GOP must shed establishment
defeatism
By David Limbaugh
8/16/2013
What
are establishment Republicans
so afraid of? Why are they so convinced that if they stand up to Obama
— even
on issues the public agrees with them on — they will be spanked at the
ballot
box?
Playing
it safe sure has paid big
dividends, huh? Every time we’ve had a fight over a budget ceiling or a
continuing resolution, the establishment has told us we must not allow
the
government to shut down because Republicans would be blamed for it. The
actual
facts of the particular situation don’t matter — even if the
Republicans’
position is justified, defensible or over an issue that aligns them
with the
electorate. The establishment has decreed that we couldn’t possibly,
ever, come
out on top in such a battle.
It’s
been a self-fulfilling
prophecy. How can we prevail when we’ve announced in advance that we
can’t? How
can we conceivably win over the public when we concede defeat before
the battle
begins?
Why
is it automatically assumed
that in every such impasse, Republicans will be blamed instead of
Obama? Is it
not true that his profligate spending is unpopular with the majority?
That
Obamacare consistently polls poorly? That the economy remains stagnant?
“We
have to keep our eye on the big
ball,” they would say. “The 2012 elections are everything, and we’ll
lose if we
always appear as the party of ‘no.’”
Well,
last time I checked, we got
our clocks cleaned in 2012 after following this timid blueprint. Mitt
Romney
had Obama on the ropes in the first debate and refused to go in for the
kill on
Benghazi and other issues. He may as well have tendered his forfeiture
right
then and there.
Contrary
to establishment “wisdom,”
Republicans win elections when they contrast themselves with Democrats,
not
emulate them. You can’t inspire voters if you don’t offer them a
different,
superior vision.
Recently,
unnamed GOP strategists
warned that unless Republicans quit going negative on Obama, they’ll go
down in
flames in 2014 and possibly even lose their congressional majority. We
cannot
take the House for granted, they say.
In
the first place, any political
strategist who says Republicans can ever take any race for granted,
given the
liberal national media and the Democrats’ proficiency at propaganda,
ought to
be fired. We must always run as though everything is on the line and
assume
nothing.
But
how about this theory that
criticizing Obama is toxic and politically suicidal? How do people
impregnated
with such defeatism gravitate toward a profession that is all about
winning? Do
Democrats ever hold back their criticism of Republicans? Are they ever
shy
about lambasting Republicans as extremists and evil?
What
makes our Beltway guys think
they can compete with gloves on when the other side not only sheds the
gloves
but carries knives and guns? This is madness. This is maddening.
Moreover,
to say that Republicans
must decide whether to criticize Obama or to present an alternative
agenda is
giving a false choice. You can’t separate the two. We can’t possibly
make the
case for our own agenda unless we focus the high beams on the utter
failures of
Obama’s policies, his lawlessness, his divisiveness and his virtual
despotism...
Read
the rest of the article at
Human Events
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