country, uniting Democrats, Republicans and Independents alike.
If the fact that over 20 percent of registered Democrats in Massachusetts gravitated to the Republican candidate does not help my Democratic friends come to this realization, nothing will. Just 11 percent of voters in Massachusetts are Republicans. Republicans did not carry this victory. The people of Massachusetts did, people of every political stripe.
Democrats need to immediately suspend debate and votes on healthcare legislation until Scott Brown is seated -- as was articulately stated by Democratic Sen. Jim Webb of Virginia. They also need to realize that when polling shows that a mere 38 percent of Americans support that legislation, it is time to make significant changes to their agenda.
It should not be lost on them that the 38 percent number equals former President George W. Bush’s approval at the end of this presidency -- a number that Democrats once pointed to as proof that Americans clearly rebuked the policies of his administration past his final day in office.
Three consecutive times now -- in the races for Governor in New Jersey and Virginia, and now in Massachusetts -- independents have surged against the president and brought the Republican candidate to victory. Now that’s a rebuke!
The results in Massachusetts demonstrate that a tide of real change is finally taking hold in this country -- rejecting excessive spending whether it is promoted by Republicans or Democrats. It is now up to Republicans to take advantage of this sweeping movement by returning to our roots of promoting a smaller, smarter and more efficient government -- a government that is not in the business of running our nation’s healthcare programs.
Working together, holding to our core principles, and speaking for the people, the Republicans can carry this momentum westward to electoral victory, even in the most blue of states and districts. Failing to do so would be a lost opportunity for our party... and for our nation.
©2010 Mike Reagan.
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Brian
The only problem I see is that the Republican party lacks one critical ingredient: a leader. I think Sarah Palin is the best choice for our next president. As first female presidents go, she beats Hillary Clinton any day of the week and twice on Sunday. Thing is, it appears that even members of her own party are pooh-pooh-ing her background and her abilities. "What does she know, she was governor of the least populated state in the union" seems to be an oft-recurring sentiment. One thing she knows: how to keep a state running at a budget surplus as opposed to a shortfall. Sonmething else she knows: how to rid the halls of power of rampant corruption. I seriously doubt the party leadership can find anyone better amongst the current crop of ego-maniacs. And I think that's what we need most: an outsider who's not afraid to buck the status quo. I'll say it loud and proud: "Palin and whoever in 2012!"
Posted January 21, 2010 at 12:38:12 AM
Patt
I agree totally with you Brian. I came to say exactly what you did. Bravo. Saved me the typing.
Posted January 21, 2010 at 1:39:28 PM
Howard Last
What we should be scared of now is the republican leadership (still an oxymoron). They have never missed an opportunity to blow an opportunity. Remember back in the 1990's when the democraps were pushing anti-gun laws. They were blocked in the Senate untill Benedict Dole on Thanksgiving night made a deal with kommandant klinton. And before anyone jumps on me for calling him Benedict, he has a lot in common with Arnold. Both were war heroes. Remmeber the Battle of Saratoga (the turning point of the Revolution) and the defense of West Point? Arnold sold out to the crown because his wife was jealous that he did not get a promotion. Dole thought he had a devine right to be king (oops President).
Then there is McCain who pushed a semi-auto ban and McCain Feingold, which Dubya signed. McCain is now saying the supremes were wrong to throw out most of the bill. The republican leadership is now backing Crist in Florida and a political hack in Kentucky to oppose Ron paul's son for the senate.
Posted January 21, 2010 at 4:04:59 PM
MichaelSSEC
I was all set to say something very much like what Brian said. No need, he said it quite well! I second what he wrote!
I nominate Sarah Palin as the Republican candidate for President in 2012.
And I nominate Michael Reagan to Chair the Party. We need Conservatives to lead us, not RINOs who offer a blasted 12-step program to defeat the Democrats.
The next two elections -- the mid-term in November of this year and the presidential cycle in 2012 -- will be the most important elections in living memory. When Ronald Reagan was elected in 1980, the country faced a worsening recession and a Democratic leadership that was quite inept. Nobody was trying to literally destroy the country or dismantle the Constitution. Today, the Obama administration makes Carter look like tame, and employs the most radical bunch ever to sit in the White House. They are quite literally dismantling America -- politically, economically, militarily. If Obama accomplishes half the things he wants, America will be nothing more than a third-rate banana republic, remembering the heyday and trying to figure out how things went so wrong.
Not only must we throw radical Obama out of the Oval Office, we must derail the radical Liberals in Congress as well. That we can do in large measure this year. But quite frankly, the GOP can't get it done on a platform of "Democrats Lite" otherwise known as the counterproductive Big Tent policy. Only by restoring Conservative principles can we defeat the Democrats and restore American exceptionalism.
I like Michael Reagan. I've heard his lectures about his dad, heard him talk about Conservative principles, heard him lead the fight against those who tried to pretend President Reagan didn't win the Cold War. I think he'd make a fine Party Chairman, who can lead the Republicans back to Conservatism the way his father did before him.
We need a leader, and Michael Reagan is a good one.
Posted January 24, 2010 at 8:17:40 PM