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Who’s in touch with those ‘grassroots’? (telling D.C. to ignore Tea Party, Rush Limbaugh voices)
Washington Post ^ | October 10, 2013 | Jennifer Rubin,

Posted on 10/11/2013 12:27:32 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

There is a misnomer about the “grassroots” on the right. (The misnomer is on the right and the grassroots is as well.) It goes something like this:

Longtime congressmen and senators are in a D.C. bubble and out of touch with the grassroots. The authentic expression for those people can be found among talk show hosts (many of whom reside in either New York or Washington D.C.), certain D.C.-based Washington think tanks, and the most ferocious of the right-wing bloggers and TV talking heads.

The problem: It isn’t true. Oh, and the latter group of people don’t really know what they are doing, having never been responsible for running more than a 3-hour radio show or a think tank supported by multi-millionaires and a fundraising list that must be constantly engaged.

Let’s look at who is out of touch and who isn’t, and which group is more adept at achieving conservative aims.

........[BIG snip].............

In short, the evidence is overwhelming that while the shutdown squad plays well within the right-wing echo chamber, that is among those already committed conservatives who’d never vote for a Democrat, it is hugely unpopular with a majority of voters, even in conservative states. And when it comes to plotting out a legislative strategy, the series of missteps by right-wingers speak for themselves. It’s not even a close contest. (Think t-ball players vs. major leaguers.)

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: dcbubble; economy; shutdown; wethepeople
They're so in the D.C. Bubble that they need an "interpreter" to explain the mood of the country. One that agrees with "we're all rubes out here in fly-over country."

Rush's exasperation with those in the D.C. bubble (and their willingness to attack the Tea Party base that has elevated the conversation and exposed the nest of vipers in the administration) was a main topic yesterday on his program.

---------------------------------

I'm Trying My Best to Fight Pessimism - Rush Limbaugh Oct 10, 2013 transcript:

RUSH: So the Republicans had a -- well, I don't know what you would call it. A press conference. I guess it was 'cause they took questions, a little press conference out there, and Republican leaders, John Boehner and some of the caucus bigwigs went out there and they announced the latest strategery.

Now, you know, folks, for those of you who have listened to this program for any length of time at all, you know that there is an ongoing effort here to be optimistic and happy, content, what have you. There's enough negativism and pessimism out there to swamp everybody, and there's more than usual lately. And, if you're like me, you have to actively fight it in order to avoid being swept up by it.

You know, as a powerful, influential member of the media, just to give you an example, I can't tell you the number of people who send me e-mails telling me what they think about things, because they, as does everybody else, want to impress me. I mean, it's just a fact of life. And I can't tell you how negative it all is. People go out and they find stories in the media and put the most negative spin to it.

My point is that there is a profound pessimism out there always. It seems to be the natural human predisposition. Optimism takes effort. It's why people have gotten rich writing books about how to do it. My old adage: You go to the library, you won't find a book on how to fail. Everybody knows that. But books on how to succeed earn millions of dollars for their authors. Norman Vincent Peale, The Power of Positive Thinking, great example.

At any rate, I'm swamped by it, and I'm sure you are. If you watch Beltway news -- sorry. It's not news. See, I'm even contradicting myself. It's the daily narrative, but it isn't news anymore. If you watch cable news coverage of Washington, you can't help but be swept up by pessimism. So this is something that I actively try to counter each and every day, but at the same time you can't be phony positive 'cause people see right through that. So it is a delicate balance.

Now, I'm leading up to something with all this. I'm not just, as my dad used to say, talking to hear my head rattle. Because I have been noticing something in the conservative commentariat, in the DC coverage, and it has me quite frosted. But then again I can't come here and fully express the outrage I feel because that would just lead to more pessimism, and that's not good. So it is a delicate balance.

Now, it all starts with that little Republican presser today. Boehner went out there -- now, I am told that Boehner said -- in fact, let me actually scroll to it. 'Cause I didn't hear this. Did you watch the whole thing? I'm told that Boehner, among other things, said, "If ands or buts were candy and nuts, then every day would be Christmas." But, of course, ands and buts aren't candy and nuts and every day isn't Christmas and somehow that relates to negotiations with Obama. Now, the Republicans announced a strategery, and it is not what I thought they were gonna do.

Monday or Tuesday word leaked that what Boehner is gonna do was propose a short-term expansion of the debt limit not tied to any defund Obamacare effort, which I like. I don't like linking these two because there's lots of ground being gained on the defund Obamacare, and that's ultimately where I'm leading here, so if you just stick with me on this. There's lots of ground being gained, but I fear that we are getting ready to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory here. I really don't want to be pessimistic, but I've gotta be honest here. That's the coin of the realm on this program is honesty, mine with you.

