General The Demise of the Republican Party are Greatly Exaggerated

Factushima

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^ARE! No, that reads *IS*..........^

I have heard a non-stop barrage of claims that Republicans 'must change' or are 'not electable.' They are buttressing their argument with the results of the 2012 election.

I have taken a look at the results and find no significant ideological shift. Lets run through these races and see what we have:

Romney vs. Obama:

David Plouffe recently claimed that the Obama machine can't be transfered. This election was about Barack Obama, not policy or Romney. This isn't the only person saying this.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/11/09/usa-campaign-obama-idUSL1E8M8LYY20121109

http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Govern...imply-Go-Away-When-Obama-Not-On-Top-Of-Ticket

When you get down to it a lot of Republicans just stayed home. Romney was in the wrong place at the wrong time. To claim his loss was a fundamental shift in the country, especially with what the Obama campaign is saying, is a stretch.

Senate:

Nobody is surprised by what happened:

Scott Brown lost in MA. Absolutely no surprise there.

Angus King won in ME. Again, no surprise there.

Mourdock lost in IN after making some full-retard statement about abortion and rape. That seat was his to lose and he lost it.

House:

Republicans held the house with a slightly smaller majority.


State Races:

I believe the Democrats netted one state house and broke even on the state senate races. In a surprise: Wisconsin put the Republicans back in charge of the state senate. Even with Obama on the ticket they couldn't get the Democrat turnout to win.


Governors Races:

Republicans picked up one state house: NC. This really isn't a surprise.

Of Note:

In Montana the libertarian candidate picked up 17k votes. More than enough to push Rick Hill (R) over the top.



Compare these results to 2010 when the Republicans, mainly with the support of the Tea Party, picked up 6 Senate seats, 63 House seats, 6 Governor seats, and 18 state House/Senate chambers. One of the largest turnovers in government in our history.

Overall, there was no fundamental shift in ideology at any level.

Why did I post this?

Two reasons:

1) The establishment Republicans, and the media, are pushing this narrative that the Republicans have to change. This is hugely beneficial to all people in the liberty movement as the establishment people will be more willing to accept moves in their platform. As would voters. Rural Republicans who stayed home are going to be more willing to join a more libertarian Republican party. The time to form a better coalition is now. People like Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock prove that the Republicans position on abortion is very unpopular. Moderating that position may prove difficult, but getting candidates to shut up about it wont.

2) In the year of Barack Obama there was no big gain for statist progressives. To me this election was more a condemnation of big government than it was for or against any party. Almost 14 million people who voted in 2008 just stayed home.

Hope you enjoyed this!
 
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^Well spoken. I might add that the puppet masters seem to be good at evening things out in their false "left-right" paradigm, given just a little bit of time and the effective use of their bought-and-paid-for media. It serves the special interests to have a dog-and-pony-show with as close to 50% on one side and 50% on the other that they can possibly engineer. It reminds me a bit of Las Vegas odds makers and the sports betting business. They adjust the point spread until the amount of money in the kitty is half on either side. Same thing in politics, but instead of the point spread adjustment it's a transference of policy positions and talking points (the Democratic Kennedy administration seems "right" of Mitt Romney, for example). However, the PROBLEM for the system is different now, in my opinion. And it's dangerous to the PTB. The liberty movement that has erupted on the "right" can only be appeased by relinquishing statist power. Which is not welcome for them and is relatively unprecedented. It's also simultaneous with a devastating economy that makes their shell game even more challenging. Should be an interesting few years ahead.
 
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The GOP can't win if it continues to brand itself the "war and religious social issues" party. Most of the calls for change in the GOP seem to be that the GOP needs to move to the left. I think this is wrong since both McCain and Romney were both left/moderates. The GOP needs to move to it's roots on the right and focus on the issues that every American can get behind. The Freedom message is popular. Abortion and bombing isn't, particularly with the aging population of the party and the GOP attempts to push the young people (us) out.
 
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Good points all, Anaconda.

I'm pretty interested in 2014. The potential is that, with a Romney loss, a lot of Republicans will be voting. There are certainly enough seats up for a liberty oriented movement to co-opt the Republican party and take a majority in the Senate and make gains in the House. It seems the local focus of the Tea Party is working. We only need a presidential candidate that seems sincere in his desire to shrink government.

One great piece of news is we might not see the kind of spending in 2016 that we saw this year. Without Obama on the ticket Democrats will likely see John Kerry totals.
 
The GOP can't win if it continues to brand itself the "war and religious social issues" party. Most of the calls for change in the GOP seem to be that the GOP needs to move to the left. I think this is wrong since both McCain and Romney were both left/moderates. The GOP needs to move to it's roots on the right and focus on the issues that every American can get behind. The Freedom message is popular. Abortion and bombing isn't, particularly with the aging population of the party and the GOP attempts to push the young people (us) out.

Amen.

Well, we have to push our way back in. I have made huge strides with my group of conservatives. They are willing to accept an end to the war on some drugs, willing to shut up about abortion, and are still 100% dead set against gay marriage. Hopefully the gay marriage issue will be pulled off the table for us.

My concern is our poor showing with hispanics, any ideas on how to appeal to them?
 
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My concern is our poor showing with hispanics, any ideas on how to appeal to them?
Yeah, don't treat them as a monolithic group. Don't fall into the media's trap of segmenting the population into handy little groups.

The principles of liberty are attractive to individuals; not groups. Do not fall into the belief that these folks only care about immigration. lol.
 
My concern is our poor showing with hispanics, any ideas on how to appeal to them?

Stop talking about building the Great Wall of China across the Mexican border, and start talking about simplifying the immigration process.
 
