"I am disinclined to think that Republicans are yet ready for a serious questioning of their philosophy or strategy. They comfort themselves with the fact that they held the House (due to gerrymandering) and think that just improving their get-out-the-vote system and throwing a few bones to the Latino community will fix their problem. There appears to be no recognition that their defects are far, far deeper and will require serious introspection and rethinking of how Republicans can win going forward. The alternative is permanent loss of the White House and probably the Senate as well, which means they can only temporarily block Democratic initiatives and never advance their own.
"I’ve paid a heavy price, both personal and financial, for my evolution from comfortably within the Republican Party and conservative movement to a less than comfortable position somewhere on the center-left. Honest to God, I am not a liberal or a Democrat. But these days, they are the only people who will listen to me. When Republicans and conservatives once again start asking my opinion, I will know they are on the road to recovery."
Following the election, Bruce Bartlett in The American Conservative reflects on becoming an apostate.
Monday, November 26, 2012
"I’m at Ground Zero in the Saga of Republicans Closing Their Eyes to Any Facts or Evidence that Conflict with Their Dogma"
Labels:
Bartlett,
economics,
George H.W. Bush,
George W. Bush,
Obama,
political history,
politics,
Reagan,
twentieth century,
twenty-first century
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