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A Republican Political Consultant Comes Clean

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by gifford1967, Jul 31, 2020.

  1. gifford1967

    gifford1967 Contributing Member
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    It doesn't get more clear than this. You can't pretend you haven't been told. @Astrodome @B@ffled @Commodore


    I Hope This Is Not Another Lie About the Republican Party

    By Stuart Stevens
    Mr. Stevens is a Republican political consultant.

    July 29, 2020

    After Mitt Romney lost the 2012 presidential race, the Republican National Committee chairman, Reince Priebus, commissioned an internal party study to examine why the party had won the popular vote only once since 1988.

    The results of that so-called autopsy were fairly obvious: The party needed to appeal to more people of color, reach out to younger voters, become more welcoming to women. Those conclusions were presented as not only a political necessity but also a moral mandate if the Republican Party were to be a governing party in a rapidly changing America.

    Then Donald Trump emerged and the party threw all those conclusions out the window with an almost audible sigh of relief: Thank God we can win without pretending we really care about this stuff. That reaction was sadly predictable.

    I spent decades working to elect Republicans, including Mr. Romney and four other presidential candidates, and I am here to bear reluctant witness that Mr. Trump didn’t hijack the Republican Party. He is the logical conclusion of what the party became over the past 50 or so years, a natural product of the seeds of race-baiting, self-deception and anger that now dominate it. Hold Donald Trump up to a mirror and that bulging, scowling orange face is today’s Republican Party.

    I saw the warning signs but ignored them and chose to believe what I wanted to believe: The party wasn’t just a white grievance party; there was still a big tent; the others guys were worse. Many of us in the party saw this dark side and told ourselves it was a recessive gene. We were wrong. It turned out to be the dominant gene.

    What is most telling is that the Republican Party actively embraced, supported, defended and now enthusiastically identifies with a man who eagerly exploits the nation’s racial tensions. In our system, political parties should serve a circuit breaker function. The Republican Party never pulled the switch.

    Racism is the original sin of the modern Republican Party. While many Republicans today like to mourn the absence of an intellectual voice like William Buckley, it is often overlooked that Mr. Buckley began his career as a racist defending segregation.

    In the Richard Nixon White House, Pat Buchanan and Kevin Phillips wrote a re-election campaign memo headed “Dividing the Democrats” in which they outlined what would come to be known as the Southern Strategy. It assumes there is little Republicans can do to attract Black Americans and details a two-pronged strategy: Utilize Black support of Democrats to alienate white voters while trying to decrease that support by sowing dissension within the Democratic Party.

    That strategy has worked so well that it was copied by the Russians in their 2016 efforts to help elect Mr. Trump.

    In the 2000 George W. Bush campaign, on which I worked, we acknowledged the failures of Republicans to attract significant nonwhite support. When Mr. Bush called himself a “compassionate conservative,” some on the right attacked him, calling it an admission that conservatism had not been compassionate. That was true; it had not been. Many of us believed we could steer the party to that “kinder, gentler” place his father described. We were wrong.

    Reading Mr. Bush’s 2000 acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention now is like stumbling across a document from a lost civilization, with its calls for humility, service and compassion. That message couldn’t attract 20 percent in a Republican presidential primary today. If there really was a battle for the soul of the Republican Party, we lost.

    There is a collective blame to be shared by those of us who have created the modern Republican Party that has so egregiously betrayed the principles it claimed to represent. My j’accuse is against us all, not a few individuals who were the most egregious.

    How did this happen? How do you abandon deeply held beliefs about character, personal responsibility, foreign policy and the national debt in a matter of months? You don’t. The obvious answer is those beliefs weren’t deeply held. What others and I thought were bedrock values turned out to be mere marketing slogans easily replaced. I feel like the guy working for Bernie Madoff who thought they were actually beating the market.

    Mr. Trump has served a useful purpose by exposing the deep flaws of a major American political party. Like a heavy truck driven over a bridge on the edge of failure, he has made it impossible to ignore the long-developing fault lines of the Republican Party. A party rooted in decency and values does not embrace the anger that Mr. Trump peddles as patriotism.

    This collapse of a major political party as a moral governing force is unlike anything we have seen in modern American politics. The closest parallel is the demise of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union, when the dissonance between what the party said it stood for and what citizens actually experienced was so great that it was unsustainable.

    This election should signal a day of reckoning for the party and all who claim it as a political identity. Will it? I’ve given up hope that there are any lines of decency or normalcy that once crossed would move Republican leaders to act as if they took their oath of office more seriously than their allegiance to party. Only fear will motivate the party to change — the cold fear only defeat can bring.

    That defeat is looming. Will it bring desperately needed change to the Republican Party? I’d like to say I’m hopeful. But that would be a lie and there have been too many lies for too long.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/29/opinion/trump-republican-party-racism.html
     
    calcium, mdrowe00, Andre0087 and 6 others like this.
  2. B@ffled

    B@ffled Member

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    Duly Noted.

    I'd be lying if I said I didn't worry about the R party (or anything other than the D party) might be diminishing into a minority as the millennial generation begins it's dominance. But we'll certainly know where we stand after the election. Right now it's impossible to know because of the press. I don't believe the polls even though they may be 100% accurate. The MSM has gone so far left politically that the only metric will be the election, assuming it's a FAIR election. And no, I'm not down with Trump's remarks about postponing the election. I think that's him drawing a line in the sand about "massive mail in voting" (note: I'm not saying absentee voting).

    What concerns me more is that there is no pushback from the left or D party to call out the MSM. If the show were on the other foot, I think I'd at least acknowledge there is a problem and then be glad that the problem is not hurting my party......at the moment. I think the MSM is everyone's problem.

    I also don't understand why there isn't more pushback from the traditional D party against the radicalized movement that used to be fringe, but now appears to be part of the platform. I'll ask you guys: Are you guys quiet because you're focused on one thing - removing Trump? Or is everyone onboard with the fringe being part of the platform? A year ago AOC was considered fringe by almost any measure. A lot changed in a year.
     
    Invisible Fan likes this.
  3. CometsWin

    CometsWin Breaker Breaker One Nine

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    New title.

    Deplorables and Republican sloganeering, a match made in hell.
     
    RayRay10 likes this.
  4. Invisible Fan

    Invisible Fan Contributing Member

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    Moderate voices have been silenced through the slow drip off Trump's daily ugliness and lies.

    Each year has had some divisive flashpoint whether it's the teardown of decency for all immigrants, the ongoing shootings since Obama, Charleston "both sides", the corruption with his appointees , impeachment, etc...

    You lament Dem moderates are silent yet republicans in Congress has been in lockstep with Trump despite agreeing that he's a repugnant character. They do so because of the voters swear by Trump, so your own party has already weeded out their moderates and the people have already bought that as the new reality.

    The msm are not allies to liberals. They have their own interests and have a huge part in Trump's election, which is probably why they're more out for blood right now.

    I do think we'd be better served of the Republican platform stood for actual governance (not the divisive ideological BS that caused them to fumble the recent Corona relief bill or all the other times they almost made the US default). Race is the only thing keeping their tent together, but what about when they're actually elected and are in power? What new has America accomplished that isn't about turning back the clock with Republican control? Space Force? I guess my grandchildren will appreciate it if we solve every other pressing issue right now...

    Real reasonable governance is hard. Passing a tax cut during a growth cycle seems to be the only damn thing Rs agree with.

    Sad for us all.
     
    calcium, mdrowe00, CometsWin and 2 others like this.

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