Message to GOP: Obama is not the problem
Written by Viguerie on Thu Jun 05 18:03:28 -0400 2008
From the Capitol Hill newspaper The Hill, at
http://thehill.com/op-eds/message-to-the-gop-obama-is-not-the-problem-2008-05-22.html:

Message to the GOP: Obama is not the problem
By Richard Viguerie
May 22, 2008

Halloween has come early this year: Republicans have forgotten how to run without scare tactics.
This year it’s Illinois Sen. Barack Obama’s turn as the Democratic goblin, with House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) as the witch on a broomstick. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) is the vampire slayer and ghostbuster who will save us from the creatures of the night.
These fear tactics didn’t work in the three special House elections this year, and they’re not going to work in November.

Are we supposed to be scared of Democrats as big spenders? The Bush administration and congressional Republicans topped Democratic spending on every front.  Even excluding the “War on Terror,” Republicans have busted the budget.
The Democrats are going to raise our taxes? No doubt they will, but, because of the Republicans’ massive deficits, our children and grandchildren are going to be crushed by tax hikes or hyperinflation.
The Democrats are corrupt miscreants? Compared to the Bridge to Nowhere-planning, bribe-taking, page-trolling Republicans?
How about, as Bob Dole once put it, the threat of sending our youth off to “Democrat Wars”?
Never mind.

As it becomes more and more clear that the Republicans have nothing to run on, the campaign will get nastier and more personal, centered on Obama. As the real Halloween approaches, it will get worse and then continue until Election Day.
Fortunately for Obama, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) has been hitting him with the Republican playbook for the past month or two, as she got more and more desperate. It didn’t work for her, and I don’t think it will work for Republicans.
To be sure, Obama has to define himself in positive tones before the Republicans succeed in defining him as a secret Muslim agent who’s going to sell us to terrorists. But he has by far the best campaign organization I’ve seen this year, and if, with much of the media in his pocket, they can’t get his message out, they deserve to lose.

Negative campaigning is not the culprit. The job in any campaign, Democrat or Republican, liberal or conservative, is to stress your positives and just as strongly stress your opponent’s negatives. We’ve had negative campaigning in America since Colonial days, and it works. That’s why it doesn’t go away despite the sermons from the “good government” crowd.
No, the culprit is not negative campaigning, but rather, campaigning without ideas that are arguably better than your opponent’s, and relying instead on bogeyman portrayals.
McCain has been the victim of bogeyman campaigning himself, and I know him to be an honorable man who doesn’t want to win that way. The problem is that McCain doesn’t have a coherent set of ideas with which he can simultaneously fire up the conservative base and attract independents. He’s a part-time liberal in conservative clothing. Conservatives aren’t fooled by that, and liberals aren’t going to vote for a part-time liberal when they have a very persuasive full-time liberal to vote for.

Republicans on the Hill have no message of what they are for, what their principles are or how they would govern.  They can’t even agree to oppose big-government spending through earmarks.
“The lesser of two evils” is not a governing philosophy.  Yet Republicans repeatedly try to seduce conservatives with it. That strategy didn’t work in 1948, 1960, 1974, 1976, 1992 or 2006 — and it won’t work in 2008.
Obama isn’t a goblin, nor Pelosi a witch, but the Republican majority of the ‘90s and 2000s is Humpty Dumpty, prostrate and shattered.
Someday, the GOP will rid itself of the leaders who brought the party to this point. Or maybe it won’t, and a new movement or a new party will rise up as the principal opposition to the liberal Democrats.
Until then, anti-Obama-ism will inexorably sweep across the land like those zombies in “Night of the Living Dead.” Now that’s scary.

