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Slate’s Left-Handed Sleight-of-Hand
Townhall.com ^ | November 18, 2014 | Arthur Schaper

Posted on 11/18/2014 4:15:43 PM PST by Kaslin

Following the 2014 GOP shellacking which expanded Republican numbers in the House and gained the US Senate, left-wing contrarian William Saletan for Slate went to work dumbing down repudiation of Obama’s economic policies. The title could not be more explicit (and misleading):

The US Is Moving Left Despite Republican Gains

Really? The basis for William Saletan’s argument? Republicans campaigned, effectively and successfully, on income inequality, as though the issue belonged only to the Left.

Excerpts defending Saletan’s untenable position include:

Republicans also zeroed in on blacks and other underserved populations. In Louisiana right-wing candidate Rob Maness pointed out, “Unemployment for young black men in this state is three times the rate of unemployment for anybody else.” In Georgia, Republican Gov. Nathan Deal emphasized the state’s progress toward reducing the number of black men in jail.

Rather than adopting left-wing ideology, Republicans are reaching out to minorities in part because they are underserved by long-standing Democratic/liberal/left-wing politicians. Uproars in the Chicago-area from the black community, and even former basketball star Charles Barkley’s indictment of black voting patterns suggest that minority groups are waking up to the disappointment results of Democratic branding.

Republicans researched how much money Democratic officeholders paid their male and female staffers. Any Democrat who paid women less was called out for it, regardless of circumstances. Republicans used this tactic in at least five states: Colorado, Illinois, Louisiana, New Hampshire, and Oregon.

The “Equal Work/Equal Pay” fraud has gone answered long enough, and in the 2014 cycle, conservative groups upended the Democratic hypocrisy on this issue. The notion, however, that Republicans are calling for arbitrary demands for exact pay are not taking place however, since the differences in income having nothing to do with gender exclusively to begin with. One conservative Republican, New York Congressman Tom Reed, schooled his liberal challenger on this issue, and received applause in contrast to her dismal reception of derision.

What about the effects of real unemployment?

While Democratic incumbents bragged about declining unemployment, Republicans pointed out that this number omits people who are so discouraged they’ve stopped looking for work.

This was a GOP talking point in Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Kentucky, Oregon, and Virginia. Dan Sullivan, the party’s nominee for the Senate in Alaska, put the argument this way:

"If nothing else, Republicans have exposed the consequences of left-wing economic ideologies, which exacerbate income inequality and diminish economic opportunity. In order to present viable solutions to these problems, they have done what conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher had advocated long before: define the terms of the argument before your opponent, and you win the debate.”

Republicans are not adopting left-leaning ideology, as much as they are stealing the terms to promote free market, pro-business policies.

Before his hard-fought reelection campaign, Michigan Governor Rick Snynder presented right-to-work reforms as “Workplace Fairness and Equity.” Equality and fairness are left-wing, progressive buzzwords, but right-to-work is right-leaning, conservative reform to put power back in the hands of the individual worker while promoting economic growth.

Consider also these arguments cited in Slate’s misleading column:

In Massachusetts, Baker criticized Democrats for raising gas taxes, utility taxes, and everyday registration fees, all of which hit the middle class. In Illinois, Rauner said sales taxes should target “services that are more business-oriented rather than on low-income working families.” In Arkansas, Hutchinson aimed his tax relief package at people making $75,000 or less. Some Republicans and libertarians, including right-wing Gov. Sam Brownback of Kansas, called for abolishing income taxes on low earners.

What Saletan ignores, and which conservatives highlighted in these campaigns, is that Republican governors are still moving away from taxation, rather than seeking deeper revenue streams for government largesse. Contrary to the left-wing argument, targeting low-comes groups in these states does not signal that Republicans have gone left, but they are reaching out to the numerous groups which the Left’s economic policies have left behind.

Then comes the final litany:

Republicans picked up other liberal themes, too. They harped on the injustice of cutting Medicare, the importance of educational opportunity as “the great equalizer,” and the folly of gambling pension money in the stock market. They endorsed health care as a fundamental right, ridiculed the description of wealthy people as “middle-class,” and championed midnight basketball.

