Roanoke Red Zone: Phone Booth Republicans
Brandon Bell makes a fair point, and D.J. McGuire brings it full circle with the way western and eastern Virginians define what is important.
But I want to bring Bell’s finer point to light, because it’s worth mentioning:
Anyone who has been involved in politics for a while knows that these mass meetings are never perfect. They are run by volunteers. Not professionals. As a party leader, Kurt Michael (and others) knew that mistakes were being made. Instead of acting the statesmen and offering to help, they waited until they could take advantage of the parliamentary technicality and defy the will of the majority. Some leader, huh?
So you ask, is this the way to build a party? Is this the way to heal old wounds? We all know the answer. But I’ve come to realize something. Michael and crowd don’t care. They never have. And they don’t really care about ideology. What they care about is power. And they will do anything, including the destruction of their own party, to get it and keep it. Sadly, the same power grab is happening in the Sixth District Committee, with Jim Crosby challenging current Chairman Fred Anderson for the top spot.
Cast the names aside for a moment, because it doesn’t matter who the names are.
In the struggle between “big tent” and principle, what precisely is the long pole? What is the one unifying principle that motivates all of us to work together and beat the Democrats?
Any party, any association of like-minded souls needs to have that one brass ring that unites those who disagree on finer points.
D.J McGuire brings up excellent points as to how the east vs. west defines what is important — fiscal conservativism vs. social conservativism. I would probably hasten to overlay how the tactics are vastly different between more urbanized Virginians (NOVA vs. ROVA — but a variant thereof) living in the Golden Crescent and those outside of the economic boom.
Of course, without principles and without a long pole, there is no tent. So what you have happen is a battle over principles… and eventually, you whittle yourselves into a party that can fit into a phone booth. Isn’t this what happened to the Libertarian Party?
The battle for principles was lost the moment Republicans gained a majority and did nothing to reduce the size and scope of our government — plain and simple. Counties such as Augusta that are writhing in pain are doing so for lack of leadership, not for lack of principle and certainly not for want of trying.
Whether the process is natural or manufactured (or acerbated) due to personalities is something we’ll never fix. But at some point in time, leadership will not become a function of compromise. Rather, the leadership the Republican Party needs will be a function of principle — a uniting principle that brings fiscal and social conservatives together for a time no matter how brief.
Reagan did this. Gingrich did this. Goldwater almost did this. In Virginia, former Governor George Allen did this based on a platform of reducing the size and scope of government… and we have survived on the carcass for nearly 15 years.
Look around. The grassroots complain, but the remaining activists (who haven’t been pushed out) are lazy compared to the Dems. The leadership pontificates, but offers no real substance to the base. Voters listen, but have long ceased to care.
This is not a cycle that is going to end easily.
Keep this in mind too — the Democrats were in precisely this position in 2000, and found themselves in it again in 2004. What pulled them out? One principle: hating President Bush. Six years later, they took Congress.
That’s not much of a principle, and the Congressional Democrats have quickly discovered that it is not enough to govern (just what have they accomplished, anyhow?) and certainly not enough to help their nominee in 2008. Nevertheless, it was enough to grant them power for two long years.
Republicans won’t need much. We just need something we don’t have yet. When we find that principle, the big tent will be easy enough to bring back. Until then, expect good and bad people to fall by the wayside — in Augusta and elsewhere.
In the meantime, wise party leaders will continue to build the apparatus that will take the best advantage of the eventual upswing… and it’ll come.
There’s probably an excellent mathematical model for all of this, but there’s no need to bore folks with details. Suffice to say, this is all perfectly natural in any given bottoming-out process, and pendulums always swing…
- Posted by Shaun Kenney at 11:00 pm
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Shaun What are you talking about?
Brandon Bell says Dr. Michael is a Professonial, when he is a volunteer, and the Professional elected officials, are some how volunteers who make mistakes?
Bell further says Dr. Michael doesn’t care about idealogy, just power, when he just stood up to a three term Senator over get this…
Ideas, the same party principles (ideas) you were just babbling about, limited govt, and less spending. Emmett Hanger loves every tax increase plan that can be dreamed up.
Nothing Bell is saying is factual or fair. What seems to be eating him is that Dr. Michael as a party chair, endorsed a challenger to an incumbent, just as Jim Crosby, a lowly Chair, endorsed a challenger against him the incumbent.
For someone who has taken on an incumbent, I would think you would hardly be trying to make this guy look anything different than what he is trying to accomplish.
Seriously this guy wants to say GOP Party Chairman are destroying the Party? How about a group of GOP Senators that make a Rock Star out of an ineffectual Gov. like Mark Warner, by conspiring with him to raise taxes, when in reality we were in a surplus.
It’s all well and good to be nice and cordial, but when someone is flat out exhibiting a projection score of 10 on a power scale of 1 to 10, it’s time to call them on it.
Brandon Bell knows who is really destroying the Party’s message, he is just trying to blame it on the people who are calling him on it, rather than looking in the mirror.
Shaun,
You post was very well stated. I am sorry that the bunch in Augusta are so emotional about this. I certainly appreciate everything that Dr. Michael and others have done. Political action is driven by who turns out the most people to support your position then working together thereafter. Sen. Hanger’s opposition simply didn’t get enough people to care enough to attend a mass meeting. The war in Augusta continues. I really don’t care who started it. Someone, and the best are the elected party leaders, needs to step forward and put all this to rest.
As you post some “state of being” is going to be required for us to learn to work together. What is apparant to me is that it will likely take being 100% in the minority.
All this reminds me of the the story of the Hatfields and McCoys. When one was asked why they were “a fueding” they didn’t know they just were. Both sides hated each other but the fued had been going on so long neither side knew what had started it. Both sides just wanted to win and be right.
This is not a Hatfield and McCoy parallel but a King George III and Patrick Henry parallel. The British Aristocracy versus the Colonial Americans. You may think this to be extreme but the more and more this meeting and the real motives behind it come to light, the more obvious those two comparisons become. Even Larry Roller in his candidate speech stated, “…the principles are a good perspective of the Party and are particularly helpful in choosing the strongest candidate for a vacated position. However, usually as long as an incumbent continues to run, there is no Primary for that position.“
Now does that sound like the people of Augusta County are “a fueding” just to do it and know no better? I think not. They know exactly what they are fighting for–and they’re not doing it for their own self-preservation. If they were thinking of their own immediate self-interest, they would have left long ago.
Former Senator Bell:
Let me help you with this statement –
“they didn’t know they just were. Both sides hated each other but the fued had been going on so long neither side knew what had started it. Both sides just wanted to win and be right.”
The voters of your district knew full well who fired the first shot. You did by voting for higher taxes! The Revolution to bring Conservatism back to our party was successful in your district.
It will take us a little longer to get a three term Senator heavily entrenched out of ours.
and for the umpteenth time, the first shot fired in our mass meeting was to change the temporary chair, for one that would change the rules for the meeting to a popular vote away from the electoral college system of voting per district in our bylaws.
The real story is that Hanger doesn’t have the support of the county beyond his district. That of course is a side to the argument that you will refuse to want to hear.
Thank God for blogs…