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Reports

Chairman Mike Turns the Tables

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Posted on Jan 14, 2010

By Eugene Robinson

Poetic justice is a beautiful thing. Republican Party grandees were all set to use Michael Steele in the most cynical way. Now it’s becoming clear that Steele has been using the users all along.

Republicans must have thought that electing Steele as their national chairman was a brilliant stroke. The 2008 presidential election had been a debacle for them. The Democratic Party was on top of the world, with the first African-American president taking office amid a national outpouring of good will.  Among the mediocre field of contenders for the RNC job—at that point, after all, who would want it?—there was one intriguing option. Why not begin the process of rebranding and renewal by installing the first African-American party chairman?

Steele was smooth and charismatic. He was effective on television, in a wall-of-noise sort of way, and clearly loved the limelight. African-Americans, Latinos and Asians had rejected the party in historic numbers, and smart Republican strategists understood the long-term implications of allowing the GOP to be pigeonholed as almost exclusively white and Southern. With Steele, the face the party presented to an increasingly diverse nation would be strikingly different. It would also be fraudulent, but hey, this is politics.

By now, however, it’s clear that Steele had an agenda of his own.

It didn’t seem unusual that the leader of the Republican Party would come out with a new book titled “Right Now: A 12-Step Program for Defeating the Obama Agenda.” But it was bizarre—and, to some Republican officials, infuriating—that Steele would spring this project on the party without bothering to tell anyone it was coming. Who came up with these 12 steps? Who decided it was a good idea to announce this “program” in the name of the party? Was there a vote, a meeting, even a memo?

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No. The book just adds to the compendium that should be called the Quotations of Chairman Mike.

And the list keeps growing. In one of a series of television interviews to promote the book, Steele opined that the party had no chance of regaining control of the House in this year’s midterm elections. This note of pessimism—probably true, but not likely to motivate GOP activists and donors—upset Republicans on Capitol Hill. The Washington Post reported that during a conference call, an unidentified “top congressional aide” told members of Steele’s staff: “You really just have to get him to stop. It’s too much.”

But Chairman Mike never stops. His response: “Fire me. But until then, shut up. Get with the program or get out of the way.”

The book and its fallout are just the latest Steele controversies. A few weeks ago, two former party chairmen took the unusual step of going public with criticism when it was revealed that Steele, who is paid $224,000 annually by the RNC, has also been making paid speeches at up to $20,000 a pop. In November, when Republican candidates won the governorships in Virginia and New Jersey, Steele took personal credit for the victories, as if they had been all his doing. “Assume the Heisman position,” he said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” as he, indeed, struck the iconic Heisman trophy pose. “There you go. That’s my moment.”

If Steele’s critics are shocked to discover that he is an adept and tireless self-promoter, they should have bothered to check his record. On the basis of one term as lieutenant governor of Maryland and one failed U.S. Senate campaign—most of his television ads failed to mention the fact that he was a Republican—he has made himself into a national figure. The party should have known that it wasn’t getting a chairman who would just shut up, sit in the corner and wait to be trotted out when the subject of diversity came up.

No matter how much Steele’s opponents in the GOP establishment may fume, the party is unlikely to dump him anytime soon. The “optics” of dismissing the first African-American chairman so quickly would be awful. And while the long knives may be out for him in Washington, he is much more popular among Republican officials outside the Beltway.

And why not? The party, moribund when Steele took over, has had an excellent fundraising cycle, taking in $80 million. He cleaned house at RNC headquarters, shaking up the complacent staff. He pays attention to long-neglected state party leaders. Disgruntled GOP insiders are probably stuck with him.

I sympathize. A good figurehead is so hard to find.

Eugene Robinson’s e-mail address is eugenerobinson(at)washpost.com.
   
© 2009, Washington Post Writers Group


Comments

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ThomasG's avatar

By ThomasG, January 20, 2010 at 11:52 am Link to this comment

DieDaily, January 17 at 3:15 pm,

Independent voters that are no doubt a part of the Left voted in MA Scott Brown, a Right-Winger, into the Senate, how is that going to improve political representation for the Left?

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rico, suave's avatar

By rico, suave, January 19, 2010 at 2:33 pm Link to this comment

Wait. Michael Steele is black. How could he possibly be “using the users” in AMERIKKKA?

Note to bogglesthemind: It’s blind squirrel, not pig.

Note to bozh: Did you send that from a cellphone? With your thumbs?

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ThomasG's avatar

By ThomasG, January 17, 2010 at 6:27 pm Link to this comment

The RNC appears to have hired Uncle Mike and got Michael X.  The next big question is what he is going to convert to, and when?

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DieDaily's avatar

By DieDaily, January 17, 2010 at 10:15 am Link to this comment

LFMAO! So he pulled an Obama on the Reps! Well, folks,
looks like we still got two flavors of stupid. Anyone
STILL not want to vote independent?

Report this

By bozh, January 17, 2010 at 9:29 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Boggles, whether u r serious or well-meaning, i wld like to enumerate some events that r more important than writing ab a single pol.
ROR, right to live[and not just for children in afgfh’n], right to abide in one’s habitat; rigts to be informed, to be formed [70% of amers r deformed], free higher education, etcetc. tnx

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bogglesthemind's avatar

By bogglesthemind, January 16, 2010 at 7:19 pm Link to this comment

rollzone

“if he successfully rides the wave and somehow contributes to the party . . .

Good move, just keep lowering the bar.  Yep, even a blind pig finds an acorn
once in awhile.

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bogglesthemind's avatar

By bogglesthemind, January 16, 2010 at 7:09 pm Link to this comment

bozh

“not one of the 10k more importnant events”

Wow, ten thousand!  Please, enlighten us with, at least, say two of those
events.  Two well be enough, but if you have more that’s alright—mention
them as well . . . thanks.

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By bozh, January 15, 2010 at 5:38 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

It may be entertaining piece to some, one, two, or many.
However, not one of the 10k more importnant events than what steele does is even mentioned let alone discussed.

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By rollzone, January 14, 2010 at 11:04 pm Link to this comment

hello. your accusations make him out to be just another philanthropic on the hill absorbed in self gain. the swing in the party has more to do with the disappointing performance of the Democrats than any personal contribution. the party will fire him the moment he crosses the line. if he successfully rides the wave and somehow contributes to the party, he will have done well. the Republican party will not be about him.

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