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February 4, 2010
Scott Brown Sworn In as 41st Republican Senator
Democrat Plan to Bring Socialism to American on Hold
Scott Brown was sworn in at approximately 5pm today by Vice-President Biden as the new Senator from Massachusetts. His upset victory was a tremendous blow to Democrats, who have lost their filibuster-proof majority in the Senate. Not that they had been able to capitalize on it. Via ABC News, here is the swearing in ceremonyL
And here is Senator Brown taking questions from the press. He handles himself well, I think
Brown's victory demonstrates several things.
Republicans and conservatives from around the country do not insist on ideological purity, but will support a moderate if that's what it takes to win. Brown is a fiscal conservative but moderate on social issues, supposedly the death-knell for Republican candidates. It also shows that there are no safe seats or safe areas for Democrats, and that if Republicans put forth good candidates who play their cards right, we can win anywhere.
Of course, Republicans should not become overconfident. President Clinton staged one of the most impressive comebacks in modern history after 1994. Obama's poll ratings are going down, but he's still floating at 50%, which is not too bad. But then again, his poll ratings were about that in Virginia and New Jersey, and fat lot of good it did the Democrats there.
Finishing up, the liberal's favorite conservative, Newt Gingrich, offers these 9 lessons from Brown's victory that I think are largely correct:
Lesson One: Run Candidates Everywhere The first lesson Republicans should take from last night's victory is the GOP should run candidates everywhere this year and not worry about whether the district used to vote Republican.In the last five days a poll has shown Tim Griffin beating incumbent Democrat Vic Snyder by 17 points in Arkansas's 2nd congressional district. In Cincinnati, former Republican Congressman Steve Chabot is now up 17 points over the Democratic incumbent, Steve Driehaus, who beat Chabot in the 2008 election. In Michigan, former Republican Congressman Tim Walberg is now 7 points ahead of the Democrat Mark Schauer who beat him in 2008.
There are moments when history changes and the American people decide to shake things up. This may be such a moment and it means Republicans should fill in the ticket at every level in every state.
Lesson Two: Being Positive Matters and Congressional Republicans Should Take Note
In the three winning campaigns (Virginia, New Jersey, Massachusetts) the Republican candidate has been issue-oriented and had a positive message. In each case, Republicans drew a principled, issue-oriented difference between themselves and the Democrats.The American people are genuinely frightened about the economy, about terrorism, about the loss of honesty and transparency in their government. The American people want a party which is trying to solve the things they fear, not a party which is trying to use their fear to remain negative. An alternative party can win huge victories in 2010 and 2012; an opposition party will have far fewer victories.
Lesson Three: President Obama Has Had Two Bad Anniversaries and Now is the Moment for Him to Rethink What He Has Been Doing
The anniversary of the President's victory in the 2008 election saw decisive Republican gubernatorial victories in two states he had carried. Wednesday was the anniversary of his inauguration, and it was the date a new Republican senator was sent to Washington to fill the late Sen. Ted Kennedy's seat, which Senator-elect Brown made clear is the "people's seat" .The President now has an excuse to stop, rethink, recalibrate, and learn some painful lessons. No more secret deals. No more Pelosi-Reid machine votes. No more leftwing, Democrats-only strategies. The leftwing leadership in the House and Senate would hate and fight such a change in course. Moderate Democrats (and most Americans) would breathe a sigh of relief.
Lesson Four: Republicans Should Offer To Help Solve America's Jobs, Security, Deficit, and Health Challenges through an Open, Transparent Legislative Process
This is the right moment for House and Senate Republicans to offer to meet with the President and start a new health reform process, as well as America's other challenges. This offer to work together to help the nation would be well received by the American people and would represent a real shift from an opposition party attitude to an alternative governing party attitude.Lesson Five: The Tea Parties and Populism Are Real
The Tea Party movement is going to be a major force in 2010 and 2012. It represents a real uprising of angry and frightened Americans who are fed up with both parties.It's no accident Scott Brown spent so much of his victory speech emphasizing his independence. This was not a Republican victory. Only 12% of Massachusetts is registered Republican. This was a people's victory--a genuine alliance of Republicans, Independents, and moderate Democrats.
Lesson Six: Trucks Beat Lobbyists
The strangest thing about President Obama's ill-advised, last minute visit to Massachusetts on Sunday was his fixation with Scott Brown's truck. FDR, who was a genuine Hudson Valley aristocrat, would have instinctively understood to be on the side of trucks. Bill Clinton might have driven up in a truck.However the elitism of the new leftwing Democratic Party--the party of the Obama-Pelosi-Reid machine--is so ingrown and so out of touch it did not understand what Scott Brown was doing.
Lesson Seven: National Security Matters
Andy McCarthy has a superb article this morning on National Review Online that discusses the role national security played in the election. Every American concerned about our safety in an age of terrorism ought to look at Brown's campaign and take heart that safety is a winning issue, and the left is absurdly on the side of putting terrorists' rights above protecting American lives.If you agree, I also encourage you to sign the Human Events petition protesting the civilian trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.
Lesson Eight: Secular Radicalism is a Losing Theme ...Even in Massachusetts
In one of the strangest moments in Attorney General Coakley's march to defeat, on the Thursday before the election in a radio interview, she said although "you can have religious freedom ... you probably shouldn't work in an emergency room". As the left has grown more secular and more militant in its hostility to religion it has begun to arouse strong opposition. Among Catholics, Evangelicals, Mormons, and Orthodox Jews, Coakley's position represented an anti-religious bigotry which they fear.Defining conscience and religion as legitimate parts of America is an enormous winning position, and Scott Brown's career had a strong component of defending faith and conscience even in Massachusetts.
Lesson Nine: The American People are Sovereign and When Their Leaders Infuriate Them They will Rise Up and Fire The Leaders
As it was with Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, the Progressive movement (especially Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson), Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and Ronald Reagan -- again and again the American people find a way to overwhelm the establishment.In America the people are sovereign. Last night reminded us it is still true. We remain an exceptional country of freedom and opportunity despite the politicians and bureaucrats and academics and elite news media.
Your friend,
Newt Gingrich
Posted by Tom at February 4, 2010 9:00 PM
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Comments
..enabling Senator Shebly to use procedural rules to demand more pork for Alabama. Blame the Democrats for the budget, while holding tea party's against spending. This is ridiculous.
Posted by: jason at February 6, 2010 11:27 AM
I do not take issue w/ any of the lessons above. I expect the Democrats will lose seats in 2010. But when it comes to following the most important lessons, I expect that GOP leadership, conservatives, and tea baggers will ignore them all.
Case in point: Charlie Crist. The tea baggers and conservatives want to purge him b/c he is not ideologically pure; he's too liberal.
Of course he may attract independents and cross over voters. Marco Rubio won't.
A few thoughts. Americans are overwhelmingly moderates. Americans distrust the consolidation of power in any one party. So what is the lesson?
If the GOP is going to rise phoenix like from the ashes, should it woo the people who elected Scott Brown or should it continue to feed the frenzy of the "base" and attempt to bring the tea baggers into the fold.
At this juncture, the tea baggers cannot be ignored but as we are seeing in Nashville this weekend, this is not a coherent movement and the GOP has profoundly misunderstood it.
TLGK
Posted by: The Loop Garoo Kid at February 6, 2010 1:30 PM



