Saw this online, and thought the writer made some good points...
...any thoughts?
Unfortunately, no conservative candidate will ever again win enough delegates to clinch the nomination until the Republican Party addresses the fact that its current caucus/primary system is its own greatest enemy.
I believe the blueprint is now in place for conservatism's doom in the Republican party. We did not choose McCain; McCain was chosen for us by a front-loaded system favoring the "blue states" which would not (and did not!) vote for McCain in the general election anyway. If nothing changes, next caucus/primary season, the same thing will inevitably happen, the most moderate/centrist candidate will again be forced upon us.
Our first priority ought to be how we're going to clean up this mess.
I disagree, but then I don't think the Republican Party has to go back so far to the right. Here is how I see this election year.
1. McCain ran a terrible campaign. One of the worst I have seen in a long time. I think he did better on the issues than Obama, but he didn't talk about them enough.
2. Obama ran a great campaign. He had a lot of help with that with the MSM because they would not look into some serious issues they should have, but still, I have to give him credit, he did run a great campaign.
3. Many people are still pissed at President Bush. At least some of the votes Obama got were not for him, nor were they against McCain, they were against Bush.
4. The economy tanked at the perfect time for Obama, and McCain made one bad decision there. He didn't look presidential while the situation floundered. The MSM made Obama look presidential with their spin instead of pointing out that what Obama did do was back away and let mommy and daddy handle it, in other words voting present on the solution. Because McCain didn't handle it well, he couldn't use it as an issue to beat him with.
Notice, none of these 4 points talks about Republican or Democrat values. And, even with the first 3 point, McCain was still ahead until point number 4 happened.
Do we need to get back to basics and get back to our values? Heck yes, but not in an exclusionary way. To try to fit all Republicans in a cookie cutter way really would be the death of the party.
We really are in a good position. All the pressure to perform is on the Democrats. They can no longer claim "well we wanted to fix it but the Republicans stopped us". I don't know about you, but the reason I AM a Republican is because I don't believe the policies of the Democrats work. I don't believe they have it right. We will now see. As a Republican, here are my predictions for the next 2 years:
1. The economy is going to get worse. I think we will see an increase in unemployment, an increase in inflation, and a stifling of the GDP. We will be in worse shape in October 2010 than we were in October 2008.
2. Our dependence on foreign oil will still be there. We will have moved very little on this issue from where we are now. We will still be "hoping" for someone to come up with a way for us to "change" this situation.
3. There will be some issues that will be passed, or attempted to be passed that are so far left that all moderates will be pissed about, including blue dogs. I think there is a lot of buyers regret going on now.
The Democrats have to perform now. If they don't, they have nothing to point to, to blame it on. And I don't think they can truly perform more than a circus side show, with lots of good phrases, lots of feel goods - nothing that will put food on the table or get anyone a job.
It's a real simple game plan to win in 2010. Take every Congressperson in office now (especially Democrats), show how they voted, and ask the folks "do you agree with this decision?". In 2010, we should stay completely away from saying good or bad, just this is what they did, do you agree? It's so simple I'm thinking of doing it here. Same way Obama was able to say "McCain voted 90% with George Bush" we will get to say "X voted 90% with Nancy Pelosi".
We believe what we believe. The people don't have a problem with our differences. They do have a problem when our candidates appear dishonest, and practice more Democratic values than Republican.