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Democrats and Republicans united in concern about GOP presidential candidates

Posted on Thursday, March 15, 2012 at 09:29 AM

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Sarah Palin

The whole country, Democrats and Republicans alike, have something in common this month -- total ambivalence about the current crop of GOP candidates.

For liberals they’re a lineup of yesterday’s men -- from the guy who lost to the last guy who lost, to the guy who was run out on a rail.

Their stances on most hot button social issues seem to run the gamut from completely out of touch to shockingly theocratic. For liberals they’re a particularly unsavory lineup of 1950s wannabes and fundamentalists.

Thankfully, it also looks like they’re an unelectable lineup.

Conservatives have different worries about the same candidates.

Firstly they worry that Mitt Romney is not conservative enough … then they fret that Rick Santorum is too governed by his militantly Catholic outlook that will not appeal to moderates … and Newt Gingrich is admired more than loved.

But the real problem, which isn’t being addressed, isn’t the opinions that the individual candidates hold – it’s the opinions that they’re allowed to hold.

When the billionaire backers of the Tea Party created a right wing noise machine to stymie the Obama administration at every turn, they little suspected that what they had unleashed would come to set the agenda for the entire party.

But that day has arrived. The Tea Party rhetoric has been so uncompromising, so ludicrous and so successful that it has set the agenda for the entire GOP.

None of the candidates dare to express themselves now without first consulting Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin and the pundits of Fox News.

But it turns out that attacking competence, longstanding expertise in your field and diplomatic authority has some unintended consequences.

Replacing career diplomats with hockey moms from Alaska isn’t always prudent politics.

Going with your gut and selecting a candidate for their looks is an emotional but not an intellectual response to politics.

Calling the establishment of your own party an out of touch elite may feel right, but that doesn’t indicate it is right.

By dumbing down and playing to the gallery the GOP have lost control of the party and given it over to a monster they created themselves.

This week a poll discovered that 52% of Mississippi GOP voters believe that President Barack Obama is a Muslim.

That’s probably an emotional response more than a rational one. It’s a way of acknowledging his otherness, which means his race.

It’s not the first time this has happened. Remember the “birther” movement, which claimed Obama isn’t even a U.S. citizen?

Establishment conservatives who claimed to know nothing about it quietly but consistently encouraged this kind of out-there insanity.

Palin, the acknowledged Tea Party queen and the symbol of the malaise afflicting the party, has never been afraid to stoke the worst kind of demagoguery in the base from notoriously accusing the president of “palling around with terrorists,” to her recent outrageous claims that he wants to drive the country back to the racial discrimination “before the Civil War.”

Palin said on Fox News last week, “Now, it has taken all these years for many Americans to understand that that gravity, that mistake, took place before the Civil War, and why the Civil War had to really start changing America. What Barack Obama seems to want to do is go back to before those days when we were in different classes based on income, based on color of skin.”

Politics ain’t beanbag, as someone said, but nor should it be a blatant call to arms against a phantom racist conflict.

It surprised me that Palin’s intemperate comments didn’t cause the immediate firestorm they were intended to. Perhaps that’s a reflection of her increasing irrelevance, or perhaps the ridiculous message couldn’t resonate beyond the base she had pitched them to.

But it’s a measure of the times we live in, and it’s a measure of the deep identity crisis the GOP is having internally right now, that this unrepentant political arsonist has a platform within the party at all.

No one minds the rough and tumble of politics, but predictions of a national race war are an astounding misuse of the national stage.

To make Republican misery even more pronounced, news that the U.S. economy is picking up steam and adding jobs again cannot fail to make the GOP worry about its chances in November.

We’re eight months away from Election Day now and it will probably be decided on the health of the economy.

But we should not forget what has happened and is happening still within the party on the long road to Election Day.




22 comments

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Forget about liking or not liking Obama; we vote for or against the Great American Divide. The Great Divide in politics is rivaled only by the Great Divide in income, with more than half of US incomes going to the top 20 percent of households and 46.2 million of us living in poverty. The poor include 22 percent of the nation's children (US Census 2010). In their complaints about Obama making the economy worse, the GOP candidates advocate only deepening the divide between 'haves' and 'have nots,' as in the Ryan Plan. If you're 10 years or more from retirement, you'll need to save $million$-- figure out how much. If you earn less than $106,000, you will have paid your share of Social Security, but won't have that when you need it, while those above $106,000 are ahead by under-paying it. Are you female? You earn, on average, 77 percent of the average male income and will have proportionally less retirement income. Medicare? Sure you've been paying for it, but you won't have it. Instead, you'll have vouchers that increase at the inflation rate while your health care costs increase at more than double that rate. Top earners and corporations will enjoy a 10 percent tax cut, but you, living on your savings because your company no longer funds pensions, will pick up their tab. So let's figure it out before November: which side of the Great American Divide are we on?
BTW: Governor Palin is not running. BTW: The Tea Party has yet to endorse anyone. BTW: Neither is The Fat Man or Beck or ... Anyway, "It's the economy, stupid" - Slick Willy
Cahir, Typical load of left wing trash not worth reading, Look at who the liberals elected to lead the country in the last Presidental election. The worst President in memory and you dare to criticize the GOP canditates. Liberals keep blaming Bush for the financial situation and what Obama inherited. Well let me remind you that during the last year of the Clinton administration the economy was in a slump when George Bush took office. When Obama took office he had control of the Congress and Senate for 2 years. He didn't lower the debt but increased it by many millions/ trillions. You can't blame George Bush for that. Obama does not have a record that he can run on so has to resort to bashing GOP candidates. By the way Sarah Palin isn't running for office so why is he hitting out at her. Anyone of the Republican Presidental candidates would be better than Obama.
McNamara,don't know where you are from but you are uninformed. Obama is the worst President ever in USA history. He is a dictator and wants to take over every aspect of our lives. I live in Texas, born in Ireland, lived in London, lived in Saudi and if you can't see our liberties disappearing here by this admin. then you have your head in the sand. This report above is so liberal and part of the Obama minons. They disgust meand hate America just like Obama does. We will take any one over Obama.
johhnyb Maybe you should compare job growth during Bush's term vs Obama and how about the two wars Obama is bringing to a close; or that it was his administration that actually took out Bin Laden. And maybe ask workers in America's car manufacturing how they feel about their job's. And about gas prices.... Isn't it time we made speculation in oil illegal? Finally yes my friend our economic woe's are Bush's fault.
Maybe you hadn't noticed, but Mrs Palin was replying to an advert that President Obama launched against her. Isn't she free to do that? By the way, what do you think of President Obama's record on jobs, the price of gasoline, the national debt and bringing peace to the Middle East? Or is all that that still Bush's fault?
America is in a very dangerous time. Many of the fringe who also are the most motivated voters in primaries and major elections no longer care about truth or facts, they merely tune into a station that is going to reinforce their biases. Murdoch, Roger Ailes and Karl Rove have created a “machine” that has taken control; with one purpose, to distort the facts so severely that the American voter truly believes they are under threat by the present administration. While all the manufactures deflections and sideshows grab attention, our country falls deeper into debt, with infrastructure crumbling while GOP “Cheerleader” like the very ignorant Mrs. Palin continue to feed the nation propaganda. Haven’t we had enough of this?
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