(http://www.nypost.com/) Updated: Thu., Aug. 26, 2010 
 





 
 
Voters: The party's over
By CHARLES HURT 
Last Updated: 4:58 AM, August 26, 2010 
Posted: 2:53 AM, August 26, 2010 
 
WASHINGTON -- Voters desperate for an alternative to both parties in  
Washington got another dose of good news in this week's primaries.  
In Florida and, it appears, also in Alaska, Republican voters once again 
sent  a chilling message to their own party leadership in Washington.  
No, they cannot stomach the untethered liberalism of Democrats in 
Washington  any longer. But nor can they stand the GOP recklessness we saw the 
last 
time the  "conservative" party was in power.  
That Republican Party of yore and the Donkeys of present are enough to send 
 shudders through any sensible person who cares about the future of this 
country.  
Both are enough to make sick anyone who in tough times has set austere  
priorities, dispatched with luxuries, and scrounged to save up enough to send  
their children to college.  
The sacrifices and tough decisions that have dominated the lives of most  
Americans these last few years have been completely absent here in the city 
of  free money -- regardless of who is in charge.  
That is because both parties are playing a fearsome game of fiscal chicken 
--  with your money, of course.  
Democrats believe that if they saddle taxpayers with enough obligations to  
provide enough free stuff to enough people, the country will riot if anyone 
ever  tries to rein in the wild spending.  
Republicans, meanwhile, believe that bankrupting the country with 
unpaid-for  wars and tax cuts will force the government to collapse and become 
smaller.  
Both tactics are as deplorable as they are dishonest.  
Fed up, Republican voters are not done cleaning house.  
In Florida, conservative insider Bill McCollum got beaten for the 
Republican  nomination for governor by a conservative party outsider promising 
to 
shake  things up with his own money.  
In Alaska, sitting GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski is on the ropes, narrowly 
trailing  Joe Miller, a conservative ally of Sarah Palin.  
Sweet justice for a woman who first "earned" her seat the old-fashioned  
Republican way -- her daddy handed it to her.  
Okay, so maybe Palin scares us all a little bit. This is understandable.  
She is less than sophisticated when it comes to answering tough 
geopolitical  questions we expect our leaders to know all about.  
She talks a little too much in public about her intimacy with powerful 
rifles  and the bloody chore of field-dressing a moose.  
And it is a little worrisome that one of the most appealing things about  
Sarah Palin is the people who hate her.  
But it is those people -- in both parties -- who are the very authors of 
the  fat, corrupt, bureaucratic disaster that has become our federal 
government.  
We have all certainly supported political figures for worse reasons. 
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