NEWS TALK RADIO Our Hosts
Powered by: Townhall.com
Sign Up
Wednesday, August 06, 2008
Craig Shirley :: Townhall.com Columnist
Morning Dawns Over the Silly Season
by Craig Shirley
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
What will you do with your tax rebate?



Every four years, the sun dawns over the “silly season” of pre-convention blather in Washington, centered mostly, on which of the prospective candidates for the vice presidential slot seemingly makes the most sense.

Inevitably, the conversations are dominated by those who know the least and have the least experience in campaigns come up with the lamest reasons why a given party’s nominee ought to nominate so and so, the more gimmicky, the better.

There is but one reason and one reason only to pick a vice presidential running mate beyond the obvious qualifications; and that is to unify a political party. For many years, both parties operated in more or less a state of equilibrium and so wisely, the moderate Eisenhower picked the conservative Nixon. The conservative Nixon picked the moderate Lodge, the conservative Reagan picked the moderate Bush and so forth. On the Democratic side, the moderate JFK picked the conservative LBJ, the conservative LBJ picked the moderate Humphrey, the conservative Jimmy Carter picked the moderate Mondale, and so forth.

As the parties have become more polarized, thanks in part to Barry Goldwater in 1964 and George McGovern in 1972, the tickets have become closer ideologically. Still, the GOP has its more conservative elements and its more moderate elements. Think Club for Growth vs. Ripon Society. The Democrats meanwhile have Moveon.org Vs. the “Blue Dog Democrats.”

John McCain and Barack Obama are no different, getting an unwanted earful emanating form the cacophony of absurdity from the punditry classes at the local drinking salons of Washington, on cable television and the Internet.

The possibility that Hillary Clinton might have won the Democratic nomination led some Republicans to argue for picking a woman for the GOP ticket, the evident reason being to out-pander the Democrats.

Obama does not have the problem of McCain, given his status. He simply needs to pick a boring white guy who is seen as incorruptible, stable, a family guy. Think Evan Bayh.

But now that Obama is on his way to the Democratic nomination, the woman talk has died down in the GOP though it set off a mad scramble to find an African-American to go on the GOP ticket. Problem is, they are in short supply these days in the Republican Party. So the next best thing the panderists thought was Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana. Jindal is a conservative, a Brainiac, and is also only about 12 minutes older than the constitutional age limit for the office. The panderists liked him though because he is a minority, of Indian descent. (Not that Indian, the other Indian.)

Give him a couple of years to mature, though, and he will be one of the GOP’s most interesting leaders along with Gov. Sara Pallin of Alaska. Tough, smart, anti-corruption---which is sorely needed in the criminal enterprise that passes for a political parties these days.

Others still argue for former Massachusetts Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, suggesting he would bring the conservative movement with him. This argument identifies McCain’s problem but Romney may not be the solution.

McCain has yet to unify the conservative movement that is not a wing of the GOP but the glue that holds it together. Conservatives have been battered and bewildered by eight years of betrayal, of Rovism, of Bushism and many are openly discussing the possible strategic advantage of losing in November and having a government dominated by extreme left wing liberals as a means of rebuilding populist conservatism.

The idea of picking Romney begs the question, if Romney was the darling of conservatives, then why didn’t he get the nomination in the first place? Is it possible that grassroots conservatives have become choosy shoppers, having been told by Bush that he was one of them but then went and behaved like those other guys?

Upon scratching the surface, conservatives found out Romney supported mandates in Massachusetts, antithetical to people who believe Freedom is their organizing principle. Continued...

1 2
| Full Article & Comments | Next >
Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author
Craig Shirley is the president of Shirley & Banister Public Affairs and the author of a history of the 1976 campaign, Reagan's Revolution: The Untold Story of the Campaign That Started it All. He is now writing a book about the 1980 campaign, Rendezvous with Destiny.

Be the first to read Craig Shirley's column. Sign up today and receive Townhall.com delivered each morning to your inbox.

Subject: Romney is wrong for America and the GOP
The writer is right on. If Romney were so good - why didn't he win. Because the party of Reagan will not elect someone who supported abortion more than Ted Kennedy. Because the party of Reagan will not support a heathen who claims the Lord Jesus Christ and satan are brothers.

Reagan built a great coalition - economic conservatives who demanded lower taxes and less government, foreign policy conservatives who demanded a military second to none and leadership willing to stand up for the USA, and Christian conservatives who were and still are appalled by the abortion on demand and gay "marriage" of the Dumbocrats.

This coalition did great things during the 80's. The coalition came together again in 1994 to put the GOP in charge of the House for the first time in 40 years and in charge of the Senate. The Republican leadership squandered that effort - higher and higher spending, scandals, and a lack of message.

This year, for some strange reason, the economic conservatives latched onto Romney, with his socialized medicine, which is absolutely contrary to anything Ronald Reagan would ever consider. They also want to throw we Christian conservatives off the bus. Well, without all three members of the coalition, it does not win. If McCain is foolish enough to pick satan worshipping Romney, he loses badly as millions of Christians like me stay home or vote for a 3rd party.

John - don't commit suicide with the heathen Romney!

I used to think liberals were dopes
Then the republican primaries started. That's when I learned that both parties are equally full of uninformed/misinformed pinheads. All these idiots were rallying around liberals like Huckabee and Gulliani, while Mitt Romney, a man with an actual proven resume and an actual conservative, languished in the polls. "I like the way he sounds", the Huckabee crowd would gush, sounding themselves much like Obama supporters.

"if Romney was the darling of conservatives, then why didn’t he get the nomination in the first place?", asks the author. Simple. It's the same reason LBJ, Carter, and Clinton got to be president -- because they let the morons vote.

People who choose a candidate because he "looks presidential", or "sounds good" or says this or says that should not be voting.

You don't vote based on how he dresses, or what goofy antics he performs in front of the cameras, or, worst of all, on what he SAYS. You vote based upon what he's DONE.
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!