|
|

Latest Column:
It’s
Hard Out Here for a Parent
When Vulgarity Takes Over...
..........

CaliforniaRepublic.org
opinon in
Reagan country
..........

Michael
Ramirez
editorial cartoon
@Investor's
Business
Daily
..........
..........
Do
your part to do right by our troops.
They did the right thing for you.
Donate Today

..........
..........

..........

tOR Talk Radio
Contributor Sites
Laura
Ingraham
Hugh
Hewitt
Eric
Hogue
Sharon
Hughes
Frank
Pastore
[Radio Home]
..........
|
|
Speaker
of the House...Nancy Pelosi?
It’s only too possible…
[Mark
Alexander] 3/8/06
Kind of makes
the eyes water, doesn't it -- but it's not idle speculation.
In eight short months, 435 House seats, and 33 in the Senate,
will be subject to the rigors of democratic selection, and
from this vantage point, short of some major alteration of
current trends, Republicans are in trouble.
In the Senate,
there are 15 Republican and 17 Democrat seats being contested
(in addition to the one occupied by switch-hitter Jim Jeffords).
Republicans are likely to hold their majority here, though
it may be trimmed by two seats.
Contributor
Mark Alexander
[Courtesty of The Federalist Patriot]
Mark
Morrison Alexander is Executive Editor and Publisher
of The
Federalist Patriot, the Web's "Conservative
E-Journal of Record" and now the most widely
subscribed Internet-based publication. [go to Alexander index]

