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A day before President Obamas pick to be the nations top trade negotiator faces a Senate committee vote, Cayman Islands officials defended their banking system and the kinds of offshore investments that have gotten the trade nominee into some hot water on the road to confirmation.

Michael Froman, now deputy national security adviser for international economic affairs, was questioned closely last week after he revealed he has about $500,000 in Cayman Islands bank accounts in a filing with the Senate Finance Committee, which is reviewing his nomination. GOP senators highlighted Mr. Obamas own criticisms of 2012 rival Mitt Romney over his offshore bank holdings in pressing Mr. Froman, who was an executive at Citigroup before joining the Obama White House.

Cayman Finance, a trade association for financial services firms on the Islands, shot back Monday. The group said its members offer perfectly legal options for investing, even though they have been mischaracterized by recent media reports and political backlash concerning Mr. Fromans Cayman investments.

We believe the mischaracterization of Mr. Fromans investment as far as how it reflects on the Cayman Islands as a financial services jurisdiction needs to be corrected, Cayman Finance said in a statement to the media.

The focus of these various reports, which seems to cast a shadow over what is otherwise legal and well-regulated activity in the Cayman Islands, is unfortunately misguided and driven largely by the domestic political environment in the U.S., the group added.

Mr. Froman, who would replace former U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, is expected to be approved in a Senate Finance Committee vote Tuesday. If his nomination passes the committee, it will go to the Senate floor for final approval.

The next U.S. trade representative will have his hands full negotiating pacts with both the European Union and a handful of Asia-Pacific nations. In his confirmation hearing last week, Mr. Froman pressed Congress to give President Obama the expired fast-track authority to negotiate major trade deals that lapsed six years ago.

Republicans used last weeks confirmation hearing to label Mr. Obama as a hypocrite for submitting yet another nominee who has an offshore bank account in his personal financial portfolio, after he attacked Mr. Romney for the same thing during last falls presidential campaign.

Sen. Orrin G. Hatch of Utah, the ranking Republican on the panel, noted that President Obama had nominated two other people with financial ties to the Cayman Islands, including Treasury Secretary Jack Lew.

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Cayman Islands bankers defend rules ahead of trade nominee vote

By The Record

Before state lawmakers head home for the summer, there are a couple of bills involving free speech and public information that are languishing in the state Senate, but deserve action.

One bill (A.856) would expand protections to citizens exercising their right to speak on matters of public interest.

By filing lawsuits against critics contesting their statements or utterances, well-heeled interests found they could cow opposition by making it too expensive for average people to risk opening their mouths. Put another way, deep pockets trumped civic speech.

The stratagem was successful and became so favored that it earned its own name -Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation, or SLAPP. Free-speech advocates pushed back, lobbying for state laws to prevent the use of SLAPP to stifle speech on public issues.

New York state has had such a law for 21 years, but its application is limited to speech on public issues undergoing a formal permitting process.

The pending bill, which has passed the Assembly, but is being blocked by the Senate majority conference, would expand speech protection to include any communication in a place open to the public or a public forum in connection with an issue of public concern; or any other lawful conduct in furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional right of free speech in connection with an issue of public concern, or in furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional right of petition.

Keep in mind that the law is designed to stop the use of courts to economically suppress legitimate free speech, not block the right to counter slander or libel.

Also pending is a bill to return data on public pensions to the public domain.

A state court recently held that information about public pensions is not subject to disclosure under the states Freedom of Information Law. That is absurd.

More here:
Editorial: Free speech, public information bills deserve approval

May 30, 2013 11:24am

The Tea Party produced a lot of winners and losers in its short history.

Nowadays, the Tea Party is a trope that has come to encompass large swaths of the GOP, and reporters have learned that its tough to distinguish between a Tea Party Republican and a regular old Republican.

In 2009 and 2010, however, the Tea Party had its magic moment as an underdog push for anti-Obama, anti-tax, anti-spending candidates. It would come to upset the Republican Party and steer its policies rightward, but before that, the movement supplied a cast of unlikely characters that made the 2010 election cycle a memorable one.

Now, one of those characters is attempting a comeback.

Joe Miller, the Alaska attorney who nearly unseated Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski in 2010, will attempt another Senate run. He filed a declaration of candidacy with the Federal Election Commission, and while his campaign has not officially announced itself, Miller himself is officially a candidate for Senate in 2014, seeking to replace Democratic Sen. Mark Begich.

