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John Cronin

GOP Convention Draws Big Crowd

The Daily Herald reports that an overflow crowd of Republicans attended a county convention in Utah yesterday and the speakers whipped up an enthusiastic crowd of partisans ready to help their party take back Congress in 2010.

~~John Cronin~~

Joe Pyrah - Daily Herald

There was plenty of red meat for the core of the reddest county in the reddest state to chew on Saturday.

“Welcome fellow terrorists!” belted out U.S. Rep. Jason Chaffetz, referencing a recent Department of Homeland Security Report that warned of “right-wing extremism.”

The county’s organizing convention drew nearly double what it has the three previous years for a number of reasons. Much of the party’s leadership was stepping down leaving elections wide-open, and the party base has been riled up by the so-called “tea parties” and fears of creeping socialism.

Chaffetz, a first-term representative, got a standing ovation and berated President Barack Obama for making stops around the world and “apologizing for being a military and economic superpower.”

Party leaders

The race for party leadership was close in most cases, but none so close as the vice chairman position which was decided by just 10 votes of 820 cast. Mark Cluff held off Lowell Nelson to retain that seat.

Taylor Oldroyd will be the party’s chairman for the next two years after besting Steve Diamond 440-391. Oldroyd said that leaders need to “energetically articulate that we are the party of ideas.”

Lisa Shepherd was selected as party secretary after defeating Matt Thompson, who was endorsed by all the county’s elected officials.

“First, when I’m the secretary, I’m going to schedule a larger venue,” Shepherd said to the packed house.

Lynn Taylor beat Ben Smith for the treasurer’s seat 592-236.

Fire it up

Chaffetz wasn’t the only one to hammer at Democrats and the Obama administration.

Sen. Bob Bennett warned of the president’s socialism and those who have “embraced their attractive new president as an individual” though maybe not his policies.

He struck a somber cord, citing recent polls that show the majority of Americans believe the country is on the right track for the first time in more than five years.

“I don’t think that’s the sentiment here today,” he said. “But we must face that reality.”

Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff said Republicans need to be like Paul Revere after the original tea party. Instead of running and hiding, Revere went door to door warning colonists of the coming trouble.

Ronald Reagan Award

Former U.S. Rep. Chris Cannon was given the party’s Ronald Reagan Award.

Cannon, defeated by Rep. Jason Chaffetz in 2008, was honored for his “unwavering love of his God, family and country,” said outgoing party chairwoman Marian Monnahan.

Cannon took the opportunity to warn Republicans against demonizing people and said that he would be working to find ways to create civil dialogue to debate ideas.

“Congress is a complex place, America is a complex place,” Cannon said. “We have to stop assassinating characters and start talking about what we believe.”

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RNC closes loop on Palin clothes

POLITICO
By: Kenneth P. Vogel

Closing a loop on the campaign finance side of the Sarah Palin clothes saga, the Republican National Committee late last month filed an amended report detailing exactly which disbursements were clothing purchases for the Republican vice presidential candidate and her family.

The amended report shows that the committee paid about $23,000 for clothing in the three weeks before and after Election Day — which is actually $7,000 less than previously reported.

That new report brings the total Palin clothing costs paid by the RNC down to about $173,000 and also makes it easier to spot clothing purchases that had previously gone undetected.

For instance, a $192 payment to the Philadelphia Flyers pro shop previously described as “campaign accessories” was recategorized as “candidate clothing,” possibly for either the Flyers hockey jersey Palin reportedly received with her name and the No. 1 on the back before dropping a ceremonial puck or the one that her younger daughter, Piper, wore at the game.

Similarly, a $289 payment to high-end shoemaker Stuart Weitzman, which had been described as “retail” and “accessories,” became “candidate clothing.”

The report also details a number of clothing payments to retailers not known for their sartorial selection, including $49 to a UPS Store near running mate John McCain’s Arizona ranch; $144 to CVS stores in Ohio, Florida and Wisconsin; and $426 to various Walgreens stores.

The RNC did not respond to requests for comment about the amended report or the fate of the clothes, which were to have been donated to charity.

The amended report came at the behest of the Federal Election Commission, which last month ordered the committee to “include a brief statement or description of why the [accessory] expenditures were made” on behalf of the McCain-Palin campaign.

