Note : 
Nothing is said about the radical critique of Viguerie
and other  committed conservatives.  This is an analysis of
Republican problems from the vantage of the moderate Left.
There are, however, plenty of problems.
.
Billy
.
----------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
 
W Post
 
 
 
As Republicans ponder 2012 defeat, party’s philosophy  hangs in the balance
By _Karen Tumulty_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/karen-tumulty/2011/07/15/gIQAMhWJGI_page.html) , 
Published: December 15,  2012
GREENCASTLE, Pa. — The Green Grove Gardens banquet hall was decked out for  
Christmas, but the atmosphere at the Franklin County Republicans’ annual  
Eisenhower dinner here was anything but cheery. 
As the evening’s speaker, former Pennsylvania senator and 2012 presidential 
 contender Rick Santorum, made a meet-and-greet round of the tables 
Tuesday, one  woman implored him to “get rid of Obamacare.” 
“We had a chance,” Santorum told her. “It was called the last election.” 
So much for comfort and joy. 
Not quite six weeks after Republicans lost a presidential contest that many 
 of them thought was in the bag, the shock has begun to wear off. The  
recriminations, on the other hand, are likely to go on for quite some time. 
And the tough work — figuring out what needs fixing — has only just  
begun. 
Some Republicans still argue that nothing is fundamentally wrong with the  
party. Or nothing that a better get-out-the-vote operation, a field of more  
appealing candidates, and more outreach to Hispanics and women wouldn’t  
repair. 
But others are coming to the conclusion that the problem goes deeper than  
that, to the party’s philosophy and policies, which are getting further out 
of  step with the nation. 
“Republicans have lost a majority of the popular vote in five out of the 
last  six elections,” GOP pollster Whit Ayres said. “There’s a message there. 
The  Republicans need a new business model, and a new product for the new 
century.  It’s not just a problem of one candidate or one campaign.” 
That gloomy assessment is shared even by some of the GOP’s most ardent  
ideological warriors. 
“We have extraordinarily real and deep problems,” former House speaker and 
 2012 presidential contender Newt Gingrich said in an interview. “We’re at 
a  serious point, not a trivial point.” 
The latest test of the weakened party’s philosophy is playing out now, in  
negotiations to avoid the “fiscal cliff.” 
Nothing is more central to GOP self-identity than its drive to cut taxes.  
Conservative columnist Robert Novak used to remark that Republicans were put 
on  this Earth for precisely that purpose. 
The problem for them now is that the American public feels otherwise, at  
least when it comes to the breaks for the wealthy that were enacted under 
George  W. Bush, which Obama promised to end if he were reelected. 
“It may be that a majority of the public, having heard both sides of the  
argument, believes that upper-income people are undertaxed,” Peter Wehner, 
who  was a top adviser in Bush’s White House, _wrote in Commentary magazine_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/12/10/what-if-conservatives-have-lost-
the-argument/) . “If that’s the case, it  would be a significant error for 
conservatives to assume we simply need to make  the same arguments, only 
louder, with more passion, and with more charts and  graphs.” 
His column was headlined: “What If Conservatives Have Lost the Argument?” 
One of the most-heated arguments at the moment is the one that is raging  
among Republicans themselves. In the postmortems following Mitt Romney’s 
defeat,  there are factions that argue that the party should have presented a 
sharper  contrast by demanding ideological purity, and others that say it 
doomed its  nominee by doing exactly that. 
“What we got was a weak moderate candidate, hand-picked by the Beltway 
elites  and country-club establishment wing of the Republican Party. The 
presidential  loss is unequivocally on them,” Tea Party Patriots national 
coordinator Jenny  Beth Martin said in a statement released just moments after 
the 
television  networks called the race for President Obama on election night. 
That prompted this retort from pundit Ann Coulter: “The party’s problem 
now  runs more along the lines of moron showoffs, trying to impress tea 
partyers like  Jenny Beth Martin.” 
Many say the party will not start winning again until it starts looking for 
 who to bring in, rather than who to exclude. 
“The party needs to fundamentally retool our thinking. And to me, the 
biggest  problem we have is our dismal primaries, and the litmus testing that 
goes on  there, and all the money and all the groups that are there to divide 
Republicans  from Republicans,” said _Joe Straus_ 
(http://www.house.state.tx.us/members/speaker/) , speaker of the Texas House of 
 Representatives. 
Last Monday, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus launched 
 what he promised will be a top-to-bottom review, which he called the 
_Growth and Opportunity Project,_ 
(http://www.gop.com/news/press-releases/rnc-launches-new-initiative-to-grow-the-party-and-win/)
  that would include  “
mechanics, data, messaging, our coalition groups and our outreach.” But he  
insisted the party’s basic philosophy remains a sound one. 
“If you look at the polling, 35 percent of the American people consider  
themselves conservative and 20 percent consider themselves liberal,” Priebus  
said. “We have natural advantages as far as the principles of the Republican 
 Party — limited government and freedom and opportunity.” 
But the polls also say that on the specifics of nearly every major policy  
question, Republicans are positioned against the tide of public opinion — on 
 taxing the rich and maintaining entitlement programs, on same-sex 
marriage, on  whether climate change is real and manmade, on whether illegal 
immigrants should  be given a path to citizenship. 
“We need to find a way to make our core principles make sense to voters who 
 are part of a changing demographic,” said _Ying Ma_ (http://yingma.org/) , 
37, a Chinese immigrant and conservative activist  in California. “One of 
the reasons all of these government goodies are so  appealing is people don’t 
believe they can make it any other way.” 
All that is why recent weeks have seen some of the party’s rising stars  
road-testing more compassionate themes that could have a broader  appeal. 
_At a Dec. 4 dinner_ 
(http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2012-12-04/politics/35625062_1_paul-ryan-romney-ryan-campaign-presidential-race)
 , 2012 
vice-presidential nominee Paul  Ryan, a Wisconsin congressman, said both 
parties “
tend to divide Americans into  our voters and their voters. Let’s be really 
clear: Republicans must steer very  clear of that trap. We must speak to the 
aspirations and the anxieties of every  American.” It was an unsubtle 
contrast with running mate Romney’s now-infamous  suggestions that Obama 
supporters were government-dependent freeloaders. 
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), speaking at the same event, struck a similar  
theme. 
Even more striking are some of the recent comments by Louisiana Gov. Bobby  
Jindal, newly installed as chairman of the Republican Governors Association 
and  frequently mentioned as a 2016 presidential contender. 
When Romney after the election _blamed his loss_ 
(http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2012-11-14/politics/35507210_1_mitt-romney-obama-campaign-louisiana
-and-scott-walker)  on the “gifts” that Obama had offered  young people, 
African Americans and Hispanics, Jindal blasted the 2012  standard-bearer as “
absolutely wrong. . . . We need to continue to show how our  policies help 
every voter out there achieve the American dream, which is to be  in the 
middle class (http://yingma.org/) .” 
On Tuesday, Jindal _gave an address at the Brookings Institution_ 
(http://www.brookings.edu/events/2012/12/11-education-choice#ref-id=20121211_jindal)
  
