Wednesday, January 14, 2015

THE PATRIOT POST - ALEXANDER'S COLUMN 01/14/2015



Alexander's Column

GOP Majorities -- Now What?

There Is Good News, if Republican Leaders Are Teachable

By Mark Alexander · January 14, 2015   Print
"A fondness for power is implanted, in most men, and it is natural to abuse it, when acquired." --Alexander Hamilton (1775)
It's Like Déjà Vu All Over Again
Prior to the 2014 midterm election, I wrote a column titled, "GOP Senate Majority -- Then What?"
Last week, the substantial Senate and historic House majorities elected in the November "Republican wave" stood to take the solemn oath "to Support and Defend" our Constitution.
So, what now?

The Republican majorities in Congress have the potential to stop the Obama regime in its tracks, particularly since those majorities are bolstered by the highest number of conservative Republicans (a.k.a. us wacky constitutional constructionists) ever. The first wave of the so-called "Tea Party" conservatives arrived in 2010, and the second wave has landed.
And as you recall, in less noted but equally promising news, Republicans once again decimated Democrats in gubernatorial and statehouse elections across the nation. This was a wide and deep victory for Republicans, and particularly conservatives.
But it's going to take more than the GOP’s revitalized turnout machine to overcome Obama. It's going to take both resolute leadership and a fearless message of conservative principles. Indeed, the hard and necessary work in the months ahead will be to set the stage for 2016 and beyond.
But with sizeable majorities in the House and Senate, what's the problem?
Here's a hint: It's not the Democrats.
The most significant threat to the Grand Old Party inside the Beltway, and across the nation, is ... drum roll please ... the GOP itself, which has proven time and again to be its own worst enemy. The tendency of power-drunk "establishment Republicans" to depart from the GOP platform, and thus foment fratricidal infighting with the growing number of conservative Republicans who actually abide by their oaths and stand on principle, is a sure formula for self-destruction.
Democrats are not the problem.
Consider, if you will, the most important lesson of the 2014 election.
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In 1992, Bill Clinton defeated George H.W. Bush, who had squandered the Reagan legacy and broke his famous "Read my lips, no new taxes" promise.
In 1994, Clinton suffered a huge midterm election defeat led by Newt Gingrich and conservative Republicans across the country. The grassroots GOP groundswell took control of the House for the first time since 1952 with a net gain of 54 seats, and likewise the Senate with a gain of eight seats.
Clinton responded, "The president is still relevant," and, indeed, he was relevant enough to win re-election two short years later when Republicans fielded yet another establishment type, former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, in a top-down campaign that failed to invigorate grassroots conservatives. House Republicans would have done better in 1998, too, but for the necessary perjury impeachment effort against Clinton after that "champion of women's rights" imposed himself upon a young intern.
In 2000, George W. Bush won the presidency despite a few dangling chads and not receiving a majority of the popular vote, but he failed to inspire any sizeable grassroots support in the years that followed. He did win re-election in 2004, when the Democrats fielded a flawed establishment candidate of their own, John Kerry.
In 2006, Democrats re-took the House and Senate by rallying their antiwar grassroots base.
In 2008, Republicans lost the presidency and suffered additional legislative branch losses after fielding yet another establishment moderate presidential candidate, John McCain, who lacked even an iota of charismatic appeal and failed to inspire grassroots conservatives. The Democrats, for their part, swept to victory by fielding an appallingly unqualified candidate whose charisma and communicative skills captivated the party's "progressive" base.
In 2010, Republicans enjoyed massive midterm gains in elections that were driven by a historic uprising of grassroots "Tea Party" conservatives.
In 2012, Republicans failed to retake the presidency and suffered lackluster legislative branch performance after fielding yet another establishment presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, who neither inspired nor mobilized the party's conservative grassroots base. Yet conservative candidates, despite establishment pundits, shined.
In 2014, Republicans again won historic midterm gains, especially in statewide elections that were driven by fresh, conservative grassroots candidates such as Iowa's Joni Ernst, Nebraska's Ben Sasse and Arkansas' Tom Cotton.
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Can you detect a pattern here?
When statewide and national elections are powered by conservative grassroots enthusiasm, Republicans win. When they are powered by top-down campaigns featuring moderate presidential candidates, Republicans lose.
So, is there a case study on a national election being powered by a conservative presidential candidate who inspired grassroots conservatives when Republicans won? Well, yes. That would be the Ronald Reagan model, which led to victory in 1980 and a historic landslide re-election in 1984.
Will the GOP learn something from this pattern ahead of the 2016 presidential campaign and adopt the Reagan model? Or will they continue to validate the old adage, "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results"?
The line between conservatives and leftists has never been more defined, and conservatives have a winning message because they articulate two core Liberty principles that moderate Republicans can't seem to grasp.