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A Message for Bloggers from NRSC Chairman John Cornyn

April 1st, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Republican Party, Senate, Twitter

Here’s something all computer savvy and social networking Mittheads will be interested in. Listen to Sen. John Cornyn explain the NRSC’s move into the New Media and his plans to move the Republican Party forward in it’s use of new campaigning tools made available through technology.

~~John Cronin~~

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Michael Steele: “I am a Pro Life Catholic”

There has been talk in some circles that Michael Steele, the Chairman of the RNC, isn’t conservative enough for their tastes. Here is a YouTube vid showing a Michael Steele/Chris Wallace interview where Mr. Steele unequivocally states that “I am a Pro Life Catholic” and takes other conservative stands that should put to rest the idea that Mr. Steele is “squishy” on certain issues very important to us in the center-right area of the political spectrum.

~~John Cronin~~

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MSM’s Take on Sarah Palin’s No Show at CPAC

March 2nd, 2009 | 3 Comments | Posted in CPAC, Republican Party, Sarah Palin

Here’s a YouTube look at how the MSM is interpreting Sarah Palin’s decision not to attend the great CPAC conference from this weekend just past.

I would be very interested to know if the decision not to attend came from Palin or if the powers that be in the RNC leaned on Gov. Palin to hold off on any high profile appearances until she gets some more experience in handling the national media.

~~John Cronin~~

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Cantor Remarks On Democrats’ Spending Bill

February 14th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Congress, Mitt Romney, Republican Party, Republicans, Spending

Along with Mitt Romney, Eric Cantor is another articulate voice of reason in a political culture that has lost it’s bearings. His call for leaner government and tax cuts for the small businesses that generate 70% of NEW JOBS is the way we should be heading, but it’s going to take adding a small army of Republicans to the Congress in 2010 if we are going to start to put the brakes on this runaway freight train called the federal government.

~~John Cronin~~

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Congressman Gives Speech in Front of Pelosi’s Office

The Business and Media Institute has a YouTube of Congressman Tom Price, (R) Georgia, standing outside the internationally acclaimed rocket scientist Nancy Pelosi’s office complaining that when the House was marking up their version of the stimulus bill and reconciling their version with the Senate’s version, the Republicans were barred from the room and no media was allowed.

I like Rep. Price’s chutzpa. Unfortunately there is no embed code for the YouTube vid, so please go over to the site and have a listen.

BTW, is it any wonder the Pubbies are boycotting the Dems on this bill? Would you just go with the flow and vote for a bill when you had been consistently barred from any participation in the process?

~~John Cronin~~

http://www.businessandmedia.org/articles/2009/20090211135318.aspx

By: Jeff Poor Business and Media Institute

President Barack Obama has proclaimed his administration will be more open than the previous administration. However, his counterparts in the House and the Senate aren’t following suit.

The Washington Post has reported that negotiations between House and Senate Democrats have resulted in a stimulus bill with a price tag of “about $789.5 billion.” This agreement raised the ire of Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., and he went outside of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office to express it.

“My name’s Tom Price and I represent the Sixth District of Georgia and [am] the privileged chair of the Republican Study Committee,” Price said. “It’s now noon on Wednesday. I’m standing outside the office of the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi. The door is closed. We just heard news break there’s been an agreement between the House and the Senate on the non-stimulus bill.”

Negotiators were slated to meet later in the day. However, since news of a deal was leaked to the media, Price questioned if there were “shady deals” going on.

“It’s curious because Republicans were invited to a meeting they said at 3 o’clock this afternoon,” Price continued. “What this means is there are more shady deals going on behind closed doors — without the public, without Republicans in attendance.”

The Georgia congressman had also called on congressional leaders to televise the House-Senate negotiations. However, as much as the press has helped the Obama administration trumpet a new era of transparency, there has been little call from the television media for these negotiations to be televised publicly.

“As the House and Senate move to negotiate the final text of the so-called stimulus bill, I have called on Speaker Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to make good on that promise and allow any and all House and Senate negotiations to take place in an open and public forum,” Price wrote in a Feb. 11 blog post for Red State. “By allowing television cameras in the room as negotiations take place, we can provide the transparency American taxpayers expect.”

Price also urged people to visit the Republican Study Committee’s Web site.

