Pretty sure seniors are growing MORE numerous, not less. You're probably right about the rest. *NM*
Aemon Send a noteboard - 07/11/2012 05:03:17 PM
The Democrats just won during tough economic times. More younger voters enter the voting pool every day while older voters get older and pass away. The racial demographics of the country continue to shift. If the Republicans allow the Tea Party faction to bully them into fielding more hard-line and/or religious candidates, I think the party will continue to have trouble gaining a majority vote on the national level. After all, it's not as though they can point to individuals such as Palin, Akin, and Mourdock and say, look, we have some great successes with voters by going this direction.
Look at Romney, even. He had to be one candidate during the primaries to appeal to the far-right faction, and a different candidate during the election. That tells you right there that the priorities of the far-right faction are not believed to be the sort of thing that will get you elected on a national stage. Even just the need to play to them during the primary sets a candidate up for easy attacks from the other side during the general election. The Republicans need to get away from the far-right social policies to something a little more reasonable, and focus instead on their economic policies, which have traditionally (as far as I know) been their strongest selling point to the nation as a whole, regardless of whether or not that's always been based on reality. They need to get the Tea Party out of their spotlight, or find some way to work with them that doesn't involve fielding their candidates in important races and sucking up to them during the primary.
I don't think Romney will be the one they'll turn to for any of that. He lost to the loser in 2008 and lost to the winner this year. The Republicans will be looking to new voices to bring their message to the general public, and they'll need someone more dynamic than Romney. But I sincerely hope they go a more moderate direction, and don't decide that they need to be more hard-line and far-right in order to succeed. And don't just go moderate to win an election and then start dragging the party back to the right again. A growing majority of Americans, it seems clear, prefer something a little closer to the center. Go with that, and you can be part of the solution in terms of bridging the divide between partisans, rather than continuing to be part of the problem (and no, not the only part of it). Stop trying to get into a fight over everything, try to work together, appeal to the people in a forthright and honest manner, avoid having to say one thing to your base and another thing to the public in general, and maybe they can get back to work for the American people as a whole. The nation could probably use them and the large amount of support they still command in the tough times ahead.
Look at Romney, even. He had to be one candidate during the primaries to appeal to the far-right faction, and a different candidate during the election. That tells you right there that the priorities of the far-right faction are not believed to be the sort of thing that will get you elected on a national stage. Even just the need to play to them during the primary sets a candidate up for easy attacks from the other side during the general election. The Republicans need to get away from the far-right social policies to something a little more reasonable, and focus instead on their economic policies, which have traditionally (as far as I know) been their strongest selling point to the nation as a whole, regardless of whether or not that's always been based on reality. They need to get the Tea Party out of their spotlight, or find some way to work with them that doesn't involve fielding their candidates in important races and sucking up to them during the primary.
I don't think Romney will be the one they'll turn to for any of that. He lost to the loser in 2008 and lost to the winner this year. The Republicans will be looking to new voices to bring their message to the general public, and they'll need someone more dynamic than Romney. But I sincerely hope they go a more moderate direction, and don't decide that they need to be more hard-line and far-right in order to succeed. And don't just go moderate to win an election and then start dragging the party back to the right again. A growing majority of Americans, it seems clear, prefer something a little closer to the center. Go with that, and you can be part of the solution in terms of bridging the divide between partisans, rather than continuing to be part of the problem (and no, not the only part of it). Stop trying to get into a fight over everything, try to work together, appeal to the people in a forthright and honest manner, avoid having to say one thing to your base and another thing to the public in general, and maybe they can get back to work for the American people as a whole. The nation could probably use them and the large amount of support they still command in the tough times ahead.
What next for Romney and the Republican party?
07/11/2012 03:51:50 PM
- 931 Views
In my view, more moderation is needed.
07/11/2012 04:17:05 PM
- 455 Views
Pretty sure seniors are growing MORE numerous, not less. You're probably right about the rest. *NM*
07/11/2012 05:03:17 PM
- 483 Views
That's true, but I don't think that's the right way to look at it.