Then when I first heard -- it was either Monday or Tuesday -- that there was gonna be a separate proposal sent up to Obama and over to the Senate to expand the debt limit for a month or two, almost within hours, another story said that wasn't gonna happen. That Boehner had decided against doing that, pulled it back, and they were going to unify Obamacare defund effort, the defund or delay with whatever they were gonna do on the debt limit increase, and they were then gonna link them again. Aw, jeez, they had it right the first time; now they're pulling it back. And that's where it left. I thought that's where it ended.

Then today they go out there and do this presser, and they're back to the original proposal I first heard about on Monday. "House Republican leaders are pushing a six-week increase in the debt limit, without any conservative strings attached, to calm jittery financial markets, according to senior GOP advisers. The plan was presented to the House GOP caucus Thursday morning after Treasury Secretary Jack Lew warned lawmakers that he would be unable to guarantee payments to any group -- whether Social Security recipients or US bondholders --" which is a crock "-- unless Congress raises the federal debt ceiling."

So the Democrats are throwing every scare tactic card out there, and the Republicans are acting as predictable. And then, not that this matters to anything, or maybe it does, then a parade of Republicans strode to the microphone and expressed their joy at having been invited to the White House today to meet with the president. Talked about ands and buts and candy and nuts. They were happy. This is the kind of thing that's needed, they said, to get the negotiations off the dime, it's good, felt proud. I don't know if they said "honored," but they were feeling good that Obama has invited 'em to the White House to discuss this. I guess from their perspective it represents a bit of an Obama -- not a cave, but maybe they're looking at it as a moral victory. I don't know.

Now, this takes me to what I have been hearing in the conservative commentariat in the DC coverage. This is what frosts me. This is where I've gotta be careful in sounding too mad. At times it's unproductive. But I've heard it a lot of times now, predominantly on Fox, and it coalesced for me last night with Lou Dobbs said. The conservative commentariat is now claiming that the Mike Lee and Ted Cruz defund strategy was delusional.

It was pointless and it was dangerous, risky, and unnecessary. It was rank amateurish. It was not mature. It was dangerous. It was all of these things. Then they follow that by claiming that the strategy they like, which is the piecemeal -- send a bill up to fund the NIH, send a bill up to fund the veterans, send a bill up to fund highways, whatever. That piecemeal strategy, small spending bills that illustrate the mean-spirited of President Obama, that's brilliant. That is really shrewd.

That was so crafty and that represents turning the tables on Obama, and they're saying that that is what has led to Obama being at 37% approval. What makes me frustrated about this is that this piecemeal... None of this would be happening if it hadn't been for the defund and delay strategy of Cruz and Lee and the people who joined them. So the point is that the establishment is still hell-bent on demolishing and discrediting the Tea Party and the Ted Cruz, Mike Lee, and whoever else was involved coalition.

Because what they did... This ongoing effort to defund or to delay is what has exposed Obama. That's what's created this groundswell of public opinion opposed to Obama. That's why Obama's at 37%. But the conservative commentariat, the establishment Republicans, say, "Oh, no, no! That was childish, that was immature, that was risky. That was just risky." But, I tell you what: They come around and say, "This piecemeal business -- fund this and fund that -- that's brilliant. That's brilliant."

They claim that was just sheer luck that just fell into everybody's lap. I'll tell you, we talk about oftentimes credit and the Reagan quote. He didn't care who got credit as long as the job got done, but in this case, there wouldn't have been time -- there wouldn't have been even the thought process -- to piecemeal, send little, small funding bills up to Obama if the defund and delay Obama strategy had not been implemented -- and to a certain degree, at least, successfully implemented.

Without that... Can we be honest here? If Ted Cruz and Mike Lee hadn't done that, you know where we'd be right now? The Republicans would have long ago caved. We would have Obama fully implemented. We'd have the debt limit raised. It would have been a grand-slam, slam-dunk win for Obama and the Democrats. Obamacare would have been not opposed, if it weren't for Lee and Cruz. There wouldn't be any of this that's going on now if it weren't for that.

But the conservative commentariat is saying, "Aw, that's irrelevant. In fact, that was rank amateurish. I mean, that was really dangerous. That was delusional and it was pointless." I don't know if you've picked up the same thing as you've listened to the commentary. Maybe I'm a bit too sensitive to this. But to me, again, it's not about credit. It's about the end result. It's about substance here. So now there are rumors, and I'm not even comfortable passing the rumors along.

There are rumors that the Republicans are getting ready to cave on everything after they've presented their piecemeal thing here on the debt limit. They're ready to just walk away from everything now, and I don't know why. I don't know what the thinking is. But the bottom line is that whatever's happening now that's good has nothing to do with Cruz. It has nothing to do with Mike Lee. It has nothing to do with the delay or defund Obama effort.

