From Politico:
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0509/22242.html
Social conservatives are blasting the National Council for a New America, House Minority Whip Eric Cantor’s (R-Va.) nascent effort to rebrand the Republican Party, as a misguided and weak-kneed initiative that is out of touch with the GOP rank and file.
The council, unveiled last week by Cantor and Sen. John McCain, is designed to be a “forward-looking, grass-roots caucus” that formulates policy prescriptions and communicates with voters in a way that could expand the Republican ranks. In announcing the formation of the group, McCain said he hoped the group would attract moderates and “like-minded Democrats” to a series of public forums around the country.
But social conservatives couldn’t help but notice that the policy areas the group will focus on included no mention of same-sex marriage, immigration or abortion. And the roster of GOP luminaries who signed on to the effort was missing a few of the pols who are most popular with values voters.
“The moderates have been saying the same thing all these years, and now they’re just seeing a renewed opportunity to push their ideas,” said Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), a leading opponent of gay marriage.
“It’s a losing proposition to try to divide social and economic conservatives,” Ken Blackwell, a one-time Ohio secretary of state and former candidate for Republican National Committee chairman, told POLITICO. “They will constantly find themselves backpedaling and apologizing and repositioning because the composition of that group does not reflect a basic reality, which is that social and economic conservatives complement one another.”
Blackwell noted that the slight did not go unnoticed among social conservatives, as they “have the experience of being used and then abused and then forgotten.”
Mike Huckabee, the former presidential candidate who was not invited to join the so-called GOP panel of experts involved with the effort — a list that included Govs. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, Sarah Palin of Alaska and Haley Barbour of Mississippi and former Govs. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts and Jeb Bush of Florida — said that it was “sad day” in Republican politics when “we think it is necessary to form a ‘listening group’ to find out what Americans think we should be fighting for.”
The long anticipated fight for the heart and soul of the GOP has begun.
Blackwell's comments are at once extraordinarly arrogant and extraordinarily accurate. He touches on the raw exposed nerve. There are not enough social conservatives out there willing to allow moderate voices to be included in the echo chamber. and both the grass roots and the fundraising engine of the party is with the fundies. While they conto9l the party, theyt also contol all the dumbness as well.
But the nation has opted for "smart people" in leadership. You may disagree but it is mot so much liberalism that is winning, its intelligence. That siesmic shift in voting pattern the last two cycles , (to be amplified after reapportionment) is something that the fundies have no answer for.
There is no Party leadership any more. just a few guys with megaphones, who either feign social comservativism to boost rating. or sow fear among the faithful to sell book s and conferences and National days of Prayers'
And niether the Limbaughs or the DObsons of the world have much uses for a bunch of "has beens", "wannabees" and "never weres", particular if they want to igmotr the fundies and create a new way forward.
So while the "RLC" may struggle to find their voice (or their ears for thier listening) the fundies are going to continue to shout them down as betrayers of the Reagan Recolution and not speaking to or for the base..
Now to be honest these patterns ebb and flow.... but this cancer on the GOP is pronounced, embittering and the discord is going to grow even louder between the various elements. The fracture lines are growing daily and if you think and, and if you think about it.....really hard... there is no one out there who will emerger to lead this crowd out of the wilderness. They are calling for the same thing I suppose, but they are too dumb and too angry to realize the Reagan Coalition has died.
What's remarkable to me is how similar this is to the rout that the DLC took after we "lost our way"