from MassResistance
 
 
Mass. Republican Party's RINO strategy a big part of 2010 election  
failures in top state races. 

In an election where Republicans were conquering the country,  
Massachusetts is probably the only state in America where the Republicans were  
completely blanked out in all statewide offices and all Congressional 
districts.  Is 
that just coincidence, or were the Republicans here possibly doing 
something  wrong?

In April 2009 the Boston homosexual newspaper Bay Windows  featured _a  
front-page interview_ 
(http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=xhdlvybab&et=1103869477836&s=17044&e=001nJsmiFCxU9oxc4OFGotw6SK3OYOPi3FSGSjMFQSTXz5n-N9MtUUueGx6Si1lHJq
LsSzcCcRxs7kOEt_84Zq0Bkl8C3wPv5jzzee9Pneod33EkTVRWbYyx4hr1HF51OMnYBlKSH6j1GW
siEq5x6lJNHKeg-gZmmbY6xcw-vr--GI9vBv7Y4xGWw==)  with newly elected 
Massachusetts Republican Party  Chairman Jennifer Nassour. She told Bay Windows 
that 
the party will no  longer oppose same-sex "marriage", abortion, or other 
divisive "social  issues."

In many peoples' opinion that was the beginning of the end,  which 
culminated in a complete shutout of statewide and Congressional races in  
Tuesday's 
election. 

The forced big-tent approach to morality has become  the Party's official 
position. The pro-gay, pro-abortion Baker/Tisei team  reflected it 
completely. And if a Republican candidate was personally pro-life  or 
pro-traditional 
marriage, the apparent strategy was either to never mention  it or obfuscate 
when asked about it.

It didn't work. It confused people.  And it alienated a fairly significant 
part of the Republican Party base -- the  part that does a lot of the actual 
work. At a certain point it started to look  pretty ridiculous......


This was reflected to some extent in all the  statewide campaigns and most 
of the Congressional campaigns. 

As  columnist Jeff Jacoby once observed (regarding Mitt Romney's 1994 
Senate race  against Ted Kennedy), if people are given the choice of a 
watered-down liberal  and a real liberal, they will choose the real thing every 
time. 
What he might  have added is that when the Republican Party caves in to more 
and more liberal  mush, its rank and file starts to lose their zeal and 
enthusiasm, and it affects  campaigns.

This kind of "moderate" thinking also led to other sources of  Republican 
Party failure:

The Party avoided running against Barack  Obama and his policies. After 
all, in a "big tent" you don't want to  alienate Obama supporters. But back in 
January, Scott Brown won his US Senate  seat running primarily as the 41st 
vote against Barack Obama's agenda. The "new"  Republican Party hardly 
mentioned Obama at all. Did you see any anti-Obama ads  -- reminding voters how 
the incumbents force-fed us Obamacare, cap and trade,  takeover of the 
economy? Neither did we. And when Congressional candidate Bill  Hudak bashed 
Obama, 
he was thrown under the bus by the Republican bigwigs.  However, around the 
country that was the main reason for booting  incumbents.

Party leaders adopted other traditionally liberal  issues. For example, 
early on Charlie Baker announced his support for the  Quinn Bill. The Quinn 
Bill is a program where state money pays for permanent  police salary increases 
if they take some college courses. It was originally a  gift to the 
policeman's union, has become very expensive, and is widely  considered a 
boondoggle -- so much so that Democrat Gov. Deval Patrick cut much  of it from 
the 
budget. So Baker was in the interesting position of being more  fiscally 
liberal then his Democrat opponent. Not exactly a Tea Party approach to  
government.

All this should send a message to someone. But we're not  holding our 
breath for this bunch to "get it" anytime soon.  

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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