‘At the very least, conservatives must stop funding the Republican National Committee’

If you missed it, [tag]Richard Viguerie[/tag]’s op-ed over the weekend was as thorough a take-down as I’ve seen to explain why the conservative base is fed up with their Republican Party.

If nothing else, it offers a fairly comprehensive list of grievances — No Child Left Behind Act, Medicare Plan D, huge spending increases, McCain-Feingold, Harriet Miers, Dubai Ports World, Hurricane Katrina response, a bungled war in Iraq, the United Nations, rising Chinese and Russian threats, and the immigration “crisis.” And that’s just for the [tag]Bush[/tag] [tag]White House[/tag]. Viguerie is just as critical of the [tag]Republican[/tag] [tag]Congress[/tag], which has “lost interest in furthering conservative ideas” and instead created “an affirmative-action program for Republican lobbyists.”

[tag]Viguerie[/tag] concludes that Bush “talked like a conservative to win our votes,” while the Republican Party’s “agenda comes from Big Business, not from grass-roots conservatives.” But the interesting part is what Viguerie suggests conservatives do about it.

The current record of Washington Republicans is so bad that, without a drastic change in direction, millions of conservatives will again stay home this November.

And maybe they should. [tag]Conservatives[/tag] are beginning to realize that nothing will change until there’s a change in the GOP leadership. If congressional Republicans win this fall, they will see themselves as vindicated, and nothing will get better.

If conservatives accept the idea that we must support Republicans no matter what they do, we give up our bargaining position and any chance at getting things done. We’re like a union that agrees never to strike, no matter how badly its members are treated. Sometimes it is better to stand on principle and suffer a temporary defeat.

At the very least, conservatives must stop funding the Republican National Committee and other party groups. (Let Big Business take care of that!) Instead, conservatives should dedicate their money and volunteer efforts toward conservative groups and conservative candidates. They should redirect their anger into building a third force — not a third party, but a movement independent of any party. They should lay the groundwork for a rebirth of the conservative movement and for the 2008 campaign, when, perhaps, a new generation of conservative leaders will step forward.

So, any chance conservative activists will follow this game plan, or is the urge to stay loyal to the party just too strong? We’ve heard bluster like this before, but this is the first time in generations that Republicans have held this much power, for so long, and so thoroughly failed to use it wisely.

“…but a movement independent of any party.” – Richard Viguerie

He might pause for a second and ponder just how he is going to get politicians from a party he has demonized for decades to return his phone calls.

In some ways this is really silly. Viguerie’s grass-roots conservatives keep putting big business Frat-boy’s on their tickets, then are amazed that they get ignored. They have not real leaders of their own, they have to co-opt ones from other ‘conservative’ strains to get any momentum at all.

Plus, just looking at Viguerie’s list of grievences shows such an ideological inconsistency that it is laughable:

No Child Left Behind Act [Anti federal mandates, small government],
Medicare Plan D [Anti-spending, small government],
huge spending increases [fiscal conservatism],
McCain-Feingold [libertarianism],
Harriet Miers [competence in government],
Dubai Ports World [government limitations to foreign investment, security],
Hurricane Katrina response [competence in government, big government],
a bungled war in Iraq [competence, isolationist foreign policy],
the United Nations [what about it exactly? or is this just a code phrase?],
rising Chinese and Russian threats [interventionist foreign policy],
and the immigration “crisis.” [pandering to Know-Nothings]

Really, it seems he is just critizing Boy George II for everything that has gone badly (in his opinion) rather than trying to make a postive policy statement himself.

  • Lance, Lance, Lance … if you read the blurb at the end of the WaPo article you would know:

    Richard A. Viguerie, chairman of a Manassas marketing firm, is the author of “Conservatives Betrayed: How Big Government Republicans Hijacked the Conservative Cause” (Bonus Books), out this summer.

    Mr. Viguerie has a book to sell.

  • “the immigration “crisis.” ”

    Okay, this one especially I want explained. Boy George II did not cause the immigration crisis, Ronald Reagan and subsequent Presidents failed to fully implement the criminal employers provisions of the 1986 law, which meant there was a demand for undocumented labor, and now we have 12,000,000 illegals in this country. Of couse, Boy George II could have done something about that over the last five years, but is that what makes this a crisis, or is it the unimplementable demands of the Know-Nothings in this country?

