The GOP Revitalization
Hardly an easy row to hoe
Editor's Note: Thomas's commentary is in blue and
Marcie's is in purple.
The Republicans have taken
it on the chin in the last two elections. The Republican Revolution
of 1994 allowed the party a chance to take control of the House
for the first time in forty years. In 2002, the party took the
Senate, and things went downhill from then on. Republican snubbed
their conservative base and spent their way out of power. In 2006
and in 2008 Democrats took back Congress in elections best described
as a "shellacking." Since then we have sat back and
watched the "woe-is-us" base wonder what went wrong,
and how does the party get back in the cat-bird seat. We believe
we have the answers, and while it will not be easy, it must be
done lest the Democrats end up with decades of control over the
Congress, and possibly the Presidency.
It starts with the grass-roots base in
the party. That is where conservatism is in the party, and no
one will argue with that. The problem is our elected officials
won't listen to us, for the most part, and we have no voice. We
don't have a Newt Gingrich right now espousing conservative principles
and true government reform. We also need to make sure we abide
by the conservative principles that gave us that revolution in
1994, and the one which started it all in 1980. Fiscal responsibility,
cut the size and scope of the federal government, lower taxes,
and stay strong on national security was the base which Ronald
Reagan appealed to, and won on. These are the same principles
that Mr. Gingrich used, and he coupled it with the Contract With
America which promised true government reform. (All the provisions
of the Contract were brought to the House floor for a vote in
the first 100 days of Mr. Gingrich's tenure as Speaker, but were
either stalled in the Senate, stalled in committee, or vetoed
by then-President Clinton.) It is time we move back to this idea,
and create a new Contract With America; one that will appeal to
the base, and stand firm on our conservative principles.
While many might disagree with us on this
next point, it is something that must be done. It is time for
us to clean house. A few conservative pundits dislike the term
"RINO," but we do have quite a few in the party that
seem to be an ever-present thorn in our side. The most notable
ones are in the Senate, and have been a problem in the past. But
with the Democrats within two seats of having a filibuster-proof
majority now, the RINOs seem to be an even larger problem. President
Obama's self-described "stimulus bill" would not have
received the necessary sixty votes to avoid a filibuster had Senators
Arlen Specter, Olympia Snowe, and Susan Collins not bolted from
the Republican caucus to jump into bed with the Democrats. The
stimulus bill is anything but stimulus for the economy. It is
a trillion dollar boondoggle that our future generations will
be paying for, and all because Democrats refuse to hold people
responsible for their mismanagement, both in private business,
and in their private lives. We need to forget about the numbers
in the Congress, and focus on getting the right people to represent
us. If we continue to vote for the names we recognize we will
relegate the party back to the Rockefeller Republican era which
left us in the darkness for decades.
Let's take a tip from the stimulus battle
in the Congress and focus on another thing that the party must
vociferously take a stand on: opposing the extreme liberal agenda
from the Democrat party leaders in the House, the Senate, and
the White House. There is a liberal agenda being fashioned between
the legislative and executive branches that many, many people
are unaware of thanks to a willing media that is seemingly in
bed with the Democrats. Ever heard of the Freedom of Choice Act?
How about the Fairness Doctrine (though Democrats admit they won't
name it that)? Did you know that Representative (and former Black
Panther) Bobby Rush was moving legislation through the House demanding
full registration of all firearms and firearms owners in the United
States? Of course you didn't know about it because the media doesn't
want to bring it up. You only know of these things if you listen
to talk radio or read the blogs (which is why several prominent
Democrats want to reinstate the Fairness Doctrine). This is an
agenda that must be opposed at all costs because it violates the
very rights we maintain in this nation. The party must stand firmly
in opposition to this radical agenda, and get the word out to
the electorate about what direction the Democrats are moving in.
In short, it's no longer an agenda of freedom and democracy. It's
an agenda of out-and-out socialism and control.
The Republicans are supposed to be the
party of ideas. Newt Gingrich came up with the perfect strategy
in 1994 with his Contract With America. It listed out ten things
that the Republicans promised to work on, and try to get enacted.
Since then we have not done anything like that. Because we have
lost that model, we have allowed the Democrats to define us; to
paint us, in essence, as the party that simply opposes everything
they stand for. While that may be true, to a point, that is not
the Republican Party that we know and belong to. We can work with
Democrats on common sense legislation, provided the other side
is open and honest in their efforts. But when they choose not
to negotiate in good faith, we must stand in opposition to what
they push because it is so contrary not only to us, but to the
founding principles of the nation. So we need fresh ideas on how
to cut the government, on how to reform a bloated bureaucracy,
and how to make government work better for the people. The people,
after all, are the ones who wield the true power in this nation,
not the federal government. That is how the Framers set up this
government, and it is high time we return to those ideals. The
only way that will happen is if we show the people we are the
party of ideas once again. In other words, it is time for us to
have the courage of our convictions, and vocalize them. In a stand-up
debate of ideas we can beat their side 99% of the time.
Last, and certainly not least, is the party
must close the technology gap. Democrats have been 'Net savvy
for years. While we can claim there are more of us on the 'Net
than them, they have had the technology advantage for years. They
organize, raise funds, and gather easier through the means of
technology today than we ever have. While conservatives may have
more blogs in the blogosphere, liberals have the advantage with
their blogs like Talking Points Memo and DailyKos. Their web traffic
is astounding, and their organizational efforts swamp us nearly
every election cycle. We must close the gap if we are to be competitive.
This was a large issue for those running for the Republican National
Committee chair back in January. They realized it, and every candidate
for the chairmanship, except Mike Duncan, had a plan to accelerate
and grow our technological apparatus. It went beyond blogs. It
urged people to join Twitter to stay involved on the grass roots
level. It was to urge people to join Facebook, and other social
networking sites. At Rebuild The Party, a site endorsed by all
candidates, except Mike Duncan, grassroots minded activists could
get involved with those striving to literally rebuild the Republican
Party. This is exactly what Democrats did over the course of a
decade. We have less time to build this aspect of the party, but
already we're making serious strides.
No one ever said this was going to be easy.
Rebuilding what was shattered never is, but it must be done. We
cannot sit idly by and watch the Democrats ram through their extreme
liberal and socialist agenda on this nation. The cost to the America
is simply too high, and right now the Republican party stands
as the final bulwark against such an agenda. Conservatives must
come out to help bring the party back from the edge of the abyss
it is clearly staring into. That comes by way of reminding voters
what we stand for -- fiscal responsibility, shrink the government,
reform the government, lower taxes, and maintain a strong national
defense. It comes in cleaning house of those who claim to speak
for the party, but lack its core principles and ideals. It has
always stood for opposing the liberal agenda. And while we may
not have always been as tech-savvy as the Democrats in recent
years, that must be changed. This is the formula to return the
party back to the conservative roots planted by President Reagan
back in the 1980s. The road back to power is a long one, and an
arduous one, but it is one that must be traveled.
He is a scholar of history, especially American
history, and the United States Constitution. She has finished
her undergrad studies, graduating with a BA in English and history
and will move onto law school this fall where she will specialize
in Constitutional Law. Together, Thomas and Marcie form the vanguard
of conservative opinion at Hamilton,
Madison, and Jay -- a blogging site devoted to advancing the
conservative cause by challenging the liberal lies and deceit
spread by the media, and espoused by the Left in general. Both
are expert debaters, and have beaten many liberals into submission
with their collective wit, and unmatched knowledge. The pair is
married, and resides in Arizona
|