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Next entry: Elitimamism Previous entry: Right wing smears and lies

McCain flip flops on GOP abortion plank in platform

John McCain is apparently getting too soft and squishy on womb control (yawn, yeah, right) and the fundies and pro-choicers in the party are erupting.

ABC News’ Teddy Davis and Rigel Anderson Report: John McCain’s campaign signaled on Wednesday that the Arizona senator is backing away from his previously stated goal of changing the GOP’s platform on abortion.

...McCain’s decision to leave the platform untouched follows a warning from a prominent social conservative.

If he were to change the party platform,” to account for exceptions such as rape, incest or risk to the mother’s life, “I think that would be political suicide,” Tony Perkins, the president of the conservative Family Research Council, told ABC News in May. “I think he would be aborting his own campaign because that is such a critical issue to so many Republican voters and the Republican brand is already in trouble.”

...“If he doesn’t change the platform, then he’s being the same kind of hypocrite that he accused Bush of being in 2000,” Jennifer Blei Stockman, the co-chairwoman of Republican Majority for Choice, told ABC News in May.

If McCain picks a pro-choice VP, watch out; Dobson et. al. will explode. Or at least I would expect the hypocrite of Colorado Springs to do so; after all, he’s already had to eat crow for coming around for the Arizona senator after swearing he’d stay home rather than vote for him. In fact, in 2000, he said this about McCain:

“The Senator,” Dobson said, “is being touted by the media as a man of principle, yet he was involved with other women while married to his first wife, and was implicated in the so-called Keating scandal with four other senators.  He was eventually reprimanded by the Congress for the ‘appearance of impropriety.’ The Senator reportedly has a violent temper and can be extremely confrontational and profane when angry.  These red flags about Senator McCain’s character are reminiscent of the man who now occupies the White House.”

Gee Daddy D, how has it all changed for you these days?

Speaking of drop-kicks and pressure on McCain from the fundies as he hones in on his Veep pick, conservative Richard A. Viguerie, chairman of ConservativeHQ.com (always good for a press release to beat on who he thinks is too soft to be a true conservative), wrote a hilarious open letter to the presumptive GOP nominee—it’s below the fold.
What a wedgie this is.

An Open Letter from Richard Viguerie to John McCain: Conservatives Can Also Play the Maverick Game

Dear Senator McCain:

The buzz in recent days has been that some of your key aides were calling national and state GOP leaders to alert them to the possibility that you were seriously considering a pro-abortion running mate and to take their temperature on such a selection.

As Dan Henninger of the Wall Street Journal asked: Are you politically “stupid” or do you care little for conservative principles?

It also shows that you don’t understand why the Republican brand has taken a massive beating in recent years. You clearly don’t comprehend why millions of conservatives are off the Republican reservation and sitting on the political sidelines.

Your indication that you’re willing to put a person who has a clear, unequivocal pro-abortion record within a heartbeat of the presidency is alarming.

Pro-life conservatives understand that, to change the laws to protect innocent life, first and foremost, we need good, articulate leadership—from the president and vice president.

To put it as simply and clearly as I can, most Republican leaders at the national and state level have betrayed, abandoned, and sold out the principles that define conservatism. Talk of selecting a pro-abortion liberal Republican (Tom Ridge) or, even worse, a pro-abortion liberal Democrat (Joe Lieberman) drives the Republican brand lower and lower.

Your apparent interest in selecting a running mate who is out of sync ideologically with the vast majority of conservatives reinforces the image of the Republican Party as a party without principle and dedicated to one proposition above all others – the seeking, acquiring, obtaining, and holding onto power.

Senator McCain, you are exceedingly proud of being a political maverick – you wear it as a badge of honor.

Well, poke the base of the Republican Party – the conservatives – in the eye one more time by choosing a pro-abortion vice presidential candidate and conservatives will show you that two can play the maverick game.

Conservatives are people with proudly held principles. We’re now waiting to see if you share our principles.

Sincerely,

Richard A. Viguerie
Chairman, ConservativeHQ.com

NOTE TO EDITORS: Richard A. Viguerie pioneered political direct mail and has been called “one of the creators of the modern conservative movement” (The Nation magazine) and one of the “conservatives of the century” (The Washington Times). His latest book is Conservatives Betrayed: How George W. Bush and Other Big-Government Republicans Hijacked the Conservative Cause (Bonus Books), which, Jerome Corsi wrote in WorldNetDaily, is “destined to become a classic of conservative thinking” and “may be the most important conservative book written in the last quarter century.”

