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Reports

The Republican Civil War

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Posted on May 10, 2012

By Richard Reeves

After Richard Mourdock defeated Sen. Richard Lugar by 20 points in Tuesday’s Indiana Republican Senate primary, he called, more or less, for one-party government. Asked by CNN’s Soledad O’Brien his definition of "compromise," he answered:

"What I’ve said about compromise and bipartisanship, I hope to build a conservative majority in the United States Senate so bipartisanship becomes Democrats joining Republicans to roll back the size of government, reduce the bureaucracy, lower taxes and get America moving again."

When O’Brien responded that that was actually the opposite of compromise, Mourdock averred: "Well, it is the definition of political effectiveness."

Rolling on, the tea party’s latest gift to American politics added: "We are at that point where one side or the other has to win this argument. One side or the other will dominate. ... You never compromise. ... If people on the left they have a principle to stand by, they should never compromise; those of us on the right should not either."

Lugar’s defeat was sad because he was in the top 10 of Senate members. Smart, sophisticated, willing to listen to the other side and sometimes vote with them, too. On the other hand, he was 80 years old and had not had a home in Indiana for decades. Experience and effectiveness worked against Lugar, once mayor of Indianapolis. His many strengths made him that most terrible of words in Indiana, an " elitist." Monica Boyer, one of the founders of Hoosiers for a Conservative Senate, said this of a breakfast conversation with Lugar in 2010:

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"We told him of our grievances and he said to us, ‘I vote this way because I feel it is best for Indiana.’ He just kept saying that over and over again, ‘I know what is best.’ ”

Perhaps it was time to go, but it was a shame to see him lose to a candidate like Mourdock, the state treasurer. There is something about him that reminds one of trench warfare in World War I. His words speak of deadlock, decline and death—the death of why the United States has worked so well over time.

It was a civil war in Indiana. But the state has always been divided—Chicago suburbs and manufacturing cities in the north and the Ku Klux Klan in the south. And the combatants were both in the same army, the Republican army. Mourdock still has to defeat a Democrat, Rep. Joe Donnelly, in the general election. And Democrats, silver lining, did not think they could defeat the venerable Lugar in November.

So, at least until November, the tea party we shall always have with us, or should I say, the Republicans will have them. What the rest of us will probably get is a Congress refusing to take action on most anything. They simply don’t want a government they are convinced has betrayed them, favoring minorities, other countries and immigrants. Anyone who disagrees with that, Democrat or Republican, is a "socialist," maybe even a "communist." Or, even worse, a columnist. In an amazing performance last week, Mitt Romney, who has to be terrified of his right-wing base, stood silently as a speaker introducing him called President Obama a "traitor."

Well, they have all the money in the world and are working quietly to find and recruit credible candidates this time—no more Christine O’Donnells of Delaware—and they will continue to do as much damage as possible to reasonable governance. The irony of their battles is that, more often than not, their targets are not liberals, they are conservatives. Their next target is Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, who they’ve been saying is not conservative enough.


© 2012 Universal Uclick


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By Dana Clark, May 12, 2012 at 1:59 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Southern Indiana is overwhelmingly populated by the descendants of abolitionists. Northern Indiana is where the Klan historically resides.

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By berniem, May 12, 2012 at 1:39 pm Link to this comment

When will what is left of the sane people of this nation realize that fascism is here and that all of the traditional remedies for maintaining a stable, democratic government are no longer viable? The time for raising a resistance movement is now! We cannot wait until the police state is fully entrenched. Each day the forces of repression build and prepare to act with increasing impunity in response to any attempts at peaceful protest or public disagreement with the insane course we are following! FREE BRADLEY MANNING & TIM DeCHRISTOPHER!!!!!

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By prisnersdilema, May 12, 2012 at 8:58 am Link to this comment

Why would the people of Indiana or elsewhere ever think that their government
betrayed them?

“They simply don’t want a government they are convinced has betrayed them,
favoring minorities, other countries and immigrants. Anyone who disagrees with
that, Democrat or Republican, is a “socialist,” maybe even a “communist.” Or, even
worse, a columnist. In an amazing performance last week, Mitt Romney, who has
to be terrified of his right-wing base, stood silently as a speaker introducing him
called President Obama a “traitor.” “

Well maybe the people of this country view the loss of jobs overseas, the bank
bailouts, the abandonment of homeowners, the gutting of constitutional rights,
the torture and murder of prisoners, the termination of habeas Corpus, debt
slavery, NDAA, NAFTA, CAFTA, Insurance reform, and the continued brutalization
of American’s by TSA, as betrayals. 

Lugar was a part of the political process that did all that.

Yes, right wing conservative economic and social policies, are frightening, but so
are gutless Democratic ones that enable those policies.. Both parties are
responsible for “deadlock, decline and death—the death of why the United States
has worked so well over time.”

The Republican party, has used and fed, the lunatics on its right forever. The
Democrats, have done the same to minorities as typified by Clinton’s welfare
reforms. Both parities have techniques to manipulate voters, then betray them. 
Then both parties point the finger at each other.

Bi-Partisanship, has become just another term for double cross. And I am
frightened each time leaders from both parties announce some sort of Bi-Partisan
agreement. Usually it means another freedom or right has been taken away. 


If Richard Mourdock, is elected Senator, he will be just another lunatic, in a Senate
full of them. Don’t be surprised, if he votes for the corporate reich.

What columnists like Richard Reeves don’t understand is that the people of this
country do understand what has happened to them and who did it. The devaluing
and denigration is typical of those that view us as useless eaters.

The rating of Congressional performance reaches a new low each week. The
people do not trust Washington at all. For example a significant number of people
believe that 911 was perpetrated by their own government. Oklahoma City is
heading in that direction too.  Whether this is true or not, is not my point. What is
significant at this point, is that very large numbers of American’s believe it.

They believe their government would murder, and main it’s own citizens for
political gain. If Mr. Reeves and others like him don’t understand the significance
of this,  they will never understand the political situation in this country right
now.

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By ODIrony, May 12, 2012 at 4:46 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

The true delegate count as of 12 May 2012 is as follows: Romney - 312; Gingrich - 24; Paul - 110; Santorum - 144; caucus or primary held but delegate selection yet to be decided - 750; caucus or primary not yet held - 638.

Delegates are not allocated until the state parties’ conventions. By National Republican Party Rule 38 no delegates are bound, despite state rules (confirmed by case of Utah delegate at the 2008 Republican National Convention by RNC top lawyer).

PS By National Republican Party Rule 11, Mitt Romney is now ineligible to be nominated since Mr Priebus began publically supporting him.

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