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Next entry: Persecuted Like Them Previous entry: Update on Ernie Chambers

Trial balloon: Michael Steele as RNC head

I have to hand it to the Republicans—they are so transparent that it continues to boggle the mind. First they put Sarah “any vajajay will do” Palin on the prez ticket, and that blew up in their faces. Now it looks like the party of Klansmen, low-information garden-variety bigots, and bible beaters is looking to put a little color at the top of its otherwise snow-white leadership.

A behind-the-scenes battle to take the reins of the Republican National Committee is taking off between former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael S. Steele.

Neither man will acknowledge his interest in the post, but Republicans close to each are burning up the phone lines and firing off e-mails to fellow party members in an effort to oust RNC Chairman Mike Duncan in the wake of the second consecutive drubbing of Republican candidates at the polls.

A bevy of backers for each man, neither of whom is an RNC member, say the committee needs a leader who can formulate a counter-agenda to President-elect Barack Obama’s administration and articulate it on the national stage.

I guess any negro will do for this crowd; then again, they don’t have too many to choose from these days. At least Steele isn’t a bubblehead, but he’s definitely anti-gay, so that fits the bill. His name was actually floated the last time the post was vacated, in 2006—by Ken Mehlman. Steele, during his failed U.S. Senate race, said:

Steele told religious leaders gathered in Lanham earlier this month that marriage is a covenant exclusively for one man, one woman and God.

“Marriage is not a purely human institution,” he said, according to a report in the Baltimore Examiner. “Marriage defines not only the relationship between a man and a woman but also their journey through life. They should not be brow-beaten into thinking something that goes counter to what the people in the community aspire to.”

...Steele, who serves under Gov. Robert Ehrlich, has publicly opposed same-sex marriage for several years. He and other members of Ehrlich’s administration opposed marriage equality in 2004 after the American Civil Liberties Union sued the city of Baltimore claiming that the state’s law prohibiting gay marriage violates the Maryland Constitution. A Baltimore Circuit Court judge has since ruled the law is unconstitutional.

 

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Posted by Pam Spaulding on 06:25 PM • (25) Comments

As a Marylander, I will share with you my favorite Michael Steele-related story… when Republicans tried to drum up a story about Steele being pelted with Oreo cookies during a 2002 debate (presumably to show that Democrats are really the racist ones), despite there being pretty much no evidence that it actually occured. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_S._Steele#Oreo_cookie_incident

Comment #1: Caro  on  11/11  at  06:46 PM

This is not surprising at all.  It’s gotten to the point that if I see a black pundit on one of the cable channels and it’s not Roland Martin or Donna Brazile I can safely assume s/he is a conservative.  GWB has a friggin 2% approval rating among black people and practically every one of them gets on TV.  If aliens landed on Earth to study the U.S. based on what’s on TV they would assume that most Republicans were black people or white (blonde) women.

Comment #2: Donna  on  11/11  at  07:00 PM

Oh, wow, please let them appoint Steele. Bill Maher has this guy on his show regularly, and I haven’t seen a nervously giggling Republican intellectual lightweight of his calibre since watching kinescopes of Joe McCarthy. And then there were Steve Gilliard’s brutal take-downs of the man he called “Simple Sambo.”

Steele might be able to deliver a prepared lecture to a hand-picked friendly crowd , but the man can’t even hold his own in political conversations with musicians or actors half his age. He’ll run the RNC into the ground like a Bush-run company.

Comment #3: Gracchus  on  11/11  at  07:35 PM

Steele is a sharp, well-spoken guy.  I was hoping McCain would pick him as his vp.  I hope he gets the position, and his being against gay marriage doesn’t hurt him for me.

Comment #4: tomonthebay  on  11/11  at  07:36 PM

This proves that the Republicans have learned nothing this year.

Sarah Palin =/= Hilary Clinton.  Michael Steele =/= Barack Obama. African Americans are no more interchangable than women are.

Comment #5: Broce  on  11/11  at  07:43 PM

It just goes to show their magical thinking process. The sky-fairy believers don’t know how to win elections anymore (since their guys ruined everything), so they’re peering over at the answers of the guy sitting next to them.

Hey, the magic word this year is ni——, errr negroes. We’ll put up an African American. Yeah, that’s the ticket!

Comment #6: KMac  on  11/11  at  08:00 PM

Honestly, it doesn’t matter much.  People barely know who the head of the RNC is, I couldn’t have named Duncan before reading this article.