 

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Posted by Pam Spaulding on 08:55 AM • (20) Comments

The best thing about that letter is the endorsement from Corsi.

Comment #1: Ginger Yellow  on  08/21  at  09:05 AM

“NOTE TO EDITORS: Richard A. Viguerie is a crazy man who has been endorsed by other crazy men. FEAR HIS GODLIKE POWER!”

Comment #2: Scott  on  08/21  at  09:07 AM

“The Republican Brand”
Do they make good cereal?

I’m constantly amazed that some think it could be more important to run ‘with the party’ than to put one’s own ideas forward. I understand that when it comes to two candidates or bust, you choose the lesser of two evils, but wouldn’t it be great if the party you belonged to were only a generalization of your tendencies rather than an iron-clad rule of how you must think in majority?
But i suppose one might argue that politicians are meant to represent their constituency, not themselves. Oh well.

If McCain were to ignore this and Do It Anyway, he’d at learn earn a little (tiny itsy) bit of my respect.

Comment #3: Kaze  on  08/21  at  09:14 AM

Ginger—yeah, the endorsement from Corsi is just icing on the cake.

You clearly don’t comprehend why millions of conservatives are off the Republican reservation and sitting on the political sidelines.

Bwah hahahahha.  The Republicans roped in the fundies in an effort to get more votes, always thinking that they could promise those crazy folks anything before the election and then claim they were blocked by those immoral Dems from implementing the plan.

Now those fundies ARE the Republican party, and you can’t be a “traditional” Republican and get by without them anymore.

Reap what you sow!!!  And choke on it!

Comment #4: Caren-Sun-blocking Creator of Animorphic Pancakes  on  08/21  at  09:23 AM

pro-abortion liberal Democrat (Joe Lieberman)

ROFL. Oh, my sides.

Comment #5: annejumps  on  08/21  at  09:56 AM

On the other hand, the idea that we live in a country where many consider pro-abortion liberal Democrat (Joe Lieberman) to be an accurate description is terrifying. (And no doubt that’s also code for “Jew.”)

Comment #6: annejumps  on  08/21  at  10:00 AM

“The Republican Brand”
Do they make good cereal?

If they made cereal, it would probably contain asbestos.

Comment #7: rea  on  08/21  at  11:28 AM

If McCain picks a pro-choice VP, watch out; Dobson et. al. will explode. Or at least I would expect the hypocrite of Colorado Springs to do so; after all, he’s already had to eat crow for coming around for the Arizona senator after swearing he’d stay home rather than vote for him.

See, that’s where I disagree.  I think Dobson, et al, will come crawling back no matter who McCain picks for Veep or what he changes the abortion plank towards.  This was always about money and power.  The Dobsonites make a killing on the anti-abortion racket, but they keep that killing through the way government favors his organizations with tax exempt statuses.  In exchange for all this money, Dobson provides kickbacks to friendly pols.  But he does love to feel like he’s in control, so he and Perkins and Robertson will throw a screaming little hissy fit if they can’t have their way.  That’s all he’ll do, however.

I’ve had hopes and prayers that the GOP theocrats would eventually break from the party, but its never going to happen so long as religion remains a major corporate industry.  There’s just too much money on the line for the right wing evangelicals to do anything less throw their full support behind the Republican ticket.  An Obama administration could rewrite tax laws and rework the “faith-based initiative” hand-out program to the tune of millions of dollars to the pockets of Big Jesus.

Comment #8: Zifnab25  on  08/21  at  11:45 AM

Oh, but this is one of the best bits:

It also shows that you don’t understand why the Republican brand has taken a massive beating in recent years.

Yes, no matter what their troubles are, the cause is always that they haven’t been conservative enough. The only reason Bush isn’t still riding high in the polls is that he isn’t hardline enough on abortion, surely.

This mentality is killing plenty of state Republican parties; I hope they stick with it long enough for it to do the same with the national party.