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Specter, Snowe, Collins Anger GOP Base

http://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/republicans_stimulus/2009/02/08/179583.html?s=sp&promo_code=79C7-1

NEWSMAX.COM

Three liberal Republican senators — Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine, and Pennsylvania’s Sen. Arlen Specter — who pledged their support this weekend to President Barack Obama’s massive stimulus bill are drawing the wrath of many conservatives.

As news filtered through the media that a “deal” had been cut with the defecting GOP Senators — giving Democrats the 60-plus votes they need to overcome a Republican filibuster — Republican officials and pundits expressed outrage.

The bolting senators cited soaring unemployment numbers, the country’s worsening recession and the fact they cut about $100 billion off of the Senate Democrats’ proposed plan as key factors for their decision to betray the GOP Senate caucus to join with the Democrats.

But critics note that the Democratic “compromise” plan comes in at $827 billion — $8 billion more in spending than the already bloated House bill that called for $819 billion in new spending. They also note the so-called stimulus bill offers little immediate relief to the economy. According to a Congressional Budget Office report issued last week, only a fraction of the stimulus will be spent in 2009.

Though weekends are noted for slow news cycles, Collins, Snowe, and Specter already are finding they are under hostile fire, lambasted on conservative Web sites throughout the weekend and the subjects of angry calls by many of their constituents, according to reports.

“Arlen Specter is DONE,” wrote a blogger named steelfish on the FreeRepublic Web site. “He won his last primary by less than 1 percent against a real conservative of Pat Toomey. And only because the President Bush came to PA and campaigned for him. He is DONE.”

Specter is up for re-election in 2010. Washington Republican strategists tell Newsmax this weekend that Specter’s defection has sealed the deal: he will face a primary for the GOP nomination.

“We don’t care if we lose the Pennsylvania Senate seat to the Democrats,” one Washington strategist told Newsmax. “Better to remove Fifth columnists from the party.”

The sentiment was echoed in chat rooms and blogs across the web.

“They are frauds. RINOS” Republicans in Name Only, wrote a blogger named Croupier101 on the Fox News blog site.

On TV news shows Sunday, their Republican colleagues distanced themselves from the defecting troika — arguing that the small GOP support for the plan did not suggest Congressional Democrats or the White House sought a bipartisan stimulus.

“This agreement is not bipartisan,” Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., told CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

“I’ve been in bipartisan agreements, many. This is three Republican senators. Every Republican congressman voted against it in the House, plus Democrats. And all but three Republicans stayed together on this. That’s not bipartisanship. That’s just picking off a couple of senators,” McCain said.

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, said the trio’s support must have been disappointing to Obama, who has staked much on his ostensible ability to transcend the partisan divide.

“Having three Republicans, potentially, support it in the Senate out of 535 members of Congress is hardly a bipartisan effort. I think it’s a disappointment — surely must be for President Obama,” Cornyn told “FOX News Sunday.” He added he fully expects the bill to pass “with almost exclusively Democratic support.”

The three were the target of a furious national campaign by liberal groups, who besieged their offices with phone calls and emails urging them to support the stimulus plan. Without Democrats controlling a supermajority of 60 votes in the Senate, the trio’s support was essential in advancing the contentious plan to a final vote next week.

Their help more than likely will result in pushing the stimulus over the finish line.

In a video posted on YouTube, Republican Rep. Ron Paul said the three “caved in and went with the Democrats.”

The former presidential candidate, who has a sizable libertarian following on the Internet, especially among college students, praised his fellow House Republicans for unanimously opposing the stimulus. But he lamented that after eight years of the massive spending done under the Bush administration, Republican opposition was too little, too late.

“It is like they’re born-again budget conservatives,” Paul said. “Where were we in the past eight years, when we could have done something? And you see our last eight years that has set this situation up. So we can’t blame the Democrats for the conditions we have.

“We have to blame both parties and presidents of the last several decades to have generated this huge government.”

The stimulus package, which is expected to come in at about $827 billion when the Senate votes, includes tax cuts and credits and spending on infrastructure, education and other projects that supporters say will create and save jobs.

But critics contend the stimulus is nothing more than a laundry list of political payback to groups that supported the Democrats in the last election. They note that less than 5 percent of the spending goes to infrastructure projects.