07/11/2012 05:18:52 PM
- 458 Views
Yeah, I hear what you're saying, and I agree with the overall point.
07/11/2012 07:52:33 PM
- 691 Views
Libertarian is the way to go IMO.
07/11/2012 05:19:29 PM
- 410 Views
totally agree, i was quite disappointed Johnson didn't get better results *NM*
07/11/2012 06:15:09 PM
- 259 Views
I'd say they're pretty much done
07/11/2012 07:54:44 PM
- 420 Views
They're through. They've been utterly crushed, demolished, and annihilated after last night.
07/11/2012 10:34:47 PM
- 501 Views
Well Romney is retiring but no the GOP is hardly 'done'
08/11/2012 12:51:44 AM
- 388 Views
I do hope the Republican party have the same lax attitude, I love seeing them lose *NM*
08/11/2012 12:46:32 PM
- 199 Views
I imagine lots of idiots feel the same way on both sides about both parties *NM*
08/11/2012 11:05:29 PM
- 219 Views
If you're relying on the democrats crashing and burning
09/11/2012 02:45:41 PM
- 434 Views
the dems played the "wait for the repubs to crash and burn" strategy and it worked out ok this year
09/11/2012 05:01:53 PM
- 500 Views
Off topic, but is your Shift key broken?
09/11/2012 05:47:12 PM
- 393 Views
do you have similar problems when talking to people with weird hair color or clothes IRL?
09/11/2012 07:09:24 PM
- 369 Views
The Dems learned their lesson from the Gore campaign
09/11/2012 06:25:23 PM
- 482 Views
i beg to differ
09/11/2012 07:22:40 PM
- 349 Views
The facts speak for themselves
09/11/2012 07:46:20 PM
- 502 Views
Re: The facts speak for themselves
11/11/2012 01:13:05 AM
- 465 Views
i'm quite curious about one thing, since i know you're such a numbers guy
11/11/2012 02:01:31 PM
- 385 Views
Re: i'm quite curious about one thing, since i know you're such a numbers guy
11/11/2012 05:48:09 PM
- 648 Views
I've also got a question for you
11/11/2012 02:16:07 PM
- 379 Views
Re: I've also got a question for you
11/11/2012 04:51:55 PM
- 415 Views
Re: I've also got a question for you
11/11/2012 05:48:52 PM
- 522 Views
There's also the fake or exaggeration aspect that might be in play but I can't judge that
11/11/2012 06:44:16 PM
- 874 Views
I think you were taking that statement rather literally
11/11/2012 07:36:14 PM
- 420 Views
I took it as a literal statement, the language implied as much to me...
11/11/2012 08:45:16 PM
- 504 Views
Oh, I can absolutely count on them crahsing and burning, that's a given, happens to both regularly *NM*
09/11/2012 06:28:51 PM
- 251 Views
You can't count on exploiting that
09/11/2012 06:39:47 PM
- 534 Views
'Mistakes' is subjective, sometimes you have to play your hand
11/11/2012 01:09:31 AM
- 395 Views
how are 300+ EVs "the skin of his teeth"?
08/11/2012 05:46:51 PM
- 408 Views
Because he barely won them? *NM*
08/11/2012 11:06:14 PM
- 187 Views
only OH, NC and FL are within 2% margin, i'd hardly call that "barely won"
08/11/2012 11:25:54 PM
- 417 Views
What makes you think Hillary won't be running?
08/11/2012 06:07:38 PM
- 398 Views
hillary has stated time and again she is done when she steps down as sec'y of state
08/11/2012 11:27:56 PM
- 354 Views
While I agree with the overall point that the Republican party isn't done by any means
08/11/2012 11:53:12 PM
- 352 Views
Romney is done; the last defeated nominee to be renominated was Nixon.
08/11/2012 04:53:52 PM
- 579 Views