Subscribe
|
In the House,
however, where Republicans hold a lead of 231-202 (counting
Vermont Socialist Bernie Sanders among the Demos, of course,
and not counting two vacancies), the GOP's inside tracking
numbers indicate that Republicans may lose more than 20 seats.
Democrats need to pick up only 16 seats to take over the House.
Notably,
the same erosion of confidence will take its toll on governors
this fall. Currently, there are 28 Republicans and 22 Democrats,
but there are 36 gubernatorial elections this year, and Democrats
will likely pick up between two and five of those seats.
Alas, Republicans
in the White House and Congress have so misspent their majority
political capital that they may well lose their party's Beltway
triad, and their majority of state executives.
How did the
Republican party come to find itself in this sorry and shameful
state? While there are many contributing factors, the short
answer is this: President George Bush and his congressional
majorities have squandered the opportunity to deliver on a
conservative domestic agenda -- and in the process, have all
but completely alienated their conservative base.
Since the
President's reelection in 2004, this column has noted that,
in the absence of a robust conservative domestic agenda during
his second term, the House would be at risk in the '06 midterm
elections, and the presidency, likewise, in '08. Yes, President
Bush got high marks as Commander in Chief in the Long
War against terror. Domestically, with the help of Congress,
he has made good on his commitments to nominate constitutional
constructionists to the Supreme Court and pass modest tax cuts
-- but his performance, and that of the Republican Congress,
declines precipitously from there.
Conservatives
expected President Bush and his congressional majorities to
lead the charge on behalf of individual liberty, the restoration
of constitutionally-constrained limits on government, and the
promotion of free enterprise and traditional American values,
as outlined in The Patriot's Statement
of Principles. But they have not.
Increasingly,
Americans can't distinguish
Republicans from Democrats, on key issues. One can still
discern the principled ideological differences between the
most conservative and liberal members of Congress, but when
it comes to domestic policy, the "great middle" of the legislative
branch falls into the "distinction without a difference" category.
Under Republican
leadership, the size and regulatory role of the central government
has grown largely unabated since President Bush took office,
and his fiscal budget for 2007 reflects spending increases
over his tenure of almost 50 percent more than Bill Clinton's
last budget. This is disgraceful.
Republicans
have so demoralized their conservative base that even the most
staunchly ideological conservatives are suggesting that a Democrat-controlled
House may be necessary to remind Republicans why, precisely,
we voted them into office.
That is not
to say that all Republicans have neglected their conservative
base. Some Republicans are conservative, and chief among them
is Rep. Mike Pence, who chairs a group of 100 House conservatives
who, as "The
Republican Study Committee," are charting a course to maintain
their majority in '06 -- and beyond.
Rep. Pence
and his fellow conservatives have rallied around principles
that he outlined in a speech last fall, "Another
Time for Choosing," picking up the central theme of Ronald
Reagan's famous 1964 speech "A
Time For Choosing."
This week,
the RSC issued its top ten legislative priorities for 2006
-- and it's high time for President Bush to sign on. "As the
challenging midterm elections approach, House conservatives
recognize that you cannot beat a national trend without a national
agenda," says Rep. Pence. "As the majority of the majority,
House conservatives believe that the remainder of the 109th
Congress should be dedicated to affirming our commitment to
limited government, fiscal discipline and traditional moral
values. While this is not an exhaustive list, the fiscal and
social policy reforms included in the RSC Top Ten compose the
nucleus of issues that minted this majority. Acting on the
RSC Top Ten is the best hope for renewing the confidence of
the American people in our commitment to fiscal discipline
and reform."
The RSC's
legislative fiscal priorities are as follows: Make the Tax
Cuts Permanent, including the repeal of the marriage-tax penalty
and the death tax and pass fundamental tax reform; pass Budget
Process Reform, which includes budgeting for emergencies with
a rainy day fund, instituting a sunset commission for federal
programs, instituting a constitutional line-item veto, and
making the budget resolution carry the force of law; pass another
Deficit Reduction Bill in the form of budget reconciliation,
to rein in autopilot spending, which has risen from 25 percent
of all federal spending in 1963 to 54 percent today, and is
expected to reach nearly 60 percent in 2014; pass Ethics Reform
that requires transparency and earmark reform that permits
Members of Congress to strike earmarks on the House floor;
pass legislation that stops the raid on the Social Security
Trust Fund and allows Americans to own a Personal Social Security
Account; pass a Balanced Budget Amendment to put our fiscal
house in order; and offset all emergency supplemental spending
with other spending reductions, and offset all new programs
with simultaneous, equivalent reductions in, or eliminations
of, existing programs.
The RSC's
legislative social priorities are as follows: Pass the Marriage
Protection Amendment, to ensure that marriage, the union of
a man and a woman as husband and wife, is not redefined by
activist judges; defend the Sanctity of Human Life, which includes
banning all human cloning, passing the Unborn Child Pain Awareness
Act, promoting ethical adult-stem-cell research, and preventing
federal funding for destructive embryonic-stem-cell research;
and pass Protections for Religious Freedom, such as the Pledge
of Allegiance, the Ten Commandments, and religious expression
in the public square.
To be sure,
the RSC's task would be much easier with President Bush leading
the charge -- if only he could. Unfortunately, Bush is no longer
even on the ropes -- he is down and almost out.
How did that
happen?
The President
has been under constant fire from Democrats for four years
over the conduct of our campaign against terror, but Democrats,
despite their best anti-American efforts, could not undermine
Bush as Commander in Chief -- until last summer, that is, when
he struck out.
Strike one
was signing the bloated highway bill, which became symbolic
of Bush's failure to contain government spending. The second
strike was his perceived failure in taking charge of the Katrina
catastrophe -- perception being what it is. (It was probably
not advisable to be on the Left Coast political circuit the
day a Cat 5 hurricane is making landfall.) Strike three was
his stupefying nomination of Harriet Miers.
Over the
course of a few short months, George Bush carelessly undermined
his own foundation, his conservative political base.
Seizing the
moment, Democrat strategists calculated that they could retake
Congress and the White House over the next two years if they
could keep Bush on the mat; keeping him down keeps the Republican
Party down. Their strategy to do so has been very well executed.
Here is the
line of attack, which will be refreshed, ad nauseum, between
now and midterm elections: Undermine Bush's standing, and,
thus, that of Republicans, on national security/defense. Continue
to insist that Bush lied about WMD in Iraq and now they are
in a civil war; Insist he authorized NSA spying on U.S. citizens;
Insist he is outsourcing our national security; Insist he is
soft on border and port security; and finally, insist that
not only is he a failure as Commander in Chief, but he does
not care about the American people -- Bush is the real hurricane
that hit Louisiana and Mississippi.
In 1992,
Ronald Reagan said of his legacy, "Whatever else history may
say about me when I'm gone, I hope it will record that I appealed
to your best hopes, not your worst fears, to your confidence
rather than your doubts."
The Democrats
are experts at appealing to "worst fears and doubts." If the
President can't get off the mat, the RSC's agenda may not get
out of the gate, and we will be hearing a lost more from "Speaker
Pelosi." -one-
copyright
2006 Federalist Patriot
§
|
|
|