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A Winning Strategy PDF Print E-mail
by Tom Pauken    Sun, Jun 21, 2009, 06:10 PM

Michael Steele, the recently elected Chairman of the Republican National Committee (RNC), appears to be a pleasant enough fellow. But, he is off to a rocky start as the GOP Chairman.

Within weeks of getting elected, Steele gave an interview to GQ magazine in which he was quoted as saying that abortion is an "individual choice," the refrain generally used by abortion rights supporters. The Republican Party platform consistently has viewed abortion as the wrongful taking of innocent human life, and the pro-life constituency has been an important part of that Reagan, conservative coalition. After a flurry of protests, Chairman Steele backtracked. The damage, however, already had been done. Social conservatives weren't enthusiastic about Steele's election as Chairman in the first place, and this gave them even more cause for concern.

Then, the Republicans lost a congressional race in a special election in upstate New York that they were expected to win. The RNC was blamed for its poor performance on behalf of the Republican candidate in that contest.

Nor was Michael Steele helped by a series of critical articles by Ralph Hallow in the Washington Times about the new Chairman's hiring practices at the RNC.

Thus, it was somewhat surprising to see Michael Steele declare in a May speech to his fellow RNC members that "A Republican renaissance has begun!" In that same talk, Steele also made the point that it was time to quit apologizing "for Republican mistakes of the past." Unfortunately, one can't ignore the damage done to the Republican brand by the failed policies of the Bush presidency.

From my perspective as a former Texas GOP Chairman and as a member of the Reagan Administration, Michael Steele's biggest problem is that he has no understanding of how a majority of economic and social conservatives was put together in the first place, and no sense of how a new conservative majority could be forged to address the issues of our times. The first thing you don't do is run off the social conservatives. Those Republicans determined to move the Party leftward on social issues need to be reminded that Ronald Reagan carried forty-nine states in 1984 as a strong, pro-life candidate. More recently, a majority of voters in California (one of the most socially liberal states in the nation) rejected same sex marriage when that issue was on the ballot last November.

The Republican Party isn't floundering because it has taken positions in favor of traditional family values. I would suggest that we are losing the support of middle class Americans because we are perceived--thanks to George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, Henry Paulson, et al--as beholden to the Wall St. crowd and Big Business on economic issues while being dictated to by neoconservative ideologues on major foreign policy questions. If we continue down that same path, I submit that the Republican Party will be in the political wilderness for a very long time.

Our principal objective should be to articulate an economic policy that addresses the concerns of Main St. Americans worried about losing their businesses and/or their jobs in the most serious economic recession our nation has faced since the Great Depression. That economic plan should be one designed to "put America back to work" by creating private sector jobs here at home, rebuilding of our manufacturing base, and lessening our dependence on unstable sources of foreign energy. The Obama Administration's so-called economic stimulus plan does none of that. It is little more than a package of social welfare spending with only a small percentage going for infrastructure and virtually nothing for the creation of private sector jobs. The Obama-Emanuel plan will make a bad unemployment situation even worse.

This is a terrific opportunity for Republicans to seize the initiative and get our economy moving again as President John F. Kennedy did in the early 1960s and President Reagan did in the early 1980s. Austin businessman David Hartman has a proposal which would do just that. The Hartman Plan would replace our onerous business tax system with a border-adjusted consumption tax. Our current tax system rewards debt while penalizing companies that save and invest to create jobs in the U.S. Hartman’s proposal would change all of that by leveling the playing field with our foreign competitors and by keeping good paying jobs here in the U.S., rather than exporting prosperity abroad. Not only would this badly needed business tax reform help put American back to work, it also would begin the difficult process of rebuilding our hollowed out manufacturing base. Moreover, this economic policy would resonate with Reagan Democrats in the hard hit industrialized states in the Midwest and the Northeast.

Passage of the Hartman Plan would end the dominance over the American economy by Wall St. investment bankers and private equity moguls who take advantage of the current tax system to load U.S. companies with high levels of debt and ship American jobs overseas. David Hartman’s tax reform proposal puts economic power back in the hands of Main St. producers, small businesses, and the American middle-class.

Conservatives need to return to the roots of the Goldwater-Reagan movement and represent the interests of Main St. Americans. Our goal should be to lead the charge against the economic and cultural elites who control our country, not attempt to become more "politically correct" by compromising our conservative principles to win acceptance by the Liberal Establishment. A winning strategy for Republicans is there for the taking if we just have the courage and resourcefulness to seize the initiative and bring America home to its founding principles.

 

This article originally appeared in the July issue of Chronicles Magazine.

Comments (8)add comment
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written by ElHombre , June 22, 2009

"I would suggest that we are losing the support of middle class Americans because we are perceived as beholden to the Wall St. crowd and Big Business on economic issues while being dictated to by neoconservative ideologues on major foreign policy questions."

Americans don't trust conservative solutions for social problemas either. Allow me to give a two-word example why...

Terry Schiavo.

Your economic ideas don't work, your foreign policy ideas don't work, and your social ideas don't work. And that's why most of America has deserted y'all.



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written by United Grassroots , June 22, 2009

Well put Tom. I hope that this is an indication that you're going to back new voices that can claim legitimacy on these issues, instead of standing behind those in current leadership who have failed us in that regard.