Miller was one of the losing candidates in 2010, having run a not-especially-disciplined campaign. But his renewed candidacy gives cause to revisit the winners and losers of the 2010 Tea Party wave.

THE WINNERS

Rand Paul. Who wouldve thought Rand Paul would become a national totem of libertarianism, much less win his Kentucky Senate race (a close one) in the first place. There was the GQ story about bong hits and Aqua Buddha. After he won, there was the Rachel Maddow interview about the Civil Rights Act.

Read more here:
Tea Party Class of 2010: Where Are They Now?



Coats Discusses IRS Violation of First Amendment Rights
Senator Dan Coats speaks on the Senate floor.

By: SenatorCoats

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Coats Discusses IRS Violation of First Amendment Rights – Video

(Scott Sommerdorf | Tribune file photo) Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, is leading a group of Republicans seeking a new line of inquiry in the IRS scandal — one aimed at the release of confidential documents, including those from a group that spent $570,000 helping to re-elect the Utah senator.

Washington A group of Senate Republicans led by Sen. Orrin Hatch called for a new investigation into the Internal Revenue Service on Thursday, focused on the improper release of information on nine conservative groups, including one that supported Hatch in his 2012 re-election campaign.

Last December, the IRS gave the website ProPublica the applications of 31 politically active groups with tax-exempt status, but nine of them had not been approved or denied. By law, the applications are confidential documents until the IRS makes a determination.

“We believe that disclosure of applications that are still pending is a violation of the Internal Revenue Code and other related provisions, which could result in civil and criminal penalties,” Hatch, R-Utah, wrote in a letter to the inspector general at the Treasury Department signed by all of the Republicans on the Senate Finance Committee.

ProPublica decided to release six of those nine applications, though it redacted financial information. One of them belonged to Freedom Path, a group with deep ties to Hatch that was created in January 2011 and spent at least $570,000 in support of the senators campaign for a seventh and, he has vowed, his final term in office.

Freedom Path operated as a tax-exempt social welfare organization as its application with the IRS was pending. That designation allowed it to withhold any public information on its donors and delay disclosure of its board of directors.

The IRS has still not ruled on Freedom Paths application and the group feels that it was among those targeted for extra scrutiny in a scandal that has already resulted in President Barack Obama firing the tax agencys acting commissioner, Steven Miller.

Freedom Path has yet to respond to a request for comment.

The groups board is comprised of a former Hatch employee and two political operatives who worked for the National Republican Senatorial Committee at a time when Hatch was the vice chairman. Freedom Path, which produced mailers and TV ads that supported Hatch and opposed his Republican challenger, also shared some vendors with the Hatch campaign, though they said no improper coordination took place.

Hatchs staff also said the senator was unaware of Freedom Paths problems with the IRS until it was reported in The Salt Lake Tribune and that the call for an expanded probe of the IRS is warranted in light of recent revelations.

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Hatch wants IRS probe to expand, include Freedom Path



First Amendment, Deficit, NSA, HoR and Senate qualifications, Unfunded Mandates

By: Javier Garcia

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First Amendment, Deficit, NSA, HoR and Senate qualifications, Unfunded Mandates – Video



IQ2: Is the GOP for liberty, or for restrictions on liberty?
2012 was a disappointing year for Republicans. The failure to win key swing states in the presidential election and surprising losses in the House and Senate…

By: IntelligenceSquared Debates

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IQ2: Is the GOP for liberty, or for restrictions on liberty? – Video



“I Can't Take the Loss of Liberty” or, How to Radicalize a Suburban Mom
“I didn't want to run for office,” says Gigi Bowman, “liberty candidate” for the New York state Senate. The Long Island native decided to run for office afte…

By: ReasonTV

The rest is here:
"I Can’t Take the Loss of Liberty" or, How to Radicalize a Suburban Mom – Video

The Second Amendment Foundation has endorsed the Senates bipartisan bill for background checks for gun stores, gun sales online and gun shows, reports DaylightDisinfectant.com.

Second Amendment Foundation Executive Vice President Alan Gottlieb said in an April 12 speech in Portland, Oregon that he consulted with Senators Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Pat Toomey (R-PA) on the bill (video below).

We snookered the other side. They havent figured it out yet, said Gottlieb, who bragged about new freedom for interstate sales, no liability for gun dealers and new punishments for the creation of the already illegal national gun registry.

Gottlieb added an anti-immigrant tinge to his endorsement, saying: “And I cant justify morally that a person walks into a gun show, buys a gun from somebody without giving his name, the guy can hardly speak English, and he walks out the door with that firearm with no check, nothing at all.”