All the great things happening now -- the piecemeal, Obama's plunging approval rating, the Democrats saying outrageous things and then having to apologize, all of that -- happened because of the brilliant thinking of the establishment types. It's just not the case. It just isn't true. I can't pretend to tell you where all this is going and where it's headed, but the bottom line is, you have something here that's good that's happened, and the whole party still can't get behind it.

There's still division. They're still playing games over who gets credit for doing what, and, "We can't let the Tea Party guys have any credit, and we certainly can't let the freshmen have any credit." They continue to portray these people as reckless amateurs who almost brought down the government, but were saved by the mature establishment types who know what they are doing.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: The Boehner quote, it turns out to be accurate. He was answering a question. "If ands or buts were candy and nuts, every day would be Christmas." The point is, every day Washington is Christmas, and that's the way Washington is viewed by way too many people. Here's the thing that really irritates me, folks. If it hadn't been for Ted Cruz and Mike Lee -- and I don't mean to be leaving anybody else out who joined them. If it hadn't been for their effort to even bring up the concept of defunding Obamacare...

Not delaying it. They were specific on defunding it. There was another group that was even arguing with them, and that was the delay Obamacare group. I mean, we weren't even unified on the approach. But nevertheless, that's a minor point. If it hadn't been for Cruz and Lee, we wouldn't be having this conversation about Obamacare or entitlement spending or the debt or the debt limit. We wouldn't see Obama's approval ratings plunging. We wouldn't be as focused on the failure of the Obamacare website as we are,I guarantee you. It's all combined here.

If Lee and Cruz had not done this, Obamacare would be fully funded, the debt limit would have been increased, and whatever was happening at the exchanges would be a well-kept secret. But because Lee and Cruz insisted on this, the Democrats were exposed. Harry Reid: Why should I care about kids with cancer? Obama opening the National Mall for illegal aliens and keeping it closed to World War II vets. People ask whether the conversation is good for the country or not. Of course it is. Here's the thing, folks -- and this is something else I want to reiterate.

What the people inside the Beltway do not understand is that outside the Beltway, this is not just the Republicans versus Obama.

That's not how the people view it.

This is the country opposed to Washington.

This is the country rising up. Look at the polling data on Obamacare. Massive numbers of people do not want it. Washington is enforcing it. Washington is forcing it on people. We have news about the IRS now. It wasn't just two rogue employees in Cincinnati. IRS officials were called into the White House to share information with high officials there -- and out beyond the Beltway, a near majority of people have had it. They're fed up.

I said yesterday, "I don't think Washington, I don't think Obama, I don't think even the Republicans understand how livid people were when they found out that the National Mall was closed to United States citizens or World War II vets -- and opened up to illegal aliens in the hundreds of thousands to demand amnesty," and that's just a microcosm. There is a lot of anger in the country over what is happening in Washington, and the Republicans are not the beneficiaries of it, as they think, because it's not seen as the Republicans trying to save the country.

They're not seen that way, sadly.

So this is Washington versus the country.

That's how people outside the Beltway see this. [end]

1 posted on 10/11/2013 12:27:32 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

And that’s because, sadly, the Republican’s are being predictable.

Instead of pressing the advantage we have going on Obamacare they decide to stop talking about Obamacare entirely and go on and on for last 48 hours straight about the debt ceiling instead.

Look, I know as well as anyone that our debt load can and likely will bring the country down in the mid to long run.

But... how dare they be so completely out of touch that they fail to understand that Obamacare is going to bankrupt working America RIGHT NOW.

Give the dems the debt ceiling, but leave the governemt shut down and unfunded FOREVER if that’s what it takes to make Obamacare go away. We must win this one single solitary issue. It’s critical. The middle class is finished if this fully goes into effect.

And no, a one year delay is NOT helpful. Private insurance is already undergoing the changes. We either stop it within a month or two or the old system will be GONE and will have to be rebuilt from the ground up.

I’m livid with the leadership in the party. Now is the time to say, here is everything else you want, but Obamacare will never get funded as long as we hold the house. That’s what America WANTS to hear, and WANTS the Republicans to act upon.


2 posted on 10/11/2013 12:41:09 AM PDT by Advil000
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To: Advil000
...........That’s what America WANTS to hear, and WANTS the Republicans to act upon.

BUMP!

Blog comments on Speaker Boehner's official website

3 posted on 10/11/2013 12:44:16 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Advil000; All
Jennifer Rubin sounds like Van Jones in this exchange with Ted Cruz:

The Ted Cruz, Van Jones Face-Off You’ve Been Waiting for: ‘Van, I Know You Desperately Want to Change the Topic From Obamacare… "Noted progressive activist and former Obama administration czar Van Jones went head-to-head with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) on CNN’s “Crossfire” Thursday night as the pair battled over Obamacare and the Republican party.