Collins said she broke ranks with her party because of the progress congressional negotiators had made on the bill.

“Well, I know that some of my Republican colleagues are unhappy with the position that I’ve taken,” Collins told reporters Saturday. “I hope they will look at the fact that we were able to cut $110 billion of unnecessary spending from this bill. I think that’s a good accomplishment. I also think that it’s important that we do pass a stimulus bill to help turn the economy around.”

But Snowe and Specter have kept a low profile since the deal was struck. Despite their huge role, none made the rounds of the Sunday talk shows. Specter said Friday night that the agreement wasn’t perfect but it was necessary.

That assertion was greeted with wild derision on the Internet and with veiled scorn by other Republican leaders.

Julie Ann O’Brien, executive director of the Maine Republican Party, said she already has received plenty of e-mails from people across the country, the majority scolding the two Senators for their support of the bill.

“We have heard from both sides,” she told FOXNews.com. “We’ve heard from those who are pleased that Sen. Collins, in particular, has been willing to play and negotiate. And there are others who feel strongly that they are not acting like Republicans are supposed to act.”

O’Brien doesn’t anticipate any local political fallout for Snowe or Collins, noting that both won’t face re-election for several years and that voters are familiar with them.

“People know what they’re getting when they vote for them,” she said. “They lean conservative on most issues — that’s why they’re Republicans. But they really do, I feel, do what is right — not politically right but morally right.”

On Sunday, a liberal, union-supported issue advocacy group initially founded in 2005 to rally against President Bush’s Social Security reform plan was praising the three in ads in Maine and Pennsylvania.

“Senators Snowe and Collins have worked with President Obama and other senators to reach agreement on a plan that has support from a broad range of groups, including the US Chamber of Commerce and organized labor,” says the version of the ad in Maine.

“Call Senators Snowe and Collins today at 202-224-3121. Thank them for their leadership and tell them to keep fighting for a plan to get our economy moving again.”

But Collins, at least, has left herself some wiggle room on the final bill that emerges after House-Senate negotiations.

“Well, I know that some of my Republican colleagues are unhappy with the position that I’ve taken,” Collins told FOX News. “I hope they will look at the fact that we were able to cut $110 billion of unnecessary spending from this bill. I think that’s a good accomplishment.”

Yet she conceded that if a bill comes back from the conference committee with the House “once again bloated with wasteful spending and it’s too expensive, then I’ll vote against it.”

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RNC Chairman Michael Steele on ABC

Many of you may be too young to remember any thing about soul singer James Brown, but for those of you who do, he used to be introduced as “The Hardest Working Man in Show Business.”

The two men in the Republican Party who have earned that title are Mitt Romney and Michael Steele. They sometimes appear to have cloned themselves, they are all over the place.

The new head of the RNC was verbally duking it out with George Stephanopoulus on ABC News this AM. Check out this YouTube of “The Man of Steele” in action defending market economics.

~~John Cronin~~

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Rediscover Your Party: Episode 1

February 8th, 2009 | 3 Comments | Posted in Republican, Republican Party, Republicans

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Nancy Pelosi’s First 100 Days in Office

If Nancy Pelosi was some back bencher from an obscure district in the middle of nowhere, she wouldn’t make me nervous. The fact is that this internationally acclaimed rocket scientist is third in the line of succession to the Presidency!

Click on this YouTube video and watch and listen to a couple of the leading lights in the Democratic Party and it will remind you why you are a Republican.

~~John Cronin~~

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Governor Romney’s Remarks to the House Republican Conference Retreat

Governor Romney today delivered the following remarks to the House Republican Conference Retreat hosted by the Congressional Institute at the Homestead in Hot Springs, Virginia.

As prepared for delivery

January 30, 2009

Thank you for the warm welcome. And thank you for the vote you took this week. You stood strong. You stood for principle. You put the best interests of the American people ahead of politics. I got some calls yesterday, after the news. They said what I feel. We want you to know that we’re proud of you.

It sure feels good to be in a room full of Republicans who came out ahead on Election Day. You can be proud of your success. And don’t be afraid to remind the President of this: you, too, won your election.