So far only four Senate Republicans have agreed to support the Senate gun package, which has not yet reached the 60-vote requirement to pass.

According to a January 10-13 poll by the Washington Post, 88 percent of Americans support background checks of people buying guns at gun shows, while 76 percent supported background checks of people buying ammunition.

Sources: DaylightDisinfectant.com and Washington Post

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Pro-Gun Second Amendment Foundation Supports Senate Gun Control Bill (Video)

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., shown speaking at a meeting of the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce on March 19, is promoting libertarian ideas as a way the Republican Party can be more inclusive.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., shown speaking at a meeting of the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce on March 19, is promoting libertarian ideas as a way the Republican Party can be more inclusive.

Republicans don’t often make high-profile speeches at Howard University, one of the country’s most prominent historically black schools. But on Wednesday, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul will talk to Howard students about how his party can be more inclusive.

Paul believes one answer is libertarianism and party leaders are starting to think he might be on to something.

When Paul’s father, former Texas Rep. Ron Paul, ran for president in 2007, the Republican establishment treated him a bit like the wacky uncle in the family. In the middle of two expensive wars, Ron Paul’s libertarian ideas of small government and personal freedom didn’t really align with party leaders.

“They don’t stand for these ideals anymore,” Ron Paul said on NBC’s Meet the Press. “I represent the Republican ideals, I think, much more so than the individuals running for the party right now.”

Over the next several years, Americans grew tired of war. The economy tanked. The debt grew. President Obama’s stimulus and health care programs ballooned the size of government.

All of that opened Americans up to more libertarian ideas. In 2010, Ron Paul’s son Rand won election to the Senate as a Republican on what he called a “Tea Party tidal wave.”

“We’ve come to take our government back!” he said.

A Libertarian Moment

Read more from the original source:
Will The Future GOP Be More Libertarian?

By Jack Brammerand Beth Musgrave jbrammer@herald-leader.combmusgrave@herald-leader.com

FRANKFORT The Rev. Patrick Delahanty of Louisville says he thinks the new state law dubbed the Religious Freedom Act is needed.

“I want the state to meet the highest bar in its ability to interfere with one’s religion,” said Delahanty, executive director of the Catholic Conference of Kentucky, which backed the bill.

But the Rev. Nancy Jo Kemper of Lexington says the new law “teeters on the verge of religious fascism” and thinks it will open the doors for people to discriminate against others in the name of God.

Kemper, minister of New Union Christian Church in Woodford County and former director of the Kentucky Council of Churches, said she was voicing only her opinions and not those of the council or her church.

The strong disagreement between the two well-respected religious leaders underscores what was the most contentious issue in this year’s General Assembly House Bill 279.

On the final night of the state legislative session Tuesday, lawmakers in the House and Senate overwhelmingly rebuffed Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear by overriding his veto of the one-paragraph bill that will become law in about three months.

The vote in the House was 79-15; in the Senate, 32-6. Almost all of the legislators siding with the governor were from urban areas or are minorities.

Most lawmakers were afraid politically to let the governor’s veto stand, said Democratic consultant Danny Briscoe of Louisville, “because they feared it would hurt their chances of getting re-elected. This state is becoming increasingly conservative, so politicians are reluctant to do anything to go against that trend.”

Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer, Covington Mayor Sherry Carran and the Kentucky Association of Counties, the Kentucky League of Cities and more than 50 other groups urged Beshear to veto HB 279.

Original post:
Kentucky’s religious freedom bill divided politicians, public, ministers



Media law changes 'not end of democracy': Finkelstein
Ray Finkelstein QC tells a Senate Committee that the Australian Government's proposed media law changes present only a 'relatively minor imposition on press …

By: NewsOnABC

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Media law changes ‘not end of democracy’: Finkelstein – Video

Elizabeth Warren’s first amendment as a member of the Senate would provide disaster relief funds to the fishing industry in the Northeast as long as the deficit is not increased as a result of the aid.

Warren announced Friday that she cosponsored the amendment with fellow Massachusetts Sen. Mo Cowan and Democratic colleagues from New York, Rhode Island, New Hampshire and Maine.

Warren said the assistance would help fishermen struggling in the wake of last year’s declaration of a commercial fisheries failure by the federal government.

Warren noted the U.S. House did not consider a Hurricane Sandy Relief Act with $150 million in fisheries assistance that passed the Senate last December.

Continued here:
Fishing industry aid is Warren’s first amendment



Italy