that blasted  teachers unions — a familiar GOP target — but also noted: “
It is completely  dishonest to pretend today that America provides equal 
opportunity in education.  We do not. And if you say that we do, you are 
lying.” 
On Friday, an op-ed by Jindal appeared in the Wall Street Journal 
advocating  selling birth control pills over the counter, as a means of taking  
“
contraception out of the political arena.” 
If there is a model for what confronts Republicans today, it may well be 
the  self-doubt and battles of the Democrats in the late 1980s after three  
presidential defeats in a row. 
In 1989, William Galston and Elaine Kamarck of the centrist Progressive  
Policy Institute wrote _a controversial paper_ 
(http://www.dlc.org/documents/Politics_of_Evasion.pdf)  diagnosing the 
Democrats’ ills. Much  of what they 
wrote could apply to what Republicans are going through today: The  
Democrats were captive of “liberal fundamentalism.” They blamed their 
candidates  
for lacking charisma. They believed that their answer was matching the GOP’s  
technological edge (in those days, direct mail) and its get-out-the-vote  
operation. They were losing the young. Their values were not in line with the 
 country’s. 
“Once Bill Clinton ran in 1992, we actually had a political center,” 
recalled  _Kamarck_ 
(http://www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/elaine-kamarck) , who 
is a lecturer at Harvard University’s John F.  Kennedy 
School of Government. “But creating a new Democratic brand was a process  that 
took several years, and also some luck.” 
In Clinton’s case, that luck included the decision of New York Gov. Mario  
Cuomo, a liberal icon, not to run for the 1992 Democratic nomination, and  
businessman Ross Perot’s third-party candidacy splitting the vote in  
November. 
In Greencastle, local party Chairman Dwight Weidman expressed confidence 
that  his party will also find its way back. But first, Weidman said, “there’
s going  to be a really tough discussion in the Republican  Party.”

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