Should GOP Ignore Democrat Playbook?

Bonnie

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Jun 30, 2004
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By Christopher Adamo (07/13/2006)

It should be glaringly obvious from the widespread Democrat excommunication
of Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman (D.-CN) that the Party is verging on
political implosion. That is, of course, unless those GOP “moderates” once
again ride to the rescue. It has happened before.

According to liberal orthodoxy, Lieberman has committed numerous cardinal
sins, chief among which is that he possesses a sufficient shred of
intellectual honesty to give credit to the Bush Administration where he
deems credit to be due. Certainly this does not qualify Lieberman as a
“conservative,” but any degree of honesty in his thinking puts him squarely
to the right of his party’s “mainstream.” Therefore, it will not be
tolerated.

Other major Democrat players have dabbled in the risky business of
“moderation,” with consistently disastrous results. With hard-core liberal
activism proliferating on the Internet in the past few years, the true
emotions and intents of the left can no longer be cloaked or restrained
behind a seemingly benign party façade.

Thus, those who stray from the liberal “reservation,” even to a slight
degree, are immediately branded as traitors and publicly maligned for their
heresy. No less pivotal a Democrat than Hillary Clinton has had to learn
this lesson the hard way.

At more than one liberal gathering in recent months, Hillary has been jeered
and heckled by the crowds for her infidelity to their demands for immediate
withdrawal from Iraq. Seeking to convince mainstream America that she is not
of the “cut and run” crowd, Senator Clinton attempted to stake out a policy
position that neither supports the President nor abandons the war on terror.
But among liberal hard-liners, such posturing will not fly.

Rather, they insist that the party adopt an inflexibly left-wing stance that
calls for retreat and invariably condemns America while ignoring any flaw or
threat on the part of its enemies. Such was the template that undergirded
American leftists throughout the Cold War, and they have no intention of
abandoning it now.

Yet seasoned Democrat politicians, though no less sympathetic to the causes
and loyalties of the hard-left, nevertheless see a need to appear somewhat
temperate in order to retain the support of a sufficient number of Americans
necessary to win elections.

As a result, observant citizens have been treated to an entertaining, albeit
ineffective “balancing act” by high-profile Democrats, whereby they seek to
advance the liberal party line while hopefully not appearing to be out of
touch with traditional America. Since the advent of the alternative media,
the ploy has not worked. Yet they remain mired in this failed strategy for
lack of any reasonable alternative.

Fortunately for them, the situation is far from hopeless. Typically, when
Democrats find themselves teetering on such a disastrous precipice,
Republican “moderates” stumble onto the scene to provide them an avenue of
escape.

Primarily, as Democrats finally recognize the necessity to move to the
“right” in order to gain wider appeal, clueless Republican hacks
misinterpret the action, assuming instead that the most advantageous
position is in the political “center.” Ultimately, the “me too” wing of the
GOP attempts to counter this Democrat tactic by pressing their party to do
likewise, which results in a leftward shift among the Republicans.

Such unprincipled political posturing seems reasonable to those whose entire
world exists within the boundaries of the Beltway. But to real America, the
resultant “moderation” of the party is thoroughly dispiriting. Ultimately,
irrespective of electoral gains or losses, Democrats retain an inordinate
control of the agenda.

Already, grassroots conservatives are becoming aware of a disturbing
movement within the GOP to foist a more “centrist” presidential candidate on
them in ‘08. Two of the biggest names being floated are former New York
Mayor Rudy Guiliani, and Arizona Senator John McCain.

Despite the hopes of those consummate pragmatists of the Republican “inner
circle,” the nomination of either would lead to electoral disaster. Hardly
appealing to a “wider following” as hoped for by party strategists, the
elements of liberalism embraced by McCain, Guiliani, and their type are as
appealing of a mix as a few drops of dishwater added to the Perrier.

Similarly, on a host of issues from immigration to pork barrel spending, the
track record of Congressional and Senate Republicans, along with the
President, has hardly been something to inspire conservatives.

It has always been counterproductive to attempt to defeat liberals by being
like them. And it is inarguably wrong to adopt the basic tenets of
liberalism under the assumption that such things are actually good for
America.

A far more courageous and principled approach would be for the GOP to firmly
anchor itself in conservative principle, and make no apologies for doing so.
Thus, it would establish a standard that no pandering Democrat could
credibly mimic.

The Democrat Party is desperately flailing as it pursues the unfathomable
task of establishing an agenda that will pacify its radical base while
appealing to the American mainstream. Liberalism is in retreat.

This is no time to allow Republican “moderates” to hijack the Party and take
it down a path that follows the American left into oblivion.

http://americandaily.com/article/14514
 

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