Thursday, August 30, 2012

Even Tea Party Not Happy with Rand Paul Speech

Brietbart writes:
Tuesday's theme at the Republican National Convention was "We Built It," but the night's speakers did not reference or mention the Tea Party movement that built the current Republican majority in the House during the 2010 midterm elections and infused a party that seemed all but moribund after the 2008 elections and the latter part of George W. Bush's presidency with enthusiasm, life, confidence, money, manpower, purpose, and a little swagger.

On Wednesday, Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), who, like his father, Ron, is one of the most prominent symbols of the Tea Party movement that revolted in part against the spending habits of Republicans and Democrats during the last decade, addressed the RNC.

But even Paul did not explicitly mention or make note, by name, of the Tea Party movement.
This has left many Tea Partiers to wonder if the Romney campaign and the RNC are deliberately trying to disassociate the Republican and Romney brands on the national stage from the Tea Party brand that has given them momentum against Obama...


This strategy is risky for Romney and Republicans for three reasons.
First, 2012 is going to be a base election, and Tea Party voters need to turn out enthusiastically for Romney for him to win. Second, should Romney win, this strategy could potentially create a rift between establishment Republicans and the Tea Party, making it tougher for Romney to govern and push his agenda. Third, should Romney lose, the feud with the Tea Party could potentially cause an even bigger internecine conflict. 
On Wednesday, Paul spoke about some of the themes Tea Partiers hold most dear. He discussed how the “explosion of debt is unconscionable and unsustainable” and “Republicans and Democrats must slay their sacred cows” when it comes to military and domestic spending, respectively.
He also talked about his aversion to Obamacare and defending “our God-given rights.”
"We have nothing to fear except our own unwillingness to defend what is naturally ours, our God-given rights," Paul said. "To thrive we must believe in ourselves again, and we must never -- never -- trade our liberty for any fleeting promise of security."
But he did not mention the Tea Party -- or its successes -- by name.
Breitbart also said:
On Tuesday night, three prominent Tea Party politicians -- Texas Senate candidate Ted Cruz, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, and South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley -- addressed the RNC without mentioning or making reference to the Tea Party movement of which they are a part.
This total blackout of the Tea Party, and also Ron Paul, suggests that establishment Republicans are very afraid of both taking over the Party. Otherwise their ignoring of the groups makes no sense. It WILL cost them votes. They have obviously decided to attempt to kill the beast now and take the hit in votes.

And Rand Paul is clearly on the establishment side hoping desperately to be let into the real establishment inner circle.

3 comments:

  1. RNC to Tea Party: "You didn't build that. We did!"

    ReplyDelete
  2. The GOP hasn't earned the Tea Party's support in 2012. They've shunned Ron Paul and his supporters, they refuse to admit that the Tea Party was a major influence in their successes in 2010, and the platform barely pays lip service to our concerns.

    Maybe we should just sit this one out and let them go it alone.

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  3. The GOP is done. The amount of votes they will lose because of both the Tea Party and Paulian libertarians will be massive and disastrous for the party.

    The only chance they have left in this election is if Bernanke decides not to start the printing presses again before voting takes place in November (well there's some delay so obviously he could start a little bit before Nov.).

    Regardless, the future of the GOP looks bleak in my opinion.

    ReplyDelete