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Breaking Up Is Hard to Do ("Bush Destroyed the Republican Party" -- Drudge Headline)
WSJ.com ^ | Jan 25, 2008 | Peggy Noonan

Posted on 01/26/2008 5:57:27 AM PST by fightinJAG

[snip]

On the pundit civil wars, Rush Limbaugh declared on the radio this week, "I'm here to tell you, if either of these two guys [Mr. McCain or Mike Huckabee] get the nomination, it's going to destroy the Republican Party. It's going to change it forever, be the end of it!"

This is absurd. George W. Bush destroyed the Republican Party, by which I mean he sundered it, broke its constituent pieces apart and set them against each other. He did this on spending, the size of government, war, the ability to prosecute war, immigration and other issues.

(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bush; compassionate; destroyed; elections; gop; noonan; rinobush; smellthecoffee
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To: tillacum

It is my understanding that Baptists are the denomination from which Mormons draw most of their converts, unless the individual is previously unchurched.


201 posted on 01/26/2008 7:42:17 PM PST by Theodore R. ( Cowardice is still forever!)
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To: Matchett-PI

Do I get the extra large belt buckle?


202 posted on 01/26/2008 7:43:12 PM PST by Leisler
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To: Rush4U

You got it. On several different levels.


203 posted on 01/27/2008 4:59:18 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: samtheman

I agree that Peggy fumbled the chance to make her point.

That said, I don’t see how Bush can be blamed for what’s happening on the GOP side in this election. Conservatives came forward and offered to be the nominee, but the grassroots did not rally to them.

Neither the MSM nor the Party nor the President could keep a conservative leader from catching fire as the nominee if the conservative rank and file rallied to him. But they didn’t.

So. Here we are.


204 posted on 01/27/2008 5:02:46 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: mewzilla

How did “the suits running the party” keep conservatives from coalescing around Fred Thompson or Duncan Hunter?

These days a candidate can even get started on the internet, just like Howard Dean did. Yes, he ultimately crashed and burned because he was . . . Howard Dean. But he came out of nowhere, with no party support; he just caught fire in the Democrat base.

About the same thing happened with Obama. He wasn’t the “party candidate;” Hildy was.

I call BS on any theory that “the suits” or the MSM can do one thing to keep conservatives from supporting a conservative candidate. For sure, the MSM may be instrumental in defeating that candidate, but they are not the reason the conservatives (or those who were more conservative than the front-runners now) in this race never got out of the very, very, very bottom tier.


205 posted on 01/27/2008 5:06:53 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: popdonnelly

Agreed.

But the question is why didn’t conservatives across the nation rally to the conservatives who offered to be the GOP nominee?

Who could have possibly stopped them from supporting, say, Fred Thompson or Duncan Hunter if they wanted to?

Even Ross Perot got 19% of the vote, for goodness sake.


206 posted on 01/27/2008 5:08:57 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: GOPJ

But we the people got that fixed. Why? Because we had some influence in the Bush administration.

That won’t be the case if the Rats win in Nov.


207 posted on 01/27/2008 5:12:25 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: mkjessup

search only works if the posters use the original headline, which according to search, they did not!


208 posted on 01/27/2008 5:13:18 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: fightinJAG

Here’s my take on why Bush is the blame for this:

A broad base of conservatives supported him both in 2000 and 2004. (In 2004 he extended his appeal to independents and Reagan democrats.)

He took that support and tossed it in the trash can on a number of issues. He gave the finger to the people who supported him and he did it with almost a fine-tuned instinct for what would piss us off the most. Remember Harriet Myers? That wasn’t even an act of bad-principles (such as illegal amnesty) but just a sort of idiosyncratic stick to poke us in the eye with.

And he is our leader! He is the leader of the coalition of economic conservatives, social conservatives and military conservatives. And he shafted each one of those groups in his own way. Including the military conservatives. In these terror-times, what else is border control but a military issue? Including the social conservatives; what else is CFR but an establishment lock-box on the ability of social conservatives to challenge the status quo? And of course, the economic conservatives, with his huge increases in spending and his six year inability to veto a single bill, and his eight year inability to open up any new drilling in Alaska or offshore.

And he is our leader! And he led us to a point where we are fighting amongst each other.

It’s not all his fault. But he is our leader. And he led us into RINO swamps where we were doomed to fight and bicker amongst each other.