Comment #9: Redshift  on  08/21  at  11:53 AM

I think Dobson, et al, will come crawling back no matter who McCain picks for Veep or what he changes the abortion plank towards.  This was always about money and power.

You’re right. It is about money and power, and that’s why Dobson would try ensure that McCain tanks if he doesn’t adhere to the party orthodoxy on abortion. If McCain wins, then Dobson is screwed—the Republican party just tossed “family values” over the side and won anyway. But if McCain leaves the anti-abortion reservation and loses, then Dobson can stand up and say to Republicans, “Look, unless you come down firmly on the pro-life side and kiss my right, you will lose, just as John McCain lost. Anyone who wants to become president needs my approval.”

I’ve had hopes and prayers that the GOP theocrats would eventually break from the party

Someone has to represent the theocrats and the fundamentalists, and we have a two-party system, so they’re either going to be part of the Democrats or the Republicans. I hope they stay where they are.

Comment #10: Tyro  on  08/21  at  11:54 AM

kiss my right

Kiss my ring.

Comment #11: Tyro  on  08/21  at  11:57 AM

I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again here and now.  While all of can and will gnash our collection teeth and worry about various things in the next seventy days or so the best we have going for us is mccain.  Yes, the same should have been true with the chimperor but now, in the context of eight years of bush rape and mismanagement, people aren’t going to be quite as easy to pull the lever for another nutbag.  And mccain is a nutbag.  What’s more, I still it’s highly likely this guy is going to self-destruct at some point.  The “base” coalition of the rethugs, this time around, is too tightly wound.  There are too many stray issues that senor mavrik has waffled or been on the wrong side of.  It will come undone and mccain won’t gather together the wingnuts like shrubbie did.  Unca karl’s help aside, our best friend *is* our enemy.

Now, deep breath and repeat after me…

Comment #12: ice weasel  on  08/21  at  12:16 PM

Agreeing with Zifnab on this: how much of this is just empty posturing and how much is for real? If these were liberals disagreeing with some plank in the party platform, I would surely believe the threats, but conservatives will, in the end, fall in line with other conservatives so until I see something different I’m going to assume Richard Viguerie is going to pull the lever for the old dude come November.

Comment #13: J.V.  on  08/21  at  12:59 PM

kiss my right
Kiss my ring.

I was kinda hoping you were going to correct that with “...butt cheek.”  But ring works.  If you wanna go and be all classy about it…

Comment #14: The Opoponax  on  08/21  at  01:39 PM

It’s going to be hard for McCain to change the Republican party convention platform. According to an article I read yesterday, he’s pretty much the only one not involved in it’s conception. MAVERICKY!

Though I really want a camera on Dobson if McCain accidentally names some pro-choice VP. Just steam and a high pitched whistle, or steam, whistle, and explosion? We need to know.


http://thesebastards.blogspot.com/

Comment #15: Matthew  on  08/21  at  02:04 PM

“Well, poke the base of the Republican Party – the conservatives – in the eye one more time by choosing a pro-abortion vice presidential candidate and conservatives will show you that two can play the maverick game.”

If McCain isn’t going to do it, then can I poke the conservative base of the Republican party in the eye?  Please?

Comment #16: Kristin  on  08/21  at  02:34 PM

If you wanna go and be all classy about it…

I really need to let loose my inner crudeness more often.

Comment #17: Tyro  on  08/21  at  03:08 PM

“Two can play the maverick game.”  Okay, I guess it’s supposed to sound like some sort of scary threat, but what the fuck does it mean?

Comment #18: bobbo  on  08/21  at  03:17 PM

Yes, no matter what their troubles are, the cause is always that they haven’t been conservative enough.

Well, they haven’t been all that conservative, particularly when it comes to fiscal policy.  The thing is, if they were truly conservative and slashed spending, Republicans would be even more unpopular.  Despite Americans’ disliking taxes, they really hate seeing their government services disappear.

Comment #19: keshmeshi  on  08/21  at  03:28 PM

“Two can play the maverick game.” Okay, I guess it’s supposed to sound like some sort of scary threat, but what the fuck does it mean?

It means they’ll kick him out of the party, and McCain can go be a maverick without the Republican Wackaloo Scream Machine to support him.

Comment #20: stogoe  on  08/21  at  03:34 PM
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