Thursday, December 27, 2012

WHY REPUBLICAN PARTY IS USELESS


SPECIAL POST

The purpose of an organization, whether it be political or otherwise, is to represent the collective wishes of its membership in dealings with third parties or other organizations.  A political party is specifically formed to represent its members in the affairs of government through the process of nomination to office.  Theoretically, the party meets or otherwise conducts some type of mechanism to provide for the members to decide who should be nominated and what the party platform should be. 

In 2008, just about every member of the party recognized that McCain was a weak candidate; he had tried unsuccessfully to win the party’s nomination before.   Mitt Romney was also running and couldn’t get past first base in the process.  McCain lost to Obama and in 2012, the “would be” Romney ended up getting the nod and the support from the party hierarchy.  The hierarchy then busied itself with engineering his ascension to the nomination. 

From a practical point, you have to ask yourself how the guy who couldn’t beat McCain in 2008 could win against Obama in 2012 when McCain himself could not; how can the assumed “second best” do better than “the best?”  That should have been the first clue.  As things progressed, Romney never could get a convincing win in any state against the remainder of the field until all of the others were forced out; he was always getting below 50% of the vote, meaning that the majority of the members wanted someone other than him to ultimately become the nominee.

But, the party hierarchy was not to let a trivial thing like the wishes of the majority of the membership to get in the way of its own agenda.  It did everything it could to undermine each and every other candidate for the nomination, one-by-one cutting them out of the field like a border collie on a range-day.  As a result, a large number of the membership stayed home on Election Day or voted for an independent candidate.  In fact, it is clear that Obama did not win the election; the Republican Party hierarchy handed it to him on a silver plate. Obama's popular vote count in 2012 was significantly lower than what he achieved in 2008, but he still won. 

As you can see, the organization no longer represents the collective interests or desires of its membership.  Furthermore, those at the top of the party who hold office in Washington are proving themselves to be ineffective and out of touch.  In the matter of taxing the rich, for example, 67% of Americans favor increasing taxes on the rich and the majority of the rich support higher taxes on themselves.  Yet, the House Republicans pretend to be unyielding in their opposition to Obama’s demand to raise taxes on the rich. Most of the party membership would just as soon get past this obstacle and deal with the remaining fiscal issues, but the hierarchy won’t budge.  Instead, the House Republicans will fight the whole thing to the bitter end, then cave in to Obama’s demands entirely as they have historically done before when, in fact, a better deal could and should have been cut. 

The party hierarchy is in total denial of the fact that few members want anything to do with them anymore and would just as soon seek other political alternatives.  All of which means leads to natural the conclusion that the Republican Party is now convincingly useless. 

That’s MY AMERICAN OPINION, respectfully submitted.    

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