After my own campaign was over, Ann and I just wanted to get away from it all. We ended up in Beijing, about as far away as you can get. We went to the Olympic Games, and one of the events we attended was women’s beach volleyball. I noticed a lot of people looking in our direction, pointing toward us and taking pictures. It’s always nice to be recognized, and I told Ann, let’s be sure to smile and look our best. Ann said, they might like us even more if we got out of the way—Kobe Bryant is standing right behind you.

A few months have passed since the election. It’s enough time to consider the outcome and take stock of our party’s future. I want to make clear that I’m optimistic: our ideas are good, our agenda will make America stronger, and your action this week showed that we have the kind of leaders who will stand up for what they believe in.

I have often been asked what I think the Republican Party must do to recover. What I’ve said is this: My first concern isn’t about our party—it’s about our country.

In fact, the two are closely related. The best way for us to advance the prospects of our party is to do what we know is right for the country. This is what the American people expect of us. And that’s what we should expect of ourselves.

This is a time of hardship and uncertainty for millions of Americans. The question is: whose leadership and ideas will turn things around. And in such a moment, it’s our job to offer the clear answers, the proven solutions, and resolute leadership that will make this country strong again.

The new President and the Congressional majority are having a difficult time doing that. After all, they have a lot of campaign rhetoric to make good on. And they’ve got plenty of special interests to pay back. As the opposition party, we’re entirely free to do what is right for the country. There are certain advantages to that kind of freedom, and I suggest we make the most of them.

That begins with a clear analysis of what’s needed to get the economy moving again. Predictions that we are almost out of the woods, based on the length of prior recessions, are wishful thinking. Americans have lost some 11 trillion dollars in net worth. That translates into about 400 billion dollars less annual consumer spending in the economy.

There’s something else people don’t talk much about: The pool of investment capital—all the money available for new investments, business start-ups, business expansions, capital expenditures, and new hiring. The size of that pool has shrunk by trillions of dollars. This was a huge loss in value, and the effect could be felt for years—in businesses that don’t start up or grow, in jobs that don’t get created.

Given these extraordinary conditions, I am convinced that a stimulus is needed.

So why not just spend and borrow with reckless abandon? Because we’re in a very delicate situation that could easily get worse if Washington does the wrong thing. The package which passed the House is a huge increase in the amount of government borrowing. And we’ve borrowed so much already, that if we add too much more debt, or spend foolishly, we could invite an even bigger crisis. We could precipitate a worldwide crisis of confidence in America, leading to a run on the dollar … or hyper-inflation that wipes out family savings and devastates the middle class.

We’re on an economic tightrope. That’s why it is so important to exercise extreme care and good judgment.

So far, the Democratic leadership hasn’t shown a great deal of that. They’ve passed 355 billion in infrastructure spending, 60% of which won’t be spent by the end of 2010. Billions for electronic medical health records—it’s a fine idea, but it won’t produce jobs for years and years.

Even worse are the liberal payoffs—50 million dollars for the National Endowment for the Arts, hundreds of millions of dollars to the states for STD prevention and education. Until your loud protests got it dropped from the bill, there even was 200 million dollars for the DC Mall. That might have grown some grass, but it wouldn’t have grown the economy. And they’re doing this when the economy is on a tightrope.

It’s still early in the administration of President Obama. Like everyone who loves this country, I want him to adopt correct principles and then to succeed. He still has a chance to step in and insist on spending discipline among the members of his own party. It’s his job to set priorities. I hope for America’s sake that he knows that a Chief Executive can’t vote “present.” He can’t let others run the show. He has to say yes to some things and no to a lot of others.

We need to stimulate the economy, not the government. A true stimulus package, one that respects the productivity and genius of the American people, could lift this country out of recession. And experience shows us what it should look like.

First, there are two ways you can put money into the economy, by spending more or by taxing less. But if it’s stimulus you want, taxing less works best. That’s why permanent tax cuts should be the centerpiece of the economic stimulus. Even Christine Romer, the President’s own choice to lead the Council of Economic Advisors, found in her research that tax cuts are twice as effective as new spending.

Second, any new spending must be strictly limited to projects that are essential. How do we define essential? Well, a good rule is that the projects we fund in a stimulus should be legitimate government priorities that would have been carried out in the future anyway, and are simply being moved up to create those jobs now.

