Login

Register

Member List

RSS Feed

Amanda | Contact

Auguste | Contact

Jesse | Contact

Pam | Contact

Next entry: I Like Stuff And Things: A Memoir Previous entry: The new sign of deep friendship is a slap in the face

Ken Blackwell receives fundie stamp of approval for RNC chair

(UPDATE: Todd Beeton at MyDD is liveblogging a debate between all of the RNC candidates at the National Press Club. Hilarity ensues.)

Is it no surprise that the former Ohio

Bush vote bag man

Secretary of State and contender for the head of the RNC, Ken Blackwell has been given the thumbs up from Daddy D and two dozen other conservatives and fundies for his candidacy? (Politico):

The group, which mixes leading economic conservatives, including Steve Forbes and Pat Toomey, and leading social conservatives, including James Dobson and Tony Perkins, had agreed to endorse and campaign together for a candidate based on a questionnaire assembled by veteran GOP activist Morton Blackwell (no relation).

“The conservative endorsers noted that there were other good candidates, but all agreed that Ken Blackwell is the best choice. They intend to contact grassroots conservatives across the country and ask them to urge the three RNC members from each state and U.S. territory to vote for Ken Blackwell for RNC chairman,” they said in a press release going out shortly.

After all,

head GOP house negro

Ken carried the water for Chip Saltsman and his decision distribute a CD with “Barack the Magic Negro” on it, even as others in his party condemned Saltsman.

“I don’t think any of the concerns that have been expressed in the media about any of the other candidates for RNC chairman should disqualify them. When looked at in the proper context, these concerns are minimal. All of my competitors for this leadership post are fine people.”

No wonder Blackwell satisfies Tony Perkins of Family Research Council. After all, Tony had no problems paying former KKK-wizard David Duke $82K for his mailing list.

Check out the full list of right wing Blackwell endorsers below the fold.
A lot of familiar names are on this list.

Gary Aldrich, Chairman, CNP Action Inc.

Morton C. Blackwell, Virginia Republican National Committeeman

Robert B. Bluey, Contributing Editor, RedState

L. Brent Bozell, Founder and President, Media Research Center

Kellyanne Conway, CEO and President, the polling company, inc./WomanTrend

T. Kenneth Cribb Jr., Former Domestic Adviser to President Reagan

James C. Dobson, Ph.D., Founder and Chairman, Focus on the Family

Becky Norton Dunlop, President, Council for National Policy

Stuart W. Epperson, Chairman, Salem Communications Corp.

Steve Forbes, Chairman & CEO, Forbes Media

Dr. Ronald Godwin, Vice Chancellor, Liberty University

Rebecca Hagelin, Author and Conservative Columnist

Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring

David Keene, Chairman, American Conservative Union

Tim LaHaye, Founder and President, Tim LaHaye Ministries

Ed Meese, Past President, Council for National Policy

James C. Miller, Past President, Council for National Policy

Tony Perkins, President Family Research Council

Ken Raasch, Chairman & CEO, Creative Brands Group

Alfred S. Regnery, Publisher, The American Spectator

Phyllis Schlafly, President, Eagle Forum

Pat Toomey, President, Club for Growth

Richard Viguerie, Chairman, ConservativeHQ.com

BTW, in the questionnaire, candidates were asked about how the GOP can expand its base and attract racial and ethnic minorities. Look at this howler from Blackwell:

Republicans can broaden the base without compromising principle. The Republican Revolution occurring right now in Louisiana is proof. Governor Bobby Jindal and Congressmen-elect Ahn “Joseph” Cao, two young Americans of Asian heritage, are both conservatives who won difficult races in Democrat strongholds. Louisiana Republicans elected three physicians to Congress this year, including two conservative freshmen. Louisiana Republicans have given us a model on which to build a broad, new Republican majority. But their strategy is based on sticking to principle, not abandoning it.

Americans of Hispanic heritage rightly belong in the Republican Party because we share so many values. We must build relationships in the communities and appeal to them on our shared values such as support for our armed forces, social issues and economic opportunity. But our strategy to win the bulk of the Hispanic vote cannot involve granting amnesty for illegal aliens or foregoing our national sovereignty and failing to secure our borders.

In contrast, the other black candidate for the GOP chair, Michael Steele, at least gave a plausible, realistic assessment.

First, conservatives must act in a genuine way to demonstrate the truth of America: that every American regardless his or her station in life, upbringing or social status has the opportunity to turn their hopes into action and to realize the promise that is the American dream! Second, conservatives must act to demonstrate the truth of the Republican Party: that as the party of Lincoln stood with those whose hands and feet were shackled over a century ago, today we will stand with those who are shackled by the soft bigotry of low expectations in education, the de-humanizing effects of addiction and poverty and the hopelessness of lost opportunity at the hands of an opportunistic government. In other words, we must demonstrate that we are prepared to move outside our comfort zone.

As a conservative, I have served our party as a County Chairman in an overwhelmingly African American community (registration 5-1). I know how African Americans and other minorities view the Republican Party and I have proven I know how to engage the dialogue necessary to reestablish trust and support for our candidates and our party as a whole.