Education as the great equalizer is not a liberal idea, or a conservative one, but an essential American identity. As for the referenced to midnight basketball, these transitions reveal the populist heart-beat of an insurgent GOP, adopted by the Tea Party, integrated by a rising class of Republican US Senators who are championing hope and change through policy as opposed to hollow rhetoric.

Flashy, catchy headlines aside, Slate’s desperate attempt to claim “We won by losing” is a lost cause, and even Saletan is forced to concede the obvious:

No, Republicans haven’t become liberals. They still hate taxes and blame everything bad on President Obama, Obamacare, and big government. But their focus on wage stagnation and class stratification reflects the economy and the political climate.

Ironically, Saletan’s argument affirm what Republicans have argued all along: President Obama and his policies are hurting working Americans, and our positions can turn this dire situation around. Instead of claiming that the country is moving left, the Washington GOP political class and its new members are exposing the corrupt failure of the Left, then coopting their language to promote free economic principles.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2014elections; equalpay; slate

1 posted on 11/18/2014 4:15:43 PM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

A graduate of the Goebbels’s Academy of Garbage (GAG) no doubt.


2 posted on 11/18/2014 4:21:52 PM PST by yetidog
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To: Kaslin

A graduate of the Goebbels’s Academy of Garbage (GAG) no doubt.


3 posted on 11/18/2014 4:21:52 PM PST by yetidog
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To: Kaslin

Its good to see even Slate likes our conservatives agenda.


4 posted on 11/18/2014 4:24:21 PM PST by Raycpa
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To: Kaslin

Rob Maness attacked Cassidy from the right. To play his support as left wing is hilarious.


5 posted on 11/18/2014 4:28:24 PM PST by Bogey78O (We had a good run. Coulda been great still.)
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To: Kaslin

“Slate” is apparently not a journalism-friendly outlet, I take it?


6 posted on 11/18/2014 4:30:14 PM PST by Some Fat Guy in L.A. (Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite it's unfashionability)
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To: Bogey78O

That happens all the time here on FR too. Those who think a Republican is too liberal to vote for are accused of supporting Obama.


7 posted on 11/18/2014 4:30:34 PM PST by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: Kaslin

What Republican politician favors midnight basketball as some sort of solution to the problems of black unemployment? Or to any problem in the black community? Any Republican pol who does is not a conservative.


8 posted on 11/18/2014 4:37:24 PM PST by driftless2 (For long term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: driftless2
What Republican politician favors midnight basketball as some sort of solution to the problems of black unemployment? Or to any problem in the black community? Any Republican pol who does is not a conservative.

Solution to "black problems": mother, father married to each other, THEN having children, educating children, always working.
It's not rocket science, is it? Who doesn't know or believe that?

9 posted on 11/18/2014 4:55:41 PM PST by cloudmountain
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To: cloudmountain
"Who doesn't...believe that?"

Liberal race-baiters, that's who. Unbelievable as it sounds, fifty years after the passage of the landmark Civil Rights Bill of 1964, affirmative discrimination er... action, and the subsequent election of a black president, liberals are still hot on the trail of that ever elusive ogre of white racism that holds blacks down.

"White privilege" is just the latest nutty meme by the race-baiters. I doubt even most regular Dems swallow the craziness anymore.

10 posted on 11/18/2014 5:08:41 PM PST by driftless2 (For long term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: Kaslin

Hey, I say let ‘em win some more.


11 posted on 11/18/2014 8:27:13 PM PST by Attention Surplus Disorder (At no time was the Obama administration aware of what the Obama administration was doing)
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To: driftless2
Liberal race-baiters, that's who. Unbelievable as it sounds, fifty years after the passage of the landmark Civil Rights Bill of 1964, affirmative discrimination er... action, and the subsequent election of a black president, liberals are still hot on the trail of that ever elusive ogre of white racism that holds blacks down.
"White privilege" is just the latest nutty meme by the race-baiters. I doubt even most regular Dems swallow the craziness anymore.

All true.

12 posted on 11/19/2014 6:11:22 AM PST by cloudmountain
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