First, they understand that Liberty is colorblind, not a "white thing"; and second, that Liberty is eternal, not transient.
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Again, when candidates articulate these principles, they win. And when grassroots voters hand the GOP control of federal and state government, they expect leaders to articulate, first and foremost, the fundamental principles of Essential Liberty, and to follow through on campaign promises such as undoing ObamaCare.
The GOP establishment is learning, but it has a long way to go, both at the state and national level.
The contest between constitutional conservatives and GOP establishment types in our nation's capital is a source of much fanfare in the liberal media, which trumpets such disunity knowing that to divide is to conquer -- a concept the GOP has yet to fully embrace.
Indeed, this week there is a significant development in the House that is a direct result of the GOP establishment's failure to stand on principle. A mass exodus is underway as conservative Republicans abandon the Republican Study Committee, which, a few years back when House Republicans were in the minority, was home to some 100 genuine conservatives. The RSC has since been defanged by an establishment moderate "get-along" Republican, House Speaker John Boehner.
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And there are similar GOP shenanigans undermining Republican majorities at the state level.
In Tennessee, my colleague, former state GOP chairperson Robin Smith, set our state on a steady course to the top of the conservative pack. As a result, our moderate-to-conservative Republican governor must now work with a state house that has a conservative Republican super-majority and state senate with a firmly conservative Republican majority. In addition, our national congressional delegation is composed of two Republican senators, and seven of our nine house seats are Republican.
Robin's formula? Grow the party by avoiding infighting, and promote the GOP's winning platform principles. Let the party focus on candidates and let candidates focus on a winning governing agenda.
The net result? Our state economy is rapidly recovering despite Obama's failed economic policies. We are fourth in the nation in job creation, a "right to work" state with an economy driven by entrepreneurial ingenuity and hard work, and largely unfettered by state government interference and regulation. We have the lowest debt ratio of any state in the nation, even though we have no regular income tax.
Despite that success, there is trouble on the horizon, as our governor's wealthy political cronies have created PACs to favor moderate Republicans over strong conservative Republicans, and to exile conservatives from the state GOP Executive Committee. (Shades of Carl Rove's PAC against congressional conservatives.)
But there is a tenet that will both build existing majorities in Congress and the states, and ensure Republican victory in the next presidential election. It is a winning dictum as demonstrated twice by Ronald Reagan.
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In his 1990 autobiography, “An American Life,” President Reagan explained this tenet, which he learned during his first campaign for the California governorship: “The personal attacks against me during the primary finally became so heavy that the state Republican chairman, Gaylord Parkinson, postulated what he called the Eleventh Commandment: Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican. It’s a rule I followed during that campaign and have ever since.”
A fearless message of conservative principles, which will energize grassroots Americans, along with adherence to the Eleventh Commandment is a winning combination, whether in office or running for one. Unity is essential for success.
In 500 BC, Sun Tzu wrote in his timeless treatise, "The Art of War," "You will not succeed unless your men have tenacity and unity of purpose, and, above all, a spirit of sympathetic cooperation." That is summarized in the current U.S. Army Field Manual 100-5 on Operations: "For every objective, seek unity of command and unity of effort."
Republican Party Chairman Reince Preibus, who distributed our Essential Liberty Declaration and Constitution Guides to every attendee at the last Republican National Convention, has made some progress toward party unity, which we saw in the 2014 midterm.
But the current leadership in the House and Senate are slow learners.
Perhaps they'll take a cue from 20th-century philosopher George Santayana, who wrote, "When experience is not retained, as among savages, infancy is perpetual. Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." Or as Aldous Huxley put it, "That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the lessons of history." Or, as esteemed philosopher Forrest Gump observed, "Stupid is as stupid does."
In contemporary parlance: There is nothing to be learned from the second kick of a jackass -- or in the case of too many GOP politicos today, the third, fourth or fifth, ad infinitum.
So here is a project I'll be discussing with several leading conservative organizations in the coming weeks:
Republican candidates are asked to sign all sorts of pledges -- no-tax pledges, Second Amendment pledges, ObamaCare repeal pledges, etc. How about a pledge to abide by Reagan's 11th Commandment rather than spend millions on fratricidal attacks? And how about Jeb Bush and Mitt Romney sign first? Of course, it would take candidates of Reagan's character and humility to abide by such restraints.
Pro Deo et Constitutione -- Libertas aut Mors
Semper Fortis Vigilate Paratus et Fidelis

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