Obama’s Stumbles Open Door for Conservatives
by Kirkwood Callahan
Two years ago America’s newest political super star, Barack Obama, walked across campaign stages to thunderous applause. Today he is the object of derision from fellow Democrats fighting for their political lives.
“When you are wrong, you are wrong!,” says West Virginia’s Governor Joe Manchin, the Democrat candidate for the U.S. Senate. He disagrees with the President on “issues that we believe in dearly in West Virginia”. The governor opposes the “Cap and Trade ” bill, and criticizes his party’s “wasteful spending”.
Manchin’s efforts to distance himself from the White House epitomize Gov. Haley Barbour’s (R. Miss.) observation that Democrats were running from Obama “like scalded dogs”.
Others, too numerous to list here, have detached themselves from Obama. These Democrats know Obama’s coattails were sheared after Obama- backed candidates in Virginia, New Jersey, and Massachusetts fell before Republicans. Even after these defeats the Democrats’ super majorities in Congress gave him big legislative victories – Obama-Care being the greatest prize. Now the political bill has come due, and the cost is very dear.
Some powerful Congressional Democrats saw the writing on the wall and retired -- Senators Chris Dodd, Conn., and Evan Bayh, Ind., and Cong. David Obey, Wisc., among them. Powerful members who chose to stay in the race -- Senate majority leader Harry Reid, Nevada, and his colleagues Barbara Boxer, Cal., and Russ Feingold, Wisc., face formidable opponents.
What explains this change in political fortunes?
More voters now understand what Obama meant by “hope and change” but reject it. However, a more comprehensive answer lies in understanding the transformation within the country’s conservative ranks.
Many conservatives felt let down after the GOP’s humiliations in 2006 and 2008. The fallen party had lost its way as it dispensed earmarks and spent money. A year ago I wrote that many considered a new party combining the energies of independents and other disaffected groups to find a way out of the nation’s morass. But a third party did not come to pass. Instead the GOP had a house cleaning.
Conservatives coalesced into various Tea Party groups and similar organizations like Haywood’s 9/12 movement. Many put their energies to work within the Republican infrastructure which is essential to conservative victories. Their message was clear: Get back to Conservative basics – the principles of limited government and fiscal restraint. Sarah Palin gave liberal pundits heartburn as her endorsements catapulted challengers to primary victories.
Veteran GOP politicians who strayed from a starboard course met defeat. In Delaware Christine O’Donnell’s victory over nine term Congressman Mike Castle for the U.S. Senate nomination was the most recent.
Incumbent Senator Lisa Murkowski, a member of an established political family, fell in the Alaskan Republican primary to Joe Miller. In Utah three-term Republican Senator Robert Bennett was denied re-nomination by his party’s state convention.
In response to the political season Republican House Leader John Boehner has announced “A Pledge to America” that will control spending, create jobs, repeal and replace Obama-Care, and maintain American security. (See www.gop.gov/)
The North Carolina GOP has announced a policy platform for winning control of the General Assembly. Boiled down the platform pledges fiscal responsibility, exemption from the mandates of Obama-Care, encouragement of private sector job growth, a lifting of the cap on charter schools, and property rights protected by an Eminent Domain Constitutional amendment. An “Honest Election Act” will require a valid photo ID to vote, and integrity in government will be restored. (See www.ncgop.org/)
Close to home the battle wages intensely. Congressman Heath Shuler, who voted for Obama’s Cap and Trade bill, avoided open town hall meetings with his constituents. The man who voted twice to seat Nancy Pelosi as Speaker is facing a challenge from Hendersonville businessman Jeff Miller who offers a common sense conservative approach to governing.
Sens. Joe Sam Queen and John Snow, whose districts cover Haywood County, are in a fight for political survival. Ralph Hise, Spruce Pine’s mayor, and Jim Davis, Macon county commissioner, challenge the incumbents’ failure to improve the region’s economy and will pursue more jobs and adherence to traditional values.
In the Haywood districts for the N.C. House Sam Edwards and Dodie Allen challenge Ray Rapp and Phil Haire, veteran legislators who have served as taxes rose and state budgets swelled. Edwards and Allen have promised strict fiscal conservatism. At the courthouse level three Republicans, Denny King, David Bradley, and Tom Freeman challenge two incumbents, Kirk Kirkpatrick and Bill Upton, as well as one new office seeker, Michael Sorrells.
Haywood Republicans will hold their Annual Harvest Dinner this Saturday evening, October 2 at Tuscola High cafeteria. The keynote speaker will be North Carolina’s senior U.S. Senator Richard Burr. Other candidates will speak also. For details call 246-7921.
Kirkwood Callahan is member of the Haywood County Republican Executive Committee. He has taught American government at four southern universities.
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Personally, I have lost all faith in the Republican Party. Theirs is a slower bus than that of the Dems, but they both lead ultimately to oppression and tyranny.
ReplyDeleteThe incumbent Republicans are corrupt, no doubt, but the incumbent Democrats are insane. Passing ObamaCare with legislative trickery, trying to ban lead, cap&trade, global warming, moritoriuim on offshore drilling, on coal operating licenses, taking Islamic Terrorists to US Courts for trial, backdoor deals buying votes from congressman, manipulating elections and congressional seats, anti-business, anti-christians, anti-military, calling ordinary citizens cowards and then labeling them as home-grown terrorists, and then you have, what, 57 Czars appointed by Obama and 32 Assistants appointed by Michelle, plus Gibbs, Axelrod, Rahm, Pelosi, Reid, Dodd, Franks, Boxer, Baucus, and throw in ACORN and Soros and you have a recipe for a full-fledged Lunatic Asylum, and no credible media to report on it except FOX.
ReplyDeleteI'll vote for the corrupt Republicans, especially this time around. They know full well, We. Are. Watching. You.
J.Philip Mt. Olive, Louisi-Yana USA
You must get directly involved in the political process. The Independence Caucus has endorsed several candidates in NC. We are an all citizen group aiming to take the gov't back from Big Money and Special Interest Groups.
ReplyDeleteBoth parties are nothing more than a money laundering system. We must at some point end the federal reserve and take our tax system out of the hands of the gov't as our tax dollars are the incentive to steal money through lobbyists.
They will not fix themselves, we the people must do it and free society requires this responsibility.