January 31, 2006
Karl Rove: State Of The Republican Party vs.
State Of The Union
By Bryanna Bevens
Karl Rove gives me the heebie-jeebies.
I
met the
White House Deputy Chief of Staff, whom Dubya
apparently calls “the architect”, a few years
back—it was out here in California at some gathering I
attended for GOP worker bees, of whom I was then one.
Let me be clear. Rove did nothing that I found
particularly offensive. He was distinctly gregarious, if
you want to know. But he just had that slimy, political
operative feel about him. It told you that he wasn’t
above rifling through your garbage hoping to find a
phone bill with numbers to a sex hotline.
And that if there was no evidence of
porn, he would make it up anyway. So the
rifling was really just a formality.
Recently, we at VDARE.com provided a lot of coverage of
the Winter Meeting of the Republican National Committee
(RNC) and the
immigration reform resolution proposed by the
heroic Randy Pullen.
In the end, the Republican National Committee officially
endorsed the President’s Guest Worker Plan—should
Republican politicians choose to oppose Guest Worker
Programs, they are now defying the official policy of
their party.
Side note: I think RNC should be slapped with a
plagiarism suit because that document already
exists…it’s called the
immigration platform of the
Democrat Party.
For example, Congressman Tom Tancredo is adamantly
opposed to guest worker programs. So he’s against
the official position of the GOP. The White House could
point to his behavior and call him a rogue or a
maverick who is threatening the Republican agenda.
With
former HIAS operative Mrs. Mehlman’s
boy at the helm of the RNC (see my
recent column), patriots like Tancredo may find
themselves suddenly ineligible for such membership
privileges as campaign finance.
Karl Rove was a keynote speaker for this year’s RNC
meeting. He revealed the GOP platform/strategy for the
2006 elections:
1)
The War,
2)
the
Patriot Act
3)
Judicial appointments. [Transcript
here]
Hmmm. After the RNC meeting, the headlines focused on
the split within the GOP over immigration reform. The
fact that Pullen’s was introduced at all could be
evidence of an impending revolution.
But here we had the President’s most trusted advisor
addressing the RNC and instead of seizing an opportunity
to smooth the fray he…talks about the war.
Yeah…this would be the same War on Terror for which we
have spent billions of dollars to promote democracy in
the Middle East.
You know, because if the people could only vote
for their leaders, well, that would prevent
terrorists from running the government.
Just look at the Palestinian elections last week! See
what happens when
these poor people are allowed to elect their
leaders?
They elect strong, determined…terrorists!
I
may not be quite as a brilliant political
consultant as K. Rove…but I would probably not
include this little number on the list of
Administration success stories during tonight’s
State of the Union, m’kay?
Wouldn’t it have been a better plan to unite the
party—to give immigration reformers something—anything?
This turn of events left me in a state of disarray…and
frankly,
without a party.
And I received a ton of
reader email expressing the same sentiment.
That got me thinking…
My readers, many of them Republicans, are talking about
looking for a new party. Get some new blood in
there.
Of course, Third Party candidates find it difficult to
qualify for the ballot—especially in
national elections.
Speaking of blood and third party candidates…
There is a vampire
running for Governor in the state of Minnesota.
Uh-huh…a vampire. [Read story
here]
The Impaler (a nickname…I hope) is representing the
political party known as the Vampires, Witches and
Pagans…of course.
In any event,
Nosferatu
here is precisely the reason for imposing ballot
restrictions and qualifications. Candidates must be able
to show a legitimate possibility of winning before the
taxpayer is forced to pay the cost of putting them on
the ballot. For example, the candidate may have to
gather a certain percentage of signatures from
registered voters in their district. For national
elections the
candidate would have to meet that same requirement
in all 50 states.
In the case of Minnesota, there could be a requirement
that the candidate is in fact, a human.
Funny—not. The possibility of a Third Party is no longer
a joke. As I
reported last year, even veteran Reagan operative
Lynn Nofziger thinks immigration could trigger one.
My antennae say the climate is ripe for it…or will be
very, very soon.
First of all, look at the mood of the electorate; the
pull towards a third party is clearly evidenced by the
trends in voter registration:
Committee For The Study of the American Electorate
Crikey! Over the last 44 years, the Democrats have
steadily declined in registration.
The Republicans, despite clawing their way to control of
the legislative and executive branches, have stayed more
or less the same…which is just as poor a showing.
Hmm…but lookey here: the percentage of people choosing
not to join the biggies (or those who have fled) has
increased by slightly more than 20 percentage points.
At this rate of growth, the number of people registered
as independents will exceed the number of registered
Republicans within three election cycles.
Then again, we are talking about a spread of less
than 7 points.
This brings me back to the Grand Old Pansies and their
new platform on immigration…
In his 1995 book on immigration,
Alien Nation, Peter Brimelow issued a caution
for those who would ignore the growing immigration
problems in America.
“…[N]o
political issue, once it reaches the surface, has more
elemental power than immigration. It could quite easily
destroy the present political-party system, as it helped
to do in the years before the Civil War.”
Alien Nation
A
Civil War as we saw back in the days of Grant and Lee
may not be on the horizon…yet...but I think a civil war
within the GOP is imminent.
This is
why:
Following the floor vote on party resolutions, a party
delegate was asked why the RNC endorsed a guest worker
program in spite of the fact that so many
Republicans oppose the legislation.
Ferrel Blount, Chairman of the North Carolina State GOP,
said
"It was
a good compromise
[Bryanna
note: compromise????!!!]…I
did not want to see a sense of the RNC resolution tie
the hands of the White House on this important issue."
RNC
Chairman Mehlman echoed the sentiment…of course.
He said the resolution "reflected where the President
was."
These
quotes come from an article by John Gizzi for
HumanEvents Online January 22, 2006 and the title that
says it all:
Is It “Stepford Committee” for White House? RNC Bows to
Bush, Kills Immigration Resolution
Lilly Nunez, committee member from the Colorado (and
member of the GOP Hispanic Advisory Committee) made this
statement in an article for the Los Angeles Times [Amid
Rifts, GOP Backs Guest-Worker Plan by Peter Wallsten
January 21, 2006]
"We as a party ought
to stand united behind our president.”
Who
are these people?
The
Republican Party was founded on an
anti-slavery platform back in the 1850’s and since
then has always been a reform party—a party of
ideas.
The
Republican Party of today has a platform as well—it’s
the
Bush II platform.
Good
grief, the party of Lincoln was never just the party of
Lincoln’s agenda. And his Presidency was actually
a success.
The War
on Terror, whatever you think of it, definitely is not a
cause around which people can organize and rally.
Americans are only energized by issues that affect
them. Whether or not women can vote in Iraq might
be significant in a worldly sense, but how worldly are
we?
We have
our own problems here that need to be fixed—when
Americans hear about
drug tunnels from Mexico I think that whole
democracy thing in the Middle East seems well, not as
important.
By
making the war the top campaign issue for 2006, Rove has
essentially transformed the GOP from a reform party into
a war party.
“The
architect”
has built, perhaps his first, house of cards.
On the
other hand, immigration reform is a real cause
and half the nation is already behind the charge.
The
White House should therefore not be surprised when and
if all those people they shunned last week organize a
new party for reform.
You
know, they same way they did—when was it?—back in
1854.
Bryanna Bevens [email
her] is a political consultant and former chief of staff
for a member of the California State Assembly.