McCain to visit with the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy

Usually, political groups trip over one another to try and gain public notoriety and attention. The Council for National Policy, meanwhile, would be perfectly happy if the public didn’t even know it exists. (I’ve long believed the easiest job on Earth would be to serve as this group’s press secretary.)

The CNP is made up of many heavy-hitters from the religious right and conservative movement in general, and they meet periodically to plot and scheme. It may sound excessively cloak-and-dagger of the group, but the CNP has a list of formal rules, one of which reads, “The media should not know when or where we meet or who takes part in our programs, before or after a meeting.”

Fortunately, details routinely leak. Today in New Orleans, for example, the CNP will gather and hear from none other than John McCain. (You know, the one who “refuses to pander” to anyone.)

Sen. John McCain, in his post-victory debut before the conservative movement’s top donors and leaders, will address the Council for National Policy’s annual winter meeting here today.

His remarks at the event, which has always been closed to the public and will have only a partial accommodation of the press this year for the first time, could turn out to be his make-or-break pitch for support from some of the right’s most influential critics of his past positions and policies.

“This is the most distinguished collection of conservative leaders and donors, and he was anxious to appear as part of his ongoing effort to consolidate support for his candidacy within the conservative movement,” said Charlie Black, Mr. McCain’s campaign adviser.

Not everyone will be glad to see him. One veteran CNP member told the far-right Washington Times, “It will say more about the state of the conservative movement than it does McCain. If he is accepted at CNP, this will mark the official end of the conservative movement as we knew it.”

And who, exactly, is the Council for National Policy? I’m glad you asked.

U.S. News reported during the ’04 campaign:

The supersecret Council for National Policy, founded at the onset of the Reagan era, will be meeting in New York at an undisclosed location in hopes of avoiding protesters. The thousand member group includes political heavyweights like John Ashcroft, Bill Frist, and Tom DeLay, religious leaders from Pat Robertson to James Dobson, media moguls like Steve Forbes, and conservative billionaires Howard Ahmanson and Nelson Bunker Hunt.

Conservative Republicans boast that the council’s meeting is the “real” convention. “It’s the old smoke-filled room, but I wouldn’t say it’s corrupt,” says a source. “Rather it’s just where the work gets done.”

No one really knows what kind of work gets done when these wealthy, powerful right-wingers gather in their proverbial smoke-filled room. We do know that the CNP was co-founded by Tim LaHaye, who provides the Biblical analysis for the popular, right-wing “Left Behind” novels and who has worked to advance the religious right’s agenda for decades.

We also know that the CNP’s membership reads like a who’s who of some powerful far-right players. In addition to those mentioned in the U.S. News piece, readers may recognize names such as Grover Norquist, Phyllis Schlafly, and Oliver North.

Perhaps the best mainstream report on the CNP came from ABC News a couple of years ago, which described the Council as “the most powerful conservative group you’ve never heard of.”

When Steve Baldwin, the executive director of an organization with the stale-as-old-bread name of the Council for National Policy, boasts that “we control everything in the world,” he is only half-kidding.

Half-kidding, because the council doesn’t really control the world. The staff of about eight, working in a modern office building in Fairfax, Va., isn’t even enough for a real full-court basketball game.

But also half-serious because the council has deservedly attained the reputation for conceiving and promoting the ideas of many who in fact do want to control everything in the world.

As for McCain, the Washington Times added, “‘We agreed the press could sit in a separate room and listen to the speech and the questions and answers,’ a CNP official said, speaking anonymously because the rules of the council forbid officials or members to speak by name in public.”

It should be interesting. Right Wing Watch also has a good item on the CNP.

Off topic, but MSNBC is showing an extended clip of McCain getting pissy with a reporter for daring to ask him about Kerry asking him to be his VP in 2004. At first I thought this was overblown, but the full clip is long and chocked full of cranky. Nice to see Senator Hothead starting to hit his stride.

  • Tim LaHaye, who provides the Biblical analysis for the popular, right-wing “Left Behind” novels and who has worked to advance the religious right’s agenda for decades.

    That’s an understatement, if anything. LaHaye was one of the founding five behind the Moral Majority. Before that, he practically coined the term “secular humanism” and led countless crusades against teaching evolution, mutliculturalism, sex ed, etc. etc. in public schools. His wife Beverly is the leader of Concerned Women for America, which is often referred to as the “conservative NOW.” (CWA has more members and more funding than NOW, so perhaps we should call NOW the “liberal CWA.”)

