February 19, 2010


Michael Gerson, Tony Perkins, Rewriting History

Filed under: Conservatism,Faux Conservatives
By Alberto Hurtado (Email) @ 10:08 am

The more I examine the Mount Vernon Statement, the more it appears a cynical ploy by Beltway Conservatives to rewrite history and get a piece of the action. Two days ago on Fox News, Tony Perkins, President of the Family Research Council, promoted the Mount Vernon Statement as asserting that the GOP doesn’t speak for conservatives. The conservative movement, in his words, had become too close to the GOP:

(more…)


November 30, 2009


WASHINGTON POLICE ASSASSIN WAS PREVIOUSLY PARDONED BY HUCKABEE

Filed under: Faux Conservatives,Huckabee,Politics,Republicans,theocons
By Joel L (Email) @ 7:05 am

Huckabee’s bad judgement has come full circle. Apparently, his judgement on clemency while governor was soooo bad that the people of Arkansas actually considered amending the state constitution in order to curtail his ill-informed promiscuous grants of clemency to violent criminals.

Huckabee must never be allowed anywhere near a Republican presidential primary, much less the presidency!

Hat tip to Ace of Spades for the heads up.


October 27, 2009


That RINO label

Filed under: Conservatism,Faux Conservatives,Republicans
By Paul Zummo (Email) @ 2:01 pm

The NY-23 race continues to heat up, and some polls suggest that Doug Hoffman is in the lead (though this particular poll might be taken with a grain of salt).  Nevertheless, Newt Gingrich is sticking to his guns, blasting what he calls the “purge” mentality and also criticizing outsiders for sticking their nose in a local New York election.  Yes, Newt Gingrich, born and raised in Pennsylvania, who later became a Congressman from Georgia, is deriding outsiders for getting involved in an upstate New York election.  Wrap your head around that one.

As for the purge remarks, Phil Klein is right on the money.

The problem is that Gingrich is making a valid point in general, but one that doesn’t apply in this specific instance. There’s no doubt that if you want to build a majority, you have to be willing to accept less conservative candidates in certain regions where a conservative has no chance of winning. As many problems as I have with Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins, I concede that it’s unrealistic to believe that we could get a genuine conservative Senator elected in Maine, which Obama won by 17 points. In the case of Giuliani, you were dealing with a city that hadn’t elected a Republican who remained a Republican in over 50 years. He was conservative on economic issues, and uniquely suited to deal with the most pressing problem facing the city — rampant crime. The only option was to support him, or allow David Dinkins to have another disastrous term as mayor.

But the New York Congressional race is entirely different. Scozzafava isn’t just a social liberal — she’s an economic liberal, too. She supports card check legislation that would allow labor unions to expand their ranks through intimidation. She called the cops on a conservative journalist who was asking her questions about her position on taxes. And there’s actually a conservative in the race who has a realistic chance of winning.

This particular district is a fairly solid Republican one, despite Obama’s getting 52% of the vote in 2008.  Had Doug Hoffman been the GOP nominee, the race wouldn’t even be a contest as he’d probably outpoll Owens by a decent margin.

Another thing to keep in mind is that there was no primary.  Local Republican voters did not get the opportunity to select their candidate, so it’s time for people like Newt to get off their soapboxes about non locals interfering in the matter.

But getting back to the RINO issue, this was touched on in the comments to this American Catholic post by Donald McClarey.  Eric Brown – a self-described DINO – asks about the -INO labels:

But why should we have such rigid political orthodoxy?

I’m not saying that a party should not have agreement on a fundamental vision and philosophy, or principles, which is necessary for unity. But if there is not room for disagreement on means to the same end, there is very little room for intellectual freedom and creativity that actually allows for constructive criticism from within the party and viable and practical solutions to problems we face as a society.

If anything, we benefit from Democratic Senators like Ben Nelson who is opposed to the public option, who is opposed to the “opt out” compromise, and who most certainly will not vote for a health care reform bill with abortion in it. He is being attacked as a “fake” Democrat. I can’t see how such dissent is a bad thing — maybe because I’m pro-life?

Perhaps, I am misunderstanding one’s definition of a “RINO” or “DINO.” Is it someone who is so antithetical to the whole platform that they belong in the other party? Can someone be pro-choice and completely conservative on everything else and not be a “RINO”?

I’ll expand a bit on what I said to Eric in the comments section.  I actually don’t particularly care for the RINO label, though I have used it from time to time.  Political parties are distinct from ideological movements, so as such there is no “Republican” approach to issues in the same way that there is a conservative or liberal approach.  It is true that the Republican Party tends to be conservative in orientation, but it isn’t necessarily a conservative party.  Sure parties, as Donald writes in his post, should stand for something.  But there is room – as Klein writes – for slight variations in opinion.  Political parties are not religions, and there is no need to enforce some rigid orthodoxy.  I may not particularly care for  moderates like Collins and Snowe, but I can appreciate that they might be the best opportunity for Republican victory in states like Maine.  And while they’re both fairly left-of-center, they do ally themselves with the rest of the party on enough issues that they are not completely useless.

