Posted on 07/07/2010 6:52:38 AM PDT by KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
Despite numerous calls for his resignation over comments made criticizing the war effort in Afghanistan, Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele will not step down, RNC spokesman Doug Heye confirmed Tuesday.
Steele will stay on as the head of the committee amid criticism from Senate Republicans who took to the airwaves over the weekend to condemn his comments that the war in Afghanistan could not be won. Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Jim DeMint and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina appeared on the Sunday talk shows to discuss the chairmans fate as leader of the Republican Party.
Appearing on ABCs This Week on a live feed from Kabul, McCain called Steeles comments wildly inaccurate but stopped short of saying he should resign.
[Steele] is going to have to assess as to whether he can still lead the Republican Party as chairman of the Republican National Committee and make an appropriate decision, McCain said.
While traveling with McCain in Afghanistan, Graham called Steeles remarks an uninformed, unnecessary, unwise, untimely comment during an interview with Face the Nation on CBS.
This is not President Obamas war; this is Americas war, he said.
On Fox News Sunday, DeMint echoed Grahams comments about the war not being the sole responsibility of President Obama, and said Steele must apologize and get back to focusing on his job: getting Republicans elected.
He needs to refocus on electing candidates who can stop this rampage of spending and debt in Washington whether or not he resigns is up to other people than me, but I need to see him focus on this November election, he said.
Although a number of influential conservatives have called for the chairman to step down, including Weekly Standard editor William Kristol and former deputy assistant secretary of state Elizabeth Cheney, only one member of Congress has taken that step. Rep. Tom Cole, Oklahoma Republican, called Steeles remarks totally unacceptable and called on the RNC chairman to apologize and resign.
He undercut American forces fighting in the field, politicized further a war that two presidents of different parties have deemed in the national interest and embarrassed the party he purports to lead, he said in a statement Monday. It is time for him to go quickly.
But one elected member of Congress, however, took the weekend to defend Steele and his comments about Afghanistan. Texas Republican Ron Paul, former presidential candidate and fierce critic of the wars in both Iraq and Afghanistan, said Steele should not resign and that his assessment of the situation was correct.
He is absolutely right Afghanistan is now Obamas war, Paul said in a written statement Sunday. During the 2008 campaign, Obama was out in front in insisting that more troops be sent to Afghanistan. Obama called for expanding the war even as he pretended to be a peace candidate.
All of this comment occurred despite Steeles attempt to clarify his remarks shortly after the video was released. In a statement released shortly after the video appeared online last week, Steele said that [t]here is no question that America must win the war on terror.
As we have learned throughout history, winning a war in Afghanistan is a difficult task. We must also remember that after the tragedy of September 11, 2001, it is also a necessary one, he said. The stakes are too high for us to accept anything but success in Afghanistan.
The controversy began when an online video emerged of Steele addressing a crowd at a Connecticut fundraiser last Thursday. Steele suggested that the war in Afghanistan was not winnable and criticized President Obama for increasing the level of American resources to the region.
This was a war of Obamas choosing. This is not something the United States has actively prosecuted or wanted to engage in, Steele said of Afghanistan. Well if hes such a student of history, has he not understood that, you know, thats the one thing you dont do is engage in a land war in Afghanistan? All right? Because everyone who has tried over a thousand years of history has failed, he added later.
Ping.
This way he can continue to undermine conservatives. Incompetence is the new qualification.
Win it and leave otherwise, do not squander American lives.
Rush gave him a pass yesterday.
More proof the RNC is run by a bunch of ball-less wonders.
What’s that saying about rising to one’s level of mediocrity? And getting paid well for it.
Actually, that's fine with me...why give the dims any political/racial ammo.
Well, he has said a thousand worse things over the past year. Why pick on this one? With Obama in charge, I don’t think the war can be won, either. We are wasting the lives of our men for nothing, at the moment, since Obama is making it clear to the enemy that he doesn’t WANT to win.
Bingo! - and just when? was the last time we did THAT? Actually “declare” a war??? Heaven forbid! /sarc
Smart pass. Nobody can say Rush is dumb.
Well, Elementary Racial Politics 101. Don’t hire a designated minority to an important position unless you’re sure he can do the job—because firing him will be most difficult.
And I’ll recall one of Machiavelli’s pieces of advice, which I often mentioned during the early Bush years. If you have to do something disagreeable, do it soon, do it all at once, and do it thoroughly. Don’t wait around. Especially, don’t wait around until just before an election.
Can’t wait for the RNC to call me asking for money :)
I nominate you as RNC chair. We need a little Machiavelli, not some whiny punk b!tch like Steele playing the race card over and over again.
The vicious truth has been unleashed and the neocons heads are exploding.
At least the RATS fight for the beliefs of their base. A fight that the old guard, embedded Republicans refuse to do!
Excellent advice which will certainly be ignored by any and all from the RNC.
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