209 posted on 01/27/2008 5:17:13 AM PST by samtheman
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To: Theodore R.

Have to give it some more thought, but it seems to me that the base of a political party can and sometimes does change over time. To me, it looks like more of “natural” process, not one influenced all that much one way or the other by a president.

Because, by definition, a base is a group of people who really have nowhere else to go politically.


210 posted on 01/27/2008 5:19:47 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: cake_crumb

Agreed.


211 posted on 01/27/2008 5:20:08 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: DrDeb

Good point.


212 posted on 01/27/2008 5:24:24 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: cake_crumb
WE have destroyed the Republican party.

My point exactly.

This situation isn't Bush's fault. How in the world did anything he did prevent conservatives from rallying around the more conservative candidates in the presidential race?

It didn't and they didn't. I'm not sure why in all particulars, but the conservative candidates, who as politicians had at least the same skills as those who are front-runners today, never made it out of the bottom tier. Who is responsible for that? Well, conservatives.

Either there are not really as many conservatives as there are said to be, or conservatives aren't as conservative as they say they are, or "conservatism" is taking on a new meaning in practical, political terms . . . or . . . or . . .

The point is that whatever is happening, whatever it means that conservatives are not rallying to conservative candidates in numbers sufficient to make them viable, it is happening within the rank and file.

George W. Bush didn't keep people from supporting Fred Thompson or Duncan Hunter, for example. Neither did the party, nor the MSM.

When the base becomes a loose group of single/handful of single issue groups, rather than an association of persons interested in advancing some core ideals, the base will break.

213 posted on 01/27/2008 5:34:18 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: no dems

Even if it’s true that W was a disaster, I’m still looking for how to pin the blame for the state of the GOP race on him.


214 posted on 01/27/2008 5:36:24 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: G.Love
The idea that George Bush has singlehandedly “destroyed” the Republican party is nonsense.

I agree with you.

One thing I find troubling about this whole enterprise is that, of all things conservatism is, it's about personal responsibility. It's about the "can do" attitude. It's about realizing and acting on the fact that one makes one's own success.

Yet when we as conservatives, for whatever reason, fail (yes, fail) to rally to conservatism, quickly the search is on to blame someone else.

As I have said in numerous posts, did George Bush, or the party, or the MSM keep one person who wanted to from supporting, say, Fred Thompson or Duncan Hunter?

No.

Did either of those more conservative candidates even get out of the block?

No.

Who's responsible for that fact?

Well, it has to be that "we" are. By that I mean, "we" the people, conservatives as a whole.

I guess people will come back with something about who is and is not a "true" conservative. But then what they are saying is that there really aren't enough true conservatives to make a difference politically.

If that's the case, is that George Bush's fault? Did he force each person to adopt or reject a particular political ideology, or did each person reach his own conclusions?

215 posted on 01/27/2008 5:44:00 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: fightinJAG
But we the people got that fixed. Why? Because we had some influence in the Bush administration. That won’t be the case if the Rats win in Nov.

Good point.

216 posted on 01/27/2008 5:48:02 AM PST by GOPJ (Hillary Didn't Win A Single County In S.C.)
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To: fightinJAG
Had Bush put his full energy into a few simple objectives the GOP would be poised to deliver a knockout blow this year:

1. Permanent tax cuts
2. Reduced government spending / balanced budget
3. Social Security privatization
4. Destruction of Al Qaeda
5. Border security (fence)

217 posted on 01/27/2008 5:49:09 AM PST by NittanyLion
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To: samtheman

Excellent post.


218 posted on 01/27/2008 5:51:07 AM PST by NittanyLion
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To: fightinJAG

WHY, YES HE HAS


219 posted on 01/27/2008 5:51:07 AM PST by servantboy777
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To: Theodore R.
Do you mean that Republican primary voters became so uninformed that they nominated poor almost non-Republican candidates?

Seems to me that voters are more informed than ever. The candidates can't get away with half the crapola they used to, with the internet, YouTube and so on being used to show their lies. And the MSM can't control the information, either.

So my question is: if it's not information (in fact, voters have more information than ever), what explains the fact that the more conservative candidates got practically zero support among conservatives? Or does conservatism not really exist among voters? If the base is voting in the Republican primaries, is the base proving to be conservative or not?

These are some fundamental questions, but they have nothing to do with George W. Bush, I think.

220 posted on 01/27/2008 5:51:15 AM PST by fightinJAG ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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