In the case of Scozzafava, however, she is in no meaningful sense of the term a Republican.  She is opposed to the party’s platform on BOTH economic and social issues, and has garnered the support of groups like ACORN and Planned Parenthood.  She is, it seems, to the left of the Democratic Party’s nominee.  Forget the NRA endorsement – opposition to gun rights is a complete non starter in this district.  She is one of the few people for whom the term RINO is a completely apt description.  That, plus what was mentioned above about the makeup of this district, and it’s clear that conservatives and Republicans really only have one option in this race.  Sorry Newt.  You might right in the abstract, but you’re wrong on this particular matter.


September 22, 2009


Mark Levin on Glenn Beck

Filed under: Faux Conservatives,Talk Radio
By Tom Van Dyke (Email) @ 3:41 pm

Well, here’s another conservative [besides me] determined not to go down with Beck’s ship:

LEVIN: How can you day after day and night after night correctly rail against Obama’s radicalism, how he’s undermining the Constitution, how he’s nationalizing our basic industries, how he has Marxists all around him, and then say in an interview with Katie Couric, I think John McCain would have been worse than Obama? Quote: “How about this? I think John McCain would have been worse for the country than Barack Obama. How’s that?”

That’s not good. McCain is no conservative, in fact in many respects he’s a progressive. Which is why I fought him. Day in and day out. Day in and day out behind this microphone. Not only fought him behind this microphone but wrote article after article — go ahead and Google it — rejecting his candidacy. But to say that he’d be worse than a president that’s a Marxist, who’s running around the country — I’m sorry, the world — apologizing for our nation, who’s slashing our defense budget, who’s nationalizing our health care system?

To say he would be worse is mindless, mindless, incoherent as a matter of fact. There’s our 5-PMer, on Fox … I don’t know who certain people are playing to, I don’t know why they are playing to certain people … I think there’s enormous confusion and positioning and pandering. It may be entertaining, but from my perspective, it’s not. It’s pathetic.”

Via the HuffPo.

I like Levin, a constitutional lawyer who’s said to have a face for radio but a voice for TV. He too has a shtick ["Now get off my phone, you big dummy!"], but he keeps it separate from his message— as opposed to Beck, whose sobbing populism is pure theater that appeals to the adolescent in us, not the adult.


September 15, 2009


This should go over well

Filed under: Conservatism,Faux Conservatives,George W. Bush,Republicans
By Paul Zummo (Email) @ 10:15 am

I’m normally a little suspicious when “insider” accounts of the White House are published, so take the following with a grain of salt.  But according to a soon-to-be released book by Bush staffer Matt Latimer titled: Speech-less: Tales of a White House Survivor, Bush had some, err, interesting things to say about conservatism.  Captain Ed, via Byron York, relays some of the more telling quotes. (more…)


May 27, 2009


Yeah, this was pretty predictable

Filed under: Faux Conservatives,Judicial Nominations,SCOTUS
By Paul Zummo (Email) @ 8:56 am

Prepare yourselves for a shock, but Grima Wormtongue Doug Kmiec has come out in support of Sonia Sotomayor.  I’ll give you a moment to recover from the surprise. (more…)


May 26, 2009


Theodore Olson To the Dark Side?

Filed under: Faux Conservatives,Federalist Society,Marriage
By Alberto Hurtado (Email) @ 8:38 pm

According to the LA Times, Solicitor General Extraordinaire, Republican, Conservative, and Federalist legal heart-throb, Theodore Olson is going to be part of the legal team mounting a federal challenge to the proposition 8 ruling. Say it ain’t so, Ted!


May 12, 2009


Unbelievable

Filed under: Faux Conservatives,Republicans
By Paul Zummo (Email) @ 9:36 am

I don’t get it.  I simply do not understand the major malfunction of the National Republican Party.  For every step forward, it decides that it must instantly shoot itself in the foot and take a staggering couple of steps ass-backwards.

Kathryn Lopez reports:

U.S. Senator John Cornyn (R-TX), Chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), issued the following statement today regarding Florida Governor Charlie Crist’s announcement that he will run for the United States Senate in 2010: (more…)


February 14, 2009


Compassionate Conservatism’s Rude Awakening

Filed under: Barack Obama,Conservatism,Faux Conservatives
By Dead Mule (Email) @ 6:40 pm

In Flannery O’Connor’s short story, “Good Country People,” the faux-nihilist Hulga has a liason with a young, seemingly innocent Bible salesman named Manley Pointer.  She sees herself as “one of those people who see through to nothing” and is going to aid the lad in shedding himself of his beliefs.  When she gets him into a hayloft to start on his education in earnest, she finds that his briefcase contains liquor, condoms, and cards beneath the Bibles.  He promptly absconds with her artificial leg and her glasses, leaving her with his parting assessment:  ”You ain’t so smart!  I been believing in nothing ever since I was born.”

The world looks strange and frightening after such an awakening, and so the world looks to Republicans and moderate Democrats in the wake of the monstrous stimulus bill’s passage.  Much as some conservative commentators railed against compassionate conservatism, that is precisely how America’s vast middle had come to define itself.  Very few really believed anymore that smaller government was necessary or desirable.  We could soothe our consciences with talk of fiscal restraint and accountability while expanding entitlements, increasing public-private “partnerships,” pouring more money down the education hole from on-high, and generally behaving like liberals.   (more…)


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