I am convinced our messages on traditional values and economic growth resonate with Asian, Hispanic, and African-American voters. Now the challenge and opportunity will be developing new strategies to communicate those messages. Presenting new solutions, new faces, new ways in which the GOP is seen to be relevant to the debate of ideas and in fact has ideas to share will work to restore voter confidence in our leadership.

I could be wrong, but I haven’t seen any sign that the party wants to take Steele’s advice. They like the well-worn path of using race baiting to win, and their aging, shrinking under-educated base thrives on it.

Check out how badly the party clings to bigotry in the DKos diary The Republicans’ Old Black Magic.

------

Registration is now required! We're still in the process of getting it all squared away, so for the moment don't forget to Login or Register using the links in the upper left menu before starting to write your comment.

Posted by Pam Spaulding on 03:25 PM • (13) Comments

Actually, Steele’s statement is pretty much right on about what they need to do. They won’t do it though, because that would mean having to admit they were doing it the wrong way before.

Comment #1: Mark  on  01/05  at  03:34 PM

As an Ohio resident, let me say that Ken Blackwell is a complete piece of shit.  Like Clarence Thomas but without the sex appeal.

Comment #2: ummeli  on  01/05  at  04:32 PM

“today we will stand with those who are shackled by the soft bigotry of low expectations in education”

What does that mean, again?  Is it “soft bigotry” to think that someone who has been kicked to the curb all their life needs a little extra help?

Comment #3: Notorious P.A.T.  on  01/05  at  04:46 PM

Phyllis Schlafly AND Tim LaHaye! 

The true founding members of Gilead!  O Rapture!

Comment #4: Caren  on  01/05  at  04:58 PM

Leave it to the rethugs, when the plane is going down in flames, instead of a deft hand at the stick, they pick a cat that will shove the balls to the wall and auger in at Mach eleventy. Good for them.

Comment #5: Grandjester  on  01/05  at  05:15 PM

Oh goodie, the RNC’s “black problem” is solved. Now the TN GOP can keep churning out all of the racist BS and Blackwell will provide the perfect cover.

Think it will work?

Me neither.

Comment #6: Southern Beale  on  01/05  at  05:15 PM

“Louisiana Republicans have given us a model on which to build a broad, new Republican majority.”

You gotta love these dopes.  Louisiana always scores at the bottom of the nation on infant mortality, HS graduation rates, household income, etc.  I figure the voters there may just be suffering PTSD and the GOP doofi running for office appear just barely more competent than the ruling Dems.

Comment #7: CParis  on  01/05  at  05:17 PM

It’s right-wingers galore in the chairmans’ offices. Obama just named Tim Kaine as the new DNC chair. That’s right, the guy who is anti-choice, opposed to stem-cell research, and not even willing to grant civil unions to gays and lesbians, let alone marriage.

Isn’t it great to finally have a progressive President?

Comment #8: Dan in Denver  on  01/05  at  05:39 PM

Hey, honestly I consider this progress.  Twenty years ago Tony Perkins and Phyllis Schlafly wouldn’t let a guy like Ken Blackwell hold a higher position than loafer polisher.  If they’re desperate enough to overcome their own prejudices to even consider this guy seems to prove how far we’ve come as a nation.

It’s right-wingers galore in the chairmans’ offices. Obama just named Tim Kaine as the new DNC chair. That’s right, the guy who is anti-choice, opposed to stem-cell research, and not even willing to grant civil unions to gays and lesbians, let alone marriage.

The DNC Chair is a fund raising position first and foremost.  Kaine is on board with the Dean 50-state strategy and he’s got friends in the right places.  This makes me think Obama is more interested in electoral success in 2010 than ideological struggling.

The rabid anti-abortionists aren’t going away in our lifetime.  But Kaine isn’t apeshit crazy and I’d take him over John Cornyn or Kay Bailey Hutchenson in a New York Minute.  He’s wrong in a lot of his beliefs, but he’s a decent administrator and a competent governor.  I’ll take my technocracy for now and work on ideology with time.

Comment #9: Zifnab25  on  01/05  at  07:16 PM

Well they got a neee-grow so now we got a neee-grow.  That fixes that.  What the hey, they’re all the same aren’t they?  It would be nice if just once the Rethugs would deal with substance.  Just once.

Comment #10: Magis  on  01/05  at  08:23 PM

” This makes me think Obama is more interested in electoral success in 2010 than ideological struggling”

Obama may want to prevent the Republicans from gaining positions in Congress like what happened under Clinton in 1994. Even if he is like FDR in his economic recovery the potential for the Repubs misrpenting or actually captializing on a rare failure or two is quite real. Such would make the rest of the term quite difficult if the republicans manage to regain a number of seats and position.

Throwing a bone out to get massive amounts of capital needed to win or maintain seats would be very smart of him.

Comment #11: tootiredoftheright  on  01/05  at  11:02 PM

i second ummeli! i was so RELIEVED when he was done being Sec of State here!

Comment #12: denelian  on  01/06  at  02:55 AM

Denelian, is it just me, or did Ohio’s air quality improve about the time Ken left?

Probably just Bush’s late-term environmental regulations kicking in.

Comment #13: ummeli  on  01/06  at  12:18 PM
Page 1 of 1 pages
Commenting is not available in this channel entry.