As we take out non-essential projects, we should focus on funding the real needs of government that will have immediate impact. And what better place to begin than repairing and replacing military equipment that was damaged or destroyed in Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan?

Third, sending out rebate checks to citizens and businesses is not a tax cut. The media bought this line so far, but they’ve got it wrong. Checks in the mail are refunds, not tax cuts. We tried rebate checks last year and they did virtually nothing to jump-start the economy. Disposable income went up, but consumption hardly moved. Businesses aren’t stupid. They’re not going to invest in equipment and new hires for a one time, short term blip.

You know, by proposing tax rebates, the Democrats are admitting that relief to families and employers works. Why can’t they shed their ideological bias and give the American people the kind of permanent, broad based tax relief that even they must know will relieve the suffering our country is going through?

Fourth, if we’re going to tax less and spend more to get the economy moving, then we have to make another commitment as well. As soon as this economy recovers, we have to regain control over the federal budget, and above all, over entitlement spending. This is more important than most people are willing to admit. I mentioned the economic tightrope before. There is a real danger that with trillions of additional borrowing—from the budget deficit and from the stimulus—that world investors will begin to fear that the dollars won’t be worth much in the future. They may fear hyper-inflation. It is essential that we demonstrate our commitment to maintaining the value of the dollar. That means showing the world that we will put a stop to runaway spending and borrowing. Senator Judd Gregg is rightly proposing a new bipartisan approach. It should be part of this bill.

Fifth, we must begin to recover from the enormous losses in the capital investment pool. And the surest, most obvious way to get that done is to send a clear signal that there will be no tax increases on investment and capital gains. The 2001 and 2003 tax cuts should be extended permanently, or at least temporarily.

And finally, let’s exercise restraint in the size of the stimulus package. Without restraint, it may grow as the days go by. Last year, with the economy already faltering, I proposed a stimulus of 233 billion dollars. The Washington Post said, and I quote: “Romney’s plan is way too big.” So what critique do they have for the size of the Democrat’s package? I’m afraid they’ve caught a bad case of liberal laryngitis. It’s everywhere these days.

In the final analysis, we know that only the private sector—entrepreneurs and businesses large and small—can create the millions of jobs our country needs. The invisible hand of the market always moves faster and better than the heavy hand of government.

The difference between us and the Democrats is this: they want to stimulate the government, and we want to stimulate the economy.

Government does have an obligation to address some of the abuses we’ve seen in the markets, particularly in the mortgage finance market and the mortgage guarantee sector. But when markets work as they should, when they are effectively and efficiently regulated, free markets create jobs and boost incomes.

As Republicans, we remain the confident voice of limited government and free enterprise. These principles are going to face another test when it comes to healthcare.

We should be first to propose a Republican plan to bring health insurance to all Americans, one based on market dynamics, free choice, and personal responsibility. I think what we did in Massachusetts is a good model to start from, but whatever direction we take, let’s not simply react to what the Democrats do. Their own plan would undoubtedly create a vast new system of costly entitlements and bureaucratic dictates, burdening the people and threatening the economy. Americans will be looking for a better alternative. Let’s give it to them.

Let’s also defend the rights of workers—against coercion and intimidation. The working people of this country should be able to unionize the way their fathers and mothers did – by free choice and secret ballot. The Democrats’ plan to take away those rights would result in economic calamity. More than that, it’s an insult to the dignity and common sense of working people. We’re going to defend the freedom of workers and the rights of labor. Interesting, isn’t it, which party stands up for workers and which one jumps for union bosses.

Ours is the party of freedom and enterprise, and we are the party of life. I know that I’m not alone in wondering why our new president, in the earliest hours of his administration, directed that international groups that promote and provide abortions be funded with American taxpayer dollars. Is that really what the world needs, more abortions?

In our party, we don’t have perfect agreement on the life issue. But with an administration that is firmly on the side of abortion, that answers to the most extreme wing of the abortion lobby, our duty is clear. We should be a voice for moderation and compassion. And even if the administration will say nothing on behalf of the child waiting to be born, we must take the side of life.

The new administration has also gained the favor of liberal commentators by pledging what it calls reform in the treatment of detainees who have taken up arms against America. And of course, President Obama says he will close Guantanamo.