    With Falwell gone and Robertson marginalized, LaHaye is the embodiment of the Religious Right. And yet most liberals have never heard of him. Watch this man like a hawk.

  • No doubt McCain will get the message from this group and toe the line, it’s called the Bullshit Express. The only solice I get is knowing that someday these subhumans will die, and expecting St. Peter at the Gates with gracious hand-kissing, they’ll instead be met by Thomas Jefferson, who will summarily beat the shit out of them and slamdunk their asses to the down elevator to hell, where the republicans hold their promised permanent majority.

  • Speaking of Councils, who, exactly, is the Council on Foreign Relations?

    It’s a “non-partisan think-tank” with upstanding members like Dick Cheney, Hillary Clinton, John McCain and Michelle Obama, that’s all. It’s a lot of geniuses who have been responsible for our foreign policy of American Empire-building over the years.

    I wouldn’t doubt that this Council on National Policy is an off-shoot of the CFR.

  • “… a CNP official said, speaking anonymously because the rules of the council forbid officials or members to speak by name in public.”

    That is an amazing statement all by itself. Somehow, my first impression is not that these guys are too humble to accept credit for all their good works.

  • Now for some reason, I just can’t get the opening scene from The Godfather out of my head…..

  • When I read about this, I didn’t think of The Godfather (per 2Manchu at #8). Rather I thought of the kind of social club where, after dinner, the members all get into the bathtub together and pee on each other.

  • toowearyforoutrage said:
    The first rule about The Council for National Policy is that you don’t talk about The Council for National Policy!

    🙂 And the second rule is that if it’s your first time at CNP, you HAVE to kowtow.

  • I wish it were, but that McCain incident isn’t crazy angry enough to have an impact. Too mild.

    Not on the general public, no.

    But this was a significant smackdown over a minor question, one that might help puncture the Cult of Saint McCain in the media. Or at least get their ardor back to pre-BBQ levels.

    At the very least, it starts to erode their buddy-buddy relationship a little.

  • Can you say, “theocratic fascism,” boys and girls? Good—I knew you could.

    And this doesn’t fall under “Godwin,” either. this has absolutely nothing to do with Naziism, and it has everything to do with the “monetary genetics” of blending authoritarian religious elitism (Dominionism) as a governmental ideal with the vagaries of uber-capitalism.

    The inherently-dangerous blend of government and business—fascism.

    The equally inherently-dangerous blend of religious dogma and government—theocracy.

    Thus, “Theocratic Fascism” converts from mere adjective to proper noun—and these people want to put a short little war veteran with a penchant for hotheadedness into the position of head of state?

    Be afraid, people—be VERY afraid….

  • Jim Strain said:
    “When I read about this, I didn’t think of The Godfather (per 2Manchu at #8). Rather I thought of the kind of social club where, after dinner, the members all get into the bathtub together and pee on each other.”

    Come to think of it, this does seem to have a very Skull-and-Bonesish aspect to it.

  • Vast Right Wing Conspiracy

    That’s just too funny. It should be called the “Vast Right Wing Truth Machine”, after all, they were telling the truth about Bill Clinton. Unlike…Bill Clinton. Or candidate Hillary Clinton.

  • “…LaHaye is the embodiment of the Religious Right. And yet most liberals have never heard of him.”

    I don’t know about that. I see his shitty, shitty novels on the shelves every time I go into a book store.

  • The good news, is that the majority of those council members are getting up there in age… so they shouldn’t have that much longer to live. Hopefully they won’t do too much more damage before they go extinct.

    I like the comment about the promised permanent republican majority down under….. 🙂

    I don’t understand … for all those Earth Liberation Front members in the news lately, who are trying to save the earth by burning down houses and businesses…. Maybe they should turn their attention to the members of that council… It would certainly save the earth more so than burning regular folk’s homes and businesses.

  • ”McCain getting pissy with a reporter for daring to ask him about Kerry asking him to be his VP in 2004”…Kerry’s vet record was vetted and scuttled…needed an Admiral’s son to keep himself afloat. Unfortunately, McCain has tradition of being shot down. Only enough room for one in his liferaft.

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