Jones began by noting that polling shows the GOP is extremely unpopular, which he attributed to Cruz’s “leadership” and his plan to defund Obamacare.

“Do you feel like you owe your party an apology? Listen, you have people who believed in you, they believed that you were somehow going to be able to defund Obamacare, they believed the strategy of shutdown might have a chance,” Jones said. “They followed you into a ditch. And now, there’s obviously there’s no chance Obamacare will be defunded and we’re on the brink of a horrific default.”

“Do you think that in the reflection of your own heart, you might say, ‘You know what? I’m a new kid here, I think I owe you an apology?’” he added........................

4 posted on 10/11/2013 12:49:47 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: All
"......According to Rasmussen, 82 percent of Democrats want to end the shutdown by maintaining spending for the Affordable Care Act at the current levels, while 71 percent of Republicans would prefer to keep the shutdown going until the law is defunded.”..... Washington Times
5 posted on 10/11/2013 12:53:02 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Maybe the Republican leadership is calling it a day at a time.

Maybe the strategy is to test the gradient every day to see if Obamacare popularity goes up or down. Maybe their notion is to keep the iron in the fire as long as Obamacare popularity goes down...


6 posted on 10/11/2013 1:07:51 AM PDT by SteveH (First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win.)
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To: SteveH; All
Thunder on the Right: The gang of conservatives who forced John Boehner's hand on the shutdown "............................Democrats are calling the partial closing of the federal government the "Tea Party shutdown." But is it really? Who is the "gang" of unyielding conservatives who have been the target of so much blame and scorn?

"I would just say it's been mischaracterized all along," said Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., a House freshman and former small-business owner whose North Carolina district, once held by Democratic Rep. Heath Shuler, is 91 percent white and includes some of the state's most conservative communities.

"There are a lot of guys here who have nothing to do with the Tea Party that are supporting this effort because people back home are asking them to do that," Meadows told the Washington Examiner.

Democrats and many Republicans see Meadows as a primary architect of the GOP's fight against any government spending bill that funds Obamacare.

It was Meadows who in August circulated a letter to fellow Republicans asking them to join him in demanding that House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., "affirmatively defund" the health care law in any spending measure, even a short-term, temporary bill aimed at preventing a government shutdown.

Eighty House Republicans signed on, forming the core of the group that influenced Boehner and his leadership team to dig in and insist that the health care law be limited or delayed in the budget bill. To pressure their leaders, the group simply refused to support any spending bill that didn't limit Obamacare in some way.

The group has also been influenced heavily by Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Mike Lee, R-Utah, who are leading the opposition to Obamacare in the Senate and who have pressured conservative House GOP members to stand firm............................"

7 posted on 10/11/2013 1:18:02 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

At this point I just the GOP in DC wiped out of power so they finally get who’s in charge. They didn’t get the hint in 2006 and 2008.


8 posted on 10/11/2013 3:19:39 AM PDT by ilgipper (Obama is proving that very bad ideas can be wrapped up in pretty words)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Jennifer Rubin is a phony conservative hired by the corrupt Washington Post.

"Longtime congressmen and senators are in a D.C. bubble and out of touch with the grassroots.

Correct.

"The authentic expression for those people can be found among talk show hosts (many of whom reside in either New York or Washington D.C.), certain D.C.-based Washington think tanks, and the most ferocious of the right-wing bloggers and TV talking heads."

No one says talk show hosts are the authentic expression of the grassroots. The grassroots are the authentice expression of themselves.

9 posted on 10/11/2013 5:40:47 AM PDT by Jabba the Nutt (You can have a free country or government schools. Choose one.)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Ted Cruz's "filibuster" was Horatio on the bridge!

That enabled us to mass our forces and make this a fight!

The fight is well joined and we can now divide the chickens from cocks on our side of the bridge.

The msm no longer controls the stratosphere, we've broken through that barrycade.

Freepers forward baby!

10 posted on 10/11/2013 6:01:17 AM PDT by Pietro
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To: SteveH
Maybe their notion is to keep the iron in the fire as long as Obamacare popularity goes down...

And then bail as soon as possible.

Remember, the E-GOP wants Obamacare as much as, or even more than, the gangrenous Left. They want some credible excuse for S&P 500 CEO's to dump their employees out of their health plans and keep the old plans only as executive perks, and throw the rabble to the Communist wolves.

No joke, blokes, the play's been called and Boehner is slow-walking through it as I write. Mark this: Boehner and the GOP leadership are fully committed to keeping Obamacare, because their corporate donors have commanded them to do it.

Remember where you read it first.

It's going to take a ton of Tea Party primary jobs on E-GOP RiNO's to turn that around, and I don't see that next year. The incumbents are too well-entrenched and greased-up.

(Vote any, and vote to vote 'em out. Eff 'em.)

11 posted on 10/11/2013 3:01:42 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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