Stop talking about building the Great Wall of China across the Mexican border, and start talking about simplifying the immigration process.

What could be more simple than crossing the border and not going back? The problem is that people have been streaming across the border since Reagan and all presidents have been looking the other way. Now the Reagan generation illegals are parents and grandparents and the demographics of the country have permanently shifted. 10+ million illegal immigrants want to be legal now. The time to say no was 30 years ago.
 
My concern is our poor showing with hispanics, any ideas on how to appeal to them?

Yes. Don't unseat delegates for the 'presumptive nominee' on the basis of their last name, especially when they are true supporters.
 
We only need a presidential candidate that seems sincere in his desire to shrink government.

Yeah, well, this coalition offered one of those. And in an environment where the corruption and corporatism were so terrible that we were winning over indpendents and disaffected Democrats wholesale with nothing more than the promise of Ninth and Tenth Amendment guarantees that they could do their thing on the state level and the integrity of the candidate, Fox managed to talk Republican primary voters into moving farther left than they had ever moved before.

When rank and file Republicans figure out what Fox is doing to them, we can take this nation back for We, the People. As long as they keep letting Fox talk them into doing what the Democratic National Committee wants them to do, we're screwed. It's just that simple.
 
Yeah, don't treat them as a monolithic group. Don't fall into the media's trap of segmenting the population into handy little groups.

The principles of liberty are attractive to individuals; not groups. Do not fall into the belief that these folks only care about immigration. lol.

I agree and disagree. There are cultural norms that extend to people who believe they share similarities. On the other hand, there are vast differences between individuals.

I feel part of the problem this election was a constant recasting of the Republicans as 'racists'. That may have drove away some hispanics, too.
 
I agree and disagree. There are cultural norms that extend to people who believe they share similarities. On the other hand, there are vast differences between individuals.

I feel part of the problem this election was a constant recasting of the Republicans as 'racists'. That may have drove away some hispanics, too.

Many hispanics supported Ron Paul.

I've already heard this, the pundits suggesting that the Republican party can fix it's woes by pandering more to minorities, as if you'll jsut toss Rubio out there and all the problems will go away. The republican party needs to go back to conservative libertarian ideals, and ditch the social conservatism.
 
Yeah, well, this coalition offered one of those. And in an environment where the corruption and corporatism were so terrible that we were winning over indpendents and disaffected Democrats wholesale with nothing more than the promise of Ninth and Tenth Amendment guarantees that they could do their thing on the state level and the integrity of the candidate, Fox managed to talk Republican primary voters into moving farther left than they had ever moved before.

When rank and file Republicans figure out what Fox is doing to them, we can take this nation back for We, the People. As long as they keep letting Fox talk them into doing what the Democratic National Committee wants them to do, we're screwed. It's just that simple.

I'm not entirely sure theres a conspiracy. Foxnews is just as confused as everyone else. There is a strong wing of the Republican party that wants to be Democrat-lite, those people are losing power. With this election, and the ridiculous coverage and analysis taking place, we might see a change in their opinion.

Of course the New Media is proving very valuable. If you look how the left took over American politics, they started by creating new avenues to get out their voices. That is precisesly what we need to do.
 
I'm not entirely sure theres a conspiracy.

Suit yourself.

OskYdl.jpg

Seems to me Obvious Troll is Obvious. And no one could be more obvious to my eyes than the owner of the New York Post.

You really don't think the Old Aussie Corporatist wanted someone with the integrity of Ron Paul in the White House? They guy the K Street lobbyists call Dr. No? Seriously?

There ain't much than can give someone like Rupert Murdoch nightmares; but that would certainly do it.
 
Suit yourself.



Seems to me Obvious Troll is Obvious. And no one could be more obvious to my eyes than the owner of the New York Post.

You really don't think the Old Aussie Corporatist wanted someone with the integrity of Ron Paul in the White House? They guy the K Street lobbyists call Dr. No? Seriously?

There ain't much than can give someone like Rupert Murdoch nightmares; but that would certainly do it.

It isn't just Murdoch, and it's no conspiracy theory. Conflicts of interest occur when you have something like 95% of the media owned by 5 megaconglomerate corporations with an abundance of different interests. GE owns NBC for instance, but it goes far far deeper than that. So yes, there is of course a conspiracy, and my guess is that it is in large part interested in maintaining the 2-party system that is used to prop up corrupt puppet candidates by being "the lesser of two evils". Divide and conquer.

No doubt in my mind that the corrupt elite would all rather have Obama re-elected than let an honest man like Dr. Paul anywhere near their gravy train.
 
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Eh, I don't want this thread to get hijacked into a discussion of media elites and corruption.

This thread is about the election results, what they actually mean, and what we do to maximize our efforts in the coming months.
 
Eh, I don't want this thread to get hijacked into a discussion of media elites and corruption.

This thread is about the election results, what they actually mean, and what we do to maximize our efforts in the coming months.

Then you might not want to play the conspiracy card when discussing what is widely known in academia.
 
Eh, I don't want this thread to get hijacked into a discussion of media elites and corruption.

This thread is about the election results, what they actually mean, and what we do to maximize our efforts in the coming months.

Well, if you know how to divorce the maximization of our efforts to elect an anti-corporatist and the issue of corruption and the Mainstream Mafia--er, I mean Media, by all means enlighten us!! Seems to me those two are inescapably intertwined.
 
im a realistic, its not gonna look good for the GOP no matter what they do. Reagan gave amnesty to illlegals no mass hispanic movement to the GOP

they should be concerned Asian vote, who are considered non-monolithic in their voting patterns - unlike blacks.
 
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