But I wonder if he noticed that some of the men already released from Guantanamo have turned up in new al Qaeda tapes? I also wonder where the President now intends to send the terrorists we capture. Will he send them to nations that will release them to kill Americans? Or will he send them to US prisons, to infect our own criminal population?

There may be more steps like closing Guantanamo—and they will receive the predictable applause from law professors, editorial boards, and others who have no responsibility for protecting American lives. The Washington Post last week announced President Obama’s actions with this headline: “Bush’s War on Terror Comes to a Sudden End.” I hope this President knows that the terrorists are still fighting and killing Americans, and that they plan to keep killing Americans.

Here, too, our party will speak confidently. We have no greater duty than a vigilant defense.

This great party of ours has seen setbacks before. They have never defined us. For our party, I believe this will be remembered as the time when we demonstrated the strength of our convictions, when we defended the foundations of America’s prosperity, security and liberty.

America will be tested. It’s not for us to choose every new test that may arise. But we’re entirely free to choose how we will face those tests. We’ll face them as you did this week. And we’ll face them as Republicans have done before in our finest moments—with the clarity and the confidence of those who put their country first.

That is the work you have undertaken as Republican members of the 111th Congress. You gather in smaller numbers than last year, but you have ideas, energy, and convictions—and the resolve to lead America to a better future. The comeback for our nation and for our party starts with you. You can count me as an ally in the work ahead. Thank you.

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RNC Chairman Michael Steele’s Acceptance Speech

January 30th, 2009 | 6 Comments | Posted in RNC Chair, Republican Party, Republicans

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Report Claims Sarah Palin’s Pricey Wardrobe Stored in Trashbags at RNC H.Q.

January 26th, 2009 | 15 Comments | Posted in John McCain, Republican Party, Sarah Palin

It feels really weird posting anything from the infamous Huffington Post. I am taking this story with a huge grain of salt, considering the source. Nonetheless, since I have been wondering for weeks when the ertswhile and now defunct McCain campaign was going to get around to donating the clothes they bought for Sarah Palin to charity as they promised they would, this story at least brings the topic up at a time when the RNC has been slow in dealing with what appears to have been an audacious waste of Republican donor money.

I can fully sympathize with people’s outrage on this, especially in a time of economic crisis. Most of us work hard for our income and to think that the RNC spent $180,000 on high end clothes, only for them to wind up in trash bags in a storage room at the RNC H.Q. is adding insult to injury.

I hope that this story proves to be false. I am not attempting to ‘gin up another controversy. What I really want to hear is that the Party has already made plans to donate the clothes to a good cause so that they can be auctioned off to the highest bidder and then the money go directly to help people in need. Then I want to see a thorough housecleaning at the RNC. Not dealing with any piles of clothes filled trash bags, but sweeping out the people their who made the bone headed decision to spend the money on Palin’s wardrobe in the first place.

Then maybe we can go into the next election cycle with a politically astute, highly professional and financially conservative group of people who can join forces with grassroots activists in rebuilding the Party.

~~John Cronin~~

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/23/palins-180000-campaign-cl_n_160313.html

NewMajority has a report today that Sarah Palin’s infamous wardrobe has not been given to charity as promised by the McCain campaign after the amazing bill was revealed in October.

McCain even told the press that “one-third of the clothing was “given back.”

But for reasons that remain mysterious, the clothes remain stashed at the RNC’s Washington, D.C., headquarters. A source close to the issue told NewMajority that the clothes are “in the process” of being donated, and an RNC spokesman corroborated, saying the clothes have indeed been returned from Palin, “inventoried and will be appropriately dispersed to various charities.” Attempts for an explanation of when and where the clothes will be donated went unanswered, and the governor’s Alaska office does not comment on campaign issues.

The fact that the clothes have not been donated or publicly accounted for, however, has angered some big donors - who want to know exactly how their money was spent, and who are already enraged by the extravagant wardrobe figure. They say it’s time for the RNC to air its dirty laundry, if you will.