  • “Mr. Viguerie has a book to sell.” – skip

    Is it at least internally consistent? Or just another list of complaints?

    Kind of amazing how conservatives are making money on trashing their great Texas hope, Boy George II.

  • If Mr. Viguerie feels unrepresented by the Republican Party, perhaps he should advocate that the United States switch to a parliamentary form of government with multiple parties. Of course, if we currently had such a system, President Bush would no longer be president because he would have lost a “no confidence vote” months ago.

  • Yeah, Lance —

    I always suspected that virulent conservatives were cannibals at heart. And you’re right: They are damn inconsistent with their ideology.

  • My response to Richard Viguerie: “Blah blah blah. Go to hell. This is your party now. This has been your party for 10 years as your hammered Democrats and jumped around reveling in your power. Stop whining about your supposed ideals. These are your ideals now: corporations write our legislation, cronies get the handouts, and the rest of us can just die. We told you what you were going to get from Bush, and you didn’t listen. You just laughed at flip floppers and Internet inventors. So unless you’re going to vote Democrat or not vote at all this November and in 2008, then shut the hell up. My guess: you’re just going to snivel about how your candidate doesn’t stand for your positions, then vote for him anyway because you’re too cowardly not too.”

  • “perhaps he should advocate that the United States switch to a parliamentary form of government with multiple parties.” – skip

    I liked a suggestion George Will made a couple of years ago. Increase the number of representatives in the house to 1000 (it’s set by law, not constitution, right now at 435), put them in super districts of five representatives each (if the state can handle it, some would have only a couple of representatives) and let people vote for whoever. You’d get a lot closer representation of your views and fewer people would be ‘unrepresented’. I suspect I’d be voting for left of center candidates supporting social issue libertarianism, fiscal conservatism and competent regulatory bodies. In short, exactly the opposite of what we have right now 😉

  • Feh, the GOP has been splitting up for about 14 years now-it started in 1992. Bush Jr. was barely able to hold the coalition together with wedge issues and terra! terra! terra! He was able to scrounge up almost 51% but I certainly don’t see any of the current crop of Republicans being able to do even that. Everybody in the GOP has got the “my way or the highway” mentality. But who can blame them? If they have worked, apparently, since 1978 to be where they are now then I guess social conservatives and other republicans expect their reward for their hard work. I imagine that there will be tons of these people not even showing up to vote. I’m wondering how many will completely drop out of the voting process altogether.

  • Lance, you called me “skip” twice. It’s “slip” kid no more. One of these days, I’ll figure out how to do the emoticons.

  • My letter to Mr. Viguerie, sent last night:

    All I can say, Mr. Viguerie, is Ha-Ha-Ha.

    Bush was a sham and a facade and a self-serving, self-dealing untruth teller from the word go. I’m afraid I must consider any serious cry of betrayal of your cause(s) by Bush to be the height of either naivite or self delusion.

    Your concerns about Russia and China are valid. Are you just now coming to understand what the implications are of BushCo and RepubCo spending policies and military mismanagement? This country has been weakened by this man, his Vice President and by the Republican lead congress which has offered no oversight or criticism. And it sure as hell has offered not a moment of leadership to making America a better country.

    I have not a smidgen of sympathy for your sense of betrayal Mr. Viguerie. You helped create this. You worked hard and encouraged “your people” to put Bush in office twice. You are coming very late to a realization which many people came to several years ago. And if you don’t feel you are coming to it late, where has your critical voice been all along?

    You and your “conservative” friends saw what they wanted to see when they went to visit Bush in Austin.

    Bash away Mr. Viguerie. At this point, none of your complaints are new or surprising.

    His e-mail is…are you ready…
    rav@conservativesbetrayed.com

    Don’t it just break your f***in heart?

  • I liked a suggestion George Will made a couple of years ago. Increase the number of representatives in the house to 1000

    Just like a conservative to SAY he is against big government and then suggest that it get bigger.

  • Why is it that conservatives, like Vigurie, think they are so right on how government should work? They’ve had complete control of all branches of governement and look at how they completely f’ed it up! I think they are just like communists: in theory their ideas should work, but they fail to take into account the flaws of people placed in leadership positions (that rule works for both business and governement.) What should be an election issue in ’06 and ’08 is that conservativism just doesn’t work in practice. Make conservative a dirty word to call a political leader.

  • Comments are closed.