Friday, May 16, 2014

TEA-PARTY WAR




Tea Party leaders need not apply
in Republican Party of the future

“While the voice of every Republican should be heard, our challenge is to figure out how to be a conservative party, without allowing the most extreme voices of the day to control our party and determine its future direction.”

That was former Virginia Lt. Governor Bill Bolling in the pages of the Washington Post responding to the election of Fred Gruber to head up Virginia’s 7th Congressional District Republican Committee. Bolling called the result “extremely disappointing.”

So, what was it about Gruber that compelled Bolling to refer to him as one of the “most extreme voices” in the Republican Party?

Judging from Gruber’s rather mundane campaign website, it is somewhat hard to say. His biography does state that “Fred believes our Party is on the wrong track, and has been an outspoken advocate for the need to reform.”

Okay, so he’s not an establishment guy, and is not supportive of the current Republican majority in the House, thinks we’re spending too much, and the like.

But so what? Isn’t there room in the Virginia Republican Party for activists like Gruber, who heads the Louisa, Virginia Tea Party and otherwise has spent his career as a financial analyst?

Otherwise, Gruber ran on a rather innocuous platform “to bring in new activists from the Tea Party, the Liberty movement, and pro-Family movement, and unite them with traditional Republicans to build a stronger GOP toward winning elections in our state and nationally.”

Frankly, that’s all pretty standard boilerplate as far as Republican politics goes.

Then again, Bolling’s frustration may have had nothing to do with Gruber’s political beliefs, and everything to do with Gruber’s support of Dave Brat to oppose House Majority Leader Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.) in the upcoming June 10 primary.

Adding insult to injury, Gruber had just defeated Cantor loyalist Linwood Cobb to win the local party election.

That is apparently enough to get smeared by the former Virginia Lt. Governor as one of the GOP’s “most extreme voices” in one of the nation’s most widely read newspapers, rather than congratulating him on a hard-fought victory.

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HELL-OOOO? This isn't news so much as just another bulleted item on a long list.  It's only recently (20 years is my recently) that I became acutely aware of the GOP's resistance to what we all assumed was the GOP's raison d' etre— conservatism.  As indirect opposition to Democrats, which is a healthy political balance.

Then, in 1994 (and again in 2004) the GOP, in the guise of Rick Santorum, supported Arlen Specter against the conservative Pat Toomey.  WTF?  That's when I began looking at things.  Now, of course, the signs were there all the while; that the GOP was the go-along/get-along party.  And this Ronald Reagan moment finally made sense to me.

ASIDE: Pat Toomey Is Becoming the Arlen Specter He Once Destroyed


2 comments:

Anonymous said...


The sooner the "Conservative Base" wakes up and realizes that they are being betrayed, the better. It's way past time to move on and return to the values the republics use to stand for.

Boehner is starting his curtain call and now has cut a deal with the most lawless President we've ever had. Valerie Jarrett confirmed he has cut a deal for Immigration and amnesty. He will not be Speaker in the new Congress. Florida here he comes.

Cantor a weasel in his own right is lining himself up for Speaker but needs to get past Brat first. God help us is he does.

Toomey has become Arlen and made his bed with Manchin to go after guns. It should finish off both of them back home, if the electorate remembers.

The "GOP" is "DOA". Unfortunately for us so is the Country because of this betrayal.

Geo

Anonymous said...

Bolling is bitter, because after two terms as Lt. Governor of Virginia, he thought the governorship was "owed" to him, then he was whipped in the pre-election polls by a Tea Party guy, Atty Gen. Ken Cuccinelli, and Bolling withdrew his candidacy in the face of a losing battle.
After quitting the race for the party’s gubernatorial nod, Bolling publicly mulled over an independent bid and then said he wouldn’t endorse anyone in the race. Not only did Bolling refuse to endorse Cuccinelli, he also transferred the money remaining in his gubernatorial campaign committee to his political action committee, the Virginia Mainstream Project, which spent no money to support Cuccinelli.
Later, when the influential business PAC Northern Virginia Technology Council voted to endorse Cuccinelli, Bolling tried to help persuade it to switch its support to Democrat Terry McAuliffe over Republican Ken Cuccinelli. After saying he would not interject and would not get involved, Bolling got caught when he called the PAC’s leader on behalf of McAuliffe.
Bolling is a bitter sleazoid.

I live in Cantor's district, and we are bombarded on the talk shows and Fox TV with Cantor ads depicting Brat as a liberal, and the ads are just as lying, trite and sleazy as you'ed expect from any Uhbamunist campaign ad. Cantor is obviously worried, because all of a sudden, I'm getting emails touting all the great, wonderful legislation he's launching in the next few months, an how he fought Uhbamacare. Well, Brat nailed it in his ad when he pointed out that Cantor has given Uhbama a blank check by voting TEN times to extend the debt limit. In the meantime, I hope Cantor really stews about his fair haired chosen one losing the district chairmanship to the Tea Party.
Cantor's district is the most conservative in Virginia, and we're sick of his fence straddling. I do so hope Brat dumps RINO weasel Cantor.
Lt. Col. Gen. Tailgunner dick

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