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John Cronin

Sen. Reid Hits the Ground Running in Uphill Re-Election Bid

December 28th, 2008 | 12 Comments | Posted in Harry Reid, Nevada, Republican Party

According to this article, Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada may be vulnerable in his upcoming re-election bid. For any Nevada Mittheads who would like to get involved in helping replace Sen. Reid with a conservative Republican, this would be a great opportunity to start the process of rebuilding the party of Lincoln and Reagan. If you would like to volunteer to help the campaign of the eventual Republican candidate, please let me know via the comments section of this post or you can email me at: jtc1767@Yahoo.com.

This will tie in with our Brainstorming For Romney effort that was held on Dec. 16. We need to have political activists who don’t like the way the Party has been going for much of the last eight years to step forward and take on strategic responsibilities within the states that will have Senator’s seats in play.

Your participation can take several paths, including phone banking, neighborhood canvassing, fundraising, organizing rallies, opening your home for coffees, distributing signs, speaking at local Republican clubs and both blogging in support of your state’s candidate and writing letters to the editor of your local newspaper.

If we can start an organization in each state that has a potentially vulnerable incumbent and get the groundwork laid well in advance, we can be in very good shape to ramp the effort up when the timing is right.

~~John Cronin~~

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123033501646236333.html

By T.W. FARNAM

WASHINGTON — Sen. Harry Reid will command the biggest party majority of any Senate leader in a quarter century when the new Congress convenes in January. But the Nevada Democrat is already worried about his own re-election fight in 2010.

Sen. Reid, perhaps the most-vulnerable Democrat who will face re-election in a midterm race that is likely to favor his party once again, began interviewing campaign managers last week. The Senate majority leader also recently stepped up fund-raising.

Starting early could help Sen. Reid avoid the fate of his predecessor, Tom Daschle, who was Democratic leader for a decade before losing his re-election bid in South Dakota in 2004. The current Republican leader in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, narrowly won re-election in Kentucky this year.

Sen. Reid “saw what happened to Tom Daschle and Mitch McConnell,” said Republican Sen. John Ensign, Nevada’s the other senator. “He saw the consequences of being the majority leader or the leader of one of the parties.”

Jon Summers, a Reid spokesman, said Sen. Reid knows he will be a Republican target in 2010 and has been preparing for his re-election campaign for some time. He added that Sen. Reid’s leadership position in the Senate is an asset, not a liability. “Being the majority leader means he can do things no one else can.”

Democrats have picked up a combined 13 seats in the past two election cycles. In 2010, more Republicans than Democrats are up for re-election, and Democratic incumbents appear to be well-positioned overall.

Sen. Reid, however, faces a potentially tough fight. A recent Research 2000 poll of likely voters put his approval rating at 38% and his disapproval rating at 54%, a possible reflection of voters’ displeasure with gridlock and partisanship in Washington. And while Nevada broke for President-elect Barack Obama by 12 percentage points in November, the state voted for President George W. Bush in 2000 and 2004.

As Senate majority leader, Sen. Reid is expected to play a critical role in shepherding Democratic priorities through the Senate, with a full docket of legislation up for consideration in the first year of the Obama administration.

Sen. Reid traveled to the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico late last month to meet with campaign contributors. A spokesman for Sen. Reid said he expects to have $3 million in his campaign account at the end of the year, up from about $2.75 million on Oct. 1. Sen. Reid spent $7 million in his 2004 race.

Two Democratic Senate colleagues, South Dakota’s Tim Johnson and Oregon’s Jeff Merkley, have sent emails to their supporters seeking contributions to Sen. Reid’s campaign.

“Republicans are going after Harry Reid’s Senate seat in 2010, and we can’t afford to lose a great Democratic leader,” Senator-elect Merkley wrote in his email.

Who might square off against Sen. Reid is unclear. Nevada’s Republican lieutenant governor, Brian Krolicki, declared his candidacy last month but was subsequently indicted for suspect accounting practices during his time as state treasurer. He has denied the charges.

Another potential GOP candidate is former Rep. Jon Porter, who lost his House seat representing an area outside of Las Vegas in November after serving three terms. The Research 2000 survey showed Sen. Reid beating Mr. Porter 46% to 40% in a potential 2010 race, an uncomfortably narrow margin for an incumbent.

Democrats say Nevada is a former swing state that has swung to their camp. The party now has a 100,000-person registration advantage there.

In 2004, the last time Sen. Reid was up for re-election, the number of registered Republicans and Democrats was about the same.

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