Monday, November 14, 2022

 

ConservativeHQ
The home for grassroots conservatives leading the battle to educate and mobilize family, friends, neighbors, and others to defeat the anti-God, anti-America, Marxist New Democrats.

 

ConservativeHQ Exclusives:

The Only Fights That Matter Right Now

ConservativeHQ

By George Rasley. CHQ Editor

In the aftermath of the massive Republican Party and conservative movement failures of the 2022 midterm election cycle, alleged “leaders” of the GOP and the Right are seemingly consumed more with finger-pointing and positioning themselves than they are with winning the as yet undecided elections.

 
 

China Crime - TikTok

ConservativeHQ

By Laurence F. Sanford, American Security Council Foundation

Hybrid warfare is a theory of military strategy that employs political warfare and blends conventional warfare, irregular warfare, and cyberwarfare with other influencing methods. The goal of hybrid warfare is to create divisions in society and artificially create internal discontent. The Red Chinese-owned worldwide social media platform TikTok is an example.


More From ConservativeHQ:

The Right Resistance: To err on COVID was human; forgive for screwing up our nation? Uh-uh.


By Jeffery A. Rendall
The 2022 federal midterms may be over – at least the Election Day portion of them – but many, many festering issues regarding our political system remain unresolved by the prospect of a new, more conservative and common-sense oriented (slight) House majority.

2022 ELECTION – A Disaster for Conservatives

By Richard A Viguerie, CHQ Chairman
There’s no denying the fact in the 2022 elections liberals outgunned conservatives. Democrats/liberals beat Republicans/conservatives like a drum. There is plenty of blame and finger-pointing for Tuesday’s colossal failure by the GOP to achieve a resounding victory under the ideal circumstances for a wave election. Let me address, however, some of the foundational problems (and solutions) that the pundits, consultants, and Party leaders won’t tell you.

The Real Culprits: Bureaucrat and Union Elitists

Karen Hiltz, EdD, Guest Columnist
The education system, once again, is blaming the virus. This time it’s for the latest National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) scores. Is the virus the real culprit? Let’s take a walk down memory lane and interject some reality. Excuses flourished when homework wasn’t turned in or attendance was late or not done at all. But the lock down also revealed what children were being taught.

The Right Resistance: Trump asks, ‘What’s in a (nick)name?’ Why this isn’t 2016 anymore


By Jeffery A. Rendall
No one realistically expects Trump to change the way he does things this late in his life and career, though ditching the name-calling thing would definitely add a degree of maturity to his overall presentation. Picking fights with other popular Republicans – especially 2022 election hero Ron DeSantis – isn’t smart politics. We’ll see if Trump can actually grow a little bit.

Republicans Stockholm Syndrome


By former Congressman Steve Stockman, Guest Columnist
Like a woman in an abusive relationship, the abused start to believe the lies of the abuser. Hearing through all the aforementioned sources the incessant mantra of “you’re no good;” “you’re a racist;” “you’re a Nazi;” “you’re against democracy;” “you’re a violent extremist;” “you’re horrible” finally takes its toll. Those themes – all lies – are voter intimidation and suppression – verbal, violent abuse of the conservative base. Honest voters are beaten into submission and began to identify with the abuser.

What If There Was A Red Wave And Nobody Reported It?

By CHQ Staff
Was the “Red Wave” oversold, including by us? Perhaps. However, there was a strange phenomenon at work in the election – while there was no Red Wave that threw Democrats out of power in Democrat-run states, like New York, Pennsylvania and Michigan, there was a massive Red Wave in Republican-run states, like Florida, Texas and Oklahoma.




Today's Headlines:
The 1980s Hangover and the GOP

Julie Kelly, American Greatness

No matter how much Republicans prefer to vote on Election Day, the party must work to change that habit. Stubborn adherence to traditional ways of voting cost Trump the presidency in 2020 and have now prevented Republicans from gaining a mandate-level majority in the House and any chance to take a slim majority in the Senate. If they ever want to win again, Republicans must play by the early and mail-in vote rules they helped create.

5 Reasons Why Republicans Failed in the Elections

Daniel J. Flynn, The American Spectator

Why did results not meet expectations? 5. Dems Vote on 30 Election Days, Republicans Vote on 1. 4. Hyper-politicized Is the New Normal. 3. Dobbs Animated the Abortion Demographic. 2. The Faustian Bargain on S0-Called ‘Election Denial’. 1. Democrats Made It About Trump, and Trump Cooperated. Acknowledging defeat hurts. But winners, who offer congratulations rather than shout no fair, will find the key to future victories in current defeats.

Senators Bail on McConnell as Red Wave Fizzles

Sandy Fitzgerald, Newsmax

In a letter obtained by Politico, Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rick Scott, R-Fla., pressed colleagues to sign off on postponing the party's leadership elections, which are for now scheduled for Wednesday morning. These three join several other GOP senators who are calling for the leadership elections to be delayed, including Sens. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Josh Hawley, R-Mo.


Josh Hawley Blasts GOP Leadership for Midterm Showing
Philip Wegmann, Real Clear Politics

The Missouri populist believes the GOP offered voters plenty in the way of generalized gripes about Democrats and President Biden – but no actionable alternative. Hawley blames that on what he calls “Washington Republicanism,” specifically Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. He also thinks it was a bad idea to talk about making changes to Social Security and Medicare. Hawley said he will not vote for McConnell as Republican Senate Leader.
 
Sen. McConnell: Unfavorable Rating of 58.5%, More Unfavorable Than Trump
Peyton Holliday, CNS News

Senator Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has an unfavorable rating of 58.5%, according to Real Clear Politics, which is the highest unfavorable rating among the political leaders highlighted by the news outlet. McConnell is rated even more unfavorable than former President Donald Trump. McConnell, the top Republican in the Senate, pulled the lowest favorable at only 20.8%, and his unfavorable rating was 58.5%, the highest in the group.
 
 

Youngkin Responds to Trump Dig: ‘That’s Not the Way I Roll’
Just the News (Natalia Mittelstadt), The Star News Network
Virginia GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkin on Friday brushed off former President Trump’s criticism of him – which followed his lieutenant governor, Winsome Sears, saying Trump should remove himself from GOP electoral politics. “Listen, you all know me,” Youngkin told reporters. “I do not call people names. I really work hard to bring people together … That’s not the way I roll and not the way I behave.” Sears suggested Trump leave politics.

No comments:

Post a Comment