Blog Comments

Donald Cook
Well, it is a shame that there is not one real statesman left in America.Still the best of the worst is Mccain.
Mitchell Langbert
Richard Viguerie's "Obama Is Not the Problem" See: http://mitchell-langbert.blogspot.com/2008/06/richard-viguerie-has-posted-interesting.html Richard Viguerie has posted an interesting article criticizing John McCain's lack of ideological focus. He notes that: "The problem is that McCain doesn’t have a coherent set of ideas with which he can simultaneously fire up the conservative base and attract independents. He’s a part-time liberal in conservative clothing. Conservatives aren’t fooled by that, and liberals aren’t going to vote for a part-time liberal when they have a very persuasive full-time liberal to vote for." He adds: "'The lesser of two evils' is not a governing philosophy. Yet Republicans repeatedly try to seduce conservatives with it. That strategy didn’t work in 1948, 1960, 1974, 1976, 1992 or 2006 — and it won’t work in 2008." Perhaps Mr. Viguerie is right. America should move to a four-party as opposed to a two-party system. Two parties worked fine in an age of congruence, in the 19th century when the Republicans and Democrats mostly disagreed about who should get the spoils and whether tariffs should be reduced. The congruence continued through the first twenty years of the twentieth century, when Progressivism was adopted by both parties. By 1920 the public had tired of political change, and some of the Republicans became known as conservatives, which really just meant that they were a wee bit less radical than they had been a decade earlier under Republican Theodore Roosevelt, perhaps the most left-wing president of the twentieth century. In the 1930s Franklin D. Roosevelt identified the Democratic Party with social democracy. Although they fought social democracy, the Republicans never aimed to repudiate their earlier Progressivism nor did they aim to repudiate the New Deal. Rather, they became the "lesser of two evils" or the "wee bit less social democracy" party. The Republicans have never questioned the elements of Democratic Party social democracy. Rather, they have been content to argue for "a wee bit less". When elected, they have never attempted to repeal the most extreme Democratic policies. Warren G. Harding did not aim to repeal the Hepburn Act and Dwight Eisenhower did not aim to repeal the New Deal, even a bit of it. Because there are two parties, there is a strong incentive for both candidates to locate as close to the center as possible. Those to the "right" of the Republican, i.e., those who are more libertarian on economics or conservative on social issues are forced to vote for the Republican unless the Republican goes so far to the left that the Democrat becomes more attractive. The Republicans go as far to the center as possible to attract the undecided voters. The conservatives and libertarians are forced to vote Republican even though the Republican's views are closer to social democratic than they would like. The reverse is true for the Democrat. The Democratic candidates are pushed as close to the "right", to the least radical position, as possible to attract the undecided. Thus, the Democratic candidate cannot seem as left wing or as social democratic as activist members would like. This does not result in a move to the center. America has not arrived at a "centrist" solution. Rather, it has arrived at a liberal/free market/conservative solution that has been radically modified by progressive/social democratic programs. This results in stability and much less change than would result in a four party system, but it also results in much less experimentation and competition. The result is a system that does not reward new ideas and that has foreclosed (a) the possibility of reductions in the extent of government as well as (b) the possibility of socialism. I am happy about (b), unhappy about (a), but the reverse is true for most Democrats. They would like to see a world where the crank ideas of the New York Times, William Ayers, Barack Obama and Jimmy Carter are applied without restraint. I do not think that Mr. Viguerie is right about the 2008 election. I do not think that Mr. Obama will win because he is too far to the left to attract centrists. His associations with Chicago radicals make clear Mr. Obama's left wing orientation. As a result, centrist voters will prefer McCain and McCain will win. McCain does not need to convince conservatives to vote for him. Rather, he needs to convince "centrists" to vote for him. Unless conservatives want Bill Ayers's and Reverend Wright's associate to run the country, they will have to support McCain. If they stay home or vote for Bob Barr, then we can welcome a new emphasis on extending centralized planning, intellectuals' planning projects and attacks on freedom. While the Republicans' performance has been dismal, the way to change this is at the local level. The president is in many ways a symbol. An Obama victory will create a national mindset that America is turning to the left. A McCain victory will say that the nation has rejected left-wing ideology even if the Bush administration's and Republican Congress's performance has been dismal. I live in Congressman Maurice Hinchey's political district. Mr. Hinchey made national news last week because he advocated price controls on gasoline. Mr. Hinchey has run unopposed for a number of elections. Tonight, I met a young man, a teacher from Binghamton, NY, who may run for Congress against Mr. Hinchey. The young man, George K. Phillips, is a conservative who has many good ideas. He is a political novice. I invite Mr. Viguerie to assist Mr. Phillips in his Congressional run. Rather than complain about McCain, let's think about how to assist Mr. Phillips and other conservatives like him at the local level. As far as big ideas, perhaps it is time to think about a four-party system. But much ground work would need to be done before this idea has any practical political importance. A four-party system would better represent the ideological diversity that exists in America. It would lead to less stability but more experimentation.
(rev.) Angelo Pepps
It seems pretty certain that unless our Lord surprisingly comes before then, it is simply a matter of time before the GOP leadership will finally, get it. Tons of baby boomers who like myself, have all our lives voted Republican are embarassed by the lack of integrity in a party that needs to become new again. People make mistakes, granted. But it's time to change course to common sense and what is best for our children and grandchildren. This can be summarized in three main principles: * Humility based on Judaeo-Christian principles; * A gold-backed currency; and * A sensible foreign policy where we no longer serve as a police nation. Yes, there must be added to these: * Retain our freedoms; * Secure our borders; * Get rid of the Fed; * Get rid of the IRA; and the ever famous but necessary * Revert to limited government all based on Follow the Constitution. But if i had to choose between all of the above, the first proves most important as it gives a person the courage to stand for the truth no matter the consequences. We may be reaching the point where there may again, be a price to pay for freedom ...
Jack
I supported both Bushes thinking they would be conservative but they weren't. Now we have songbird McCain nominated who is neither conversative or a Republican in my books. Origninally he was a liberal Democrat but saw that Republicans were the ones being elected so he switched. His voting record in Congress shows that most of the time he was there alongside liberal Democrats voting the same way they did. So now it looks like we have a choice during the upcoming Presidential election....liberal Democrat or liberal/false Republican.... why not merge both parties and form one called Republicrats, it would be easier?
KIM MOORE
Ron Paul is the problem and he's also the solution!
adam F. Kohler
I've been a conservative for many years and I wish I had not voted for George W. Bush. I will never make the same mistake again. I will not vote for McCain because is not a Conservative. The only way to rid the Republican Party of it's moderates is to vote for a third party candidate whenever the moderate faction wins and forces us conservative to eat mud. I'll live with a Democrat in office and not regret my decision.
richard germond
I too found myself voting for Bush, mainly because I had no other choices. This year will be different for me. I will vote under the constitutional party and will cast my vote for Chuck Balwin. I came to the republican party back in the mid 70's because of the course that the Democratic party was heading. Now I am leaving another corrupt party. The sad situation is we focus so much on the Presidential race yet it is the Congress we need to really focus our attention. These bums are the cause of most of our problems. Vote the bums out and start out with fresh new faces. Don't pay attention to their party pay attention to their beliefs. We need to put unconstitutional minded people in office.

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