Comment #7: Mikey  on  11/11  at  08:12 PM

I sure hope they do pick Steele. Oh please oh please oh please…

Strangely, I fear Gingrich the most.

Comment #8: Ben D.  on  11/11  at  08:24 PM

Steele is a sharp, well-spoken guy.  I was hoping McCain would pick him as his vp.

I was hoping McCain would pick him, too, but in the end, I was very happy with the way his choice of Palin turned out.

Comment #9: Tyro  on  11/11  at  08:38 PM

“party of Klansmen”

I believe that the only Klansman left in the congress is a West Virginia Democrat.

Comment #10: Bismarck  on  11/11  at  08:39 PM

I was hoping McCain would pick Alan Keyes.

Comment #11: Ben D.  on  11/11  at  08:40 PM

I suppose we all know it’s a white elephant… But you can’t say someone like Steele hasn’t worked hard to get his right-winger bona fides for the position.  Focusing on race seems disingenuous, when he really and truly does match what they profess - a self-made hater, who hates with all his might, and climbed up the mountain of hate to sit at the top.

Comment #12: Crissa  on  11/11  at  09:10 PM

Marriage is not a purely human institution

And they say we’re the ones who are going to turn to bestiality next?

Comment #13: Lauren O  on  11/11  at  09:56 PM

If you knew anything, Bismark, you’d know that Byrd is repentant about his time in the Klan, unlike, say, Haley Barbour, who has had much more recent ties to the racist Council of Conservative Citizens with his fellow Mississippian Trent Lott, by contrast.

How about this Republican KKKlansman, in full gear:
http://www.pamshouseblend.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=8132

Comment #15: Pam Spaulding  on  11/11  at  11:21 PM

If they are looking for token black Republicans from Maryland, the should go for the Full Crazy, and pick Alan Keyes.

Comment #16: Spike  on  11/11  at  11:53 PM

liberals invented affirmative action, conservatives invented tokenism.

yeah, Gingritch has a lot more bona fides, though.

Comment #17: Indy  on  11/12  at  01:30 AM

Goodness, who would pick God for the third in their menage a trois? He’s such a self-centered bastard.

Comment #18: Samantha Vimes  on  11/12  at  03:51 AM

How about this Republican KKKlansman, in full gear:
http://www.pamshouseblend.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=8132

Pam Spaulding on 11/11 at 09:21 PM

If I remember correctly, when David Duke snagged the GOP nomination for governor of Louisiana in the open primary, the Louisiana Republican Party endorsed the Democrat candidate, Edwin Edwards.  I believe that Mr. Edwards is still residing in a Louisiana prison.  And David Duke holds neither public nor party office.

As for Randy Gray, every movement has its screwballs.  Does Aids Coalition to Unleash Power ring a bell?

Comment #19: Bismarck  on  11/12  at  11:36 AM

I’m confused… am I supposed to be surprised that the RNC is considering someone who is anti SSM for one of their leadership posts? It really does seem to be the hill they’re willing to die on.

Comment #20: Andrew  on  11/12  at  11:41 AM

Lessee, they had an N-person and a C—twho were players in the senate.  So ... we need to find ourself our very own N-person and C—t to get the N-person C—t vote!

Because those democrats were only voting for this female and black novelty act out of white guilt.  They couldn’t possibly be voting for the individual people based on their campaigning prowess and qualifications, you know!

Comment #21: Ms Kate  on  11/12  at  01:01 PM

Michael Steele is the new Alan Keyes, and Tom is the new Black, as far as the Republicants are concerned.

Comment #22: JupiterPluvius  on  11/12  at  02:42 PM

Liberals don’t like Michael Steele. He, like Justice Thomas, isn’t slave to the PC crowd and how a black man should think…

He’s just a little to “uppity” for ‘em.

Comment #23: Bob Zimerman  on  11/12  at  04:54 PM

If the Republicans want to seriously reach out to non-white voters after their absymal showing in the last election, then this is a good thing. Eventually, the Republicans will win an election and it’s better for America if they are not the “racist party” when they do.

But sadly, this appears to be more tokenism than anything.

Comment #24: wayward  on  11/12  at  06:28 PM

Actually, there is a legitimate argument to be made for not having a proven liar at the head of the Republicans, but like a liberal, BZ wouldn’t be making it here. 

Why is that?

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