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written by History , June 22, 2009

Tom, ROGER all. Texans need to put backbone into state and national Republican party positions, if we are going to attract economic conservatives and keep the social conservatives in our fold. One key method of doing that is to recur to the Constitution, insisting on those rights reserved to states and pursuing policies at state level which begin to reset precedent. If the people of Iran can muster such courage against their totalitarian regime, perhaps Americans will too... again.
--Wes Riddle



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written by Lifestyl Choices , June 22, 2009

The backbone of public servants has become like that of the spineless snail. A protective shell has been constructed preventing penetration into their private domain of dictating public policy. When morals, ethics, local, state and federal laws are ignored with impunity, the rules don't matter for anyone. There is no order. As if to accept the notion that living a good life is some kind of goal, the moral threshhold of society has become shallow as it redily allows animal instinct to rule over decisions in spite of the high-minded values it proclaims as truths. Actions, or the absence of actions is what counts. If we as a society are not willing to uphold the laws, why do we have them? Where are the champions of law enforcement? Clinton summed it up when he said, "It depends on what 'is' is." What people 'know' is that it ain't the truth.


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written by Bob Reagan , June 22, 2009

I agree with most of Tom’s analysis. The GOP should not drive off the social conservatives, or anyone else who shares the basic political principles of limited government and strong national security. Social conservatives are not a monolithic bloc, however. Not all of those who believe abortion is wrong would seek to criminalize it, even if they could. The tension between state establishment of religion and free exercise requires drawing a line somewhere. There is disagreement among social conservative where it should be drawn. Devout Southern Baptists, about as socially conservative as you can find on most issues, have a long tradition of separating church and state. Immigration reform is a national security issue, but it seems to target those coming from Mexico, Central and South America, many of who are socially conservative on other issues. The point is that the Republican Party cannot afford to take a stance that excludes those who have different views on some issues, but believe in the core issues. Ronald Reagan once stated that someone who agrees with your 80% of the time is your friend. Also, social conservatives must come realize that limited government and respect for federalism in its original form is the best framework in which to achieve their goals – which should be persuasion, not coercion.

I have to agree with the above comment about the Terry Schiavo affair. The spectacle of the Republican led Congress passing a law that permitted the federal courts to become involved in a purely state matter, and interfering with a family’s private affair to boot, made the GOP look like a bunch of idiots, and scary ones at that. I credit the Schiavo fiasco in no small part with the 2006 electoral debacle.



...
written by Paul Barnes , June 23, 2009

Mr. Reagan, I am glad you brought up Latinos. They disapprove of the Republican Party by an astonishing 86%. The GOP "base" has a problem with meaningful immigration reform. Many simply don't like people from south of the border. This is demographic doom for the GOP. I don't see how the hagiography of Ronald Reagan or Barry Goldwater can solve this. America needs two strong political parties. The GOP remains in the wilderness with 21% of the population claiming to be a Republican. Good luck with that.


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written by Bob Reagan , June 23, 2009

Mr. Barnes: There may be something to what you say, but I know a lot of very conservative Republicans, and have not perceived that they dislike Latin Americans per se. There have been many Mexican-American GOP stalwarts, and up to 40% voted for G.W. Bush. I really do not believe you can group Cuban-Americans with Mexican-Americans, but they have been overwhelmingly Republican up until fairly recently. Part of the problem is that many conservatives, who do not like public money being spent for almost anything, see illegal immigrants as moochers, particularly of health care resources. If that is true, it is an exception. Most immigrants who come here do not come for handouts, but to work. They do, and hard. That is something that we all should value. The GOP should chill on that issue, and realize that the next generation will go with them, as most other immigrant groups in the past have done.


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written by Jonathan Green , July 04, 2009

Michael Steele has been under a barrage of criticism from fellow Republicans since his ascendancy to the chairmanship of the Grand Old Party. Along the way, he has embarrassed himself and his supporters with some of his rhetoric and for not seeming to show where he wants to take the Party. But it’s not all his fault. The GOP is in nearly as bad shape as the domestic automakers, so it’s probably accurate to believe that he was handed the keys to a beat up Ford Pinto, not a brand new Rolls Royce. While he is the lightening rod, the GOPs problems can’t easily be fixed – by anyone. Be that as it may, Steele’s stewardship of the Republican Party leaves much to be desired.

It’s not like he entered the job with a mandate for change. He was the default winner of the chairmanship. One leading candidate was eliminated after the “Barack the Magic Negro” CD snafu. Another had the temerity to seek the job despite membership in a racially exclusive country club – that’s not the resume line that suggests the GOP is really interested in having a “big tent.” Steele’s win did not come with the momentum or wide range of enthusiastic support that one usually has entering this position, so his blunders and missteps have been magnified.

He got mocked at the White House Correspondents Dinner and has had a series of media blunders that have called into question his judgment and leadership. He embarrassed himself by capitulating to Rush Limbaugh after showing some political bravery (and recognizing the facts) by stating that the bloviating talk show host was an incendiary force within the Party. Conservatives seem to be the only ones who don’t understand that most people don’t want to support a party whose most important figure is a talk show host. Steele’s honesty was followed by a hat-in-hand appearance on Limbaugh’s show. That event, a month into Steele’s term, showed everyone that the chairman is neither feared nor respected by Limbaugh (and those of his ilk).

Steele will likely be among the fallguys after the 2010 elections which, at this early date, will look a lot like the 2006 and 2008 ones. The rush to regionalize the GOP will be nearly complete by that time. For the sake of a two-party democracy, let’s hope that moderates will find the strength they need to push back against a conservative onslaught that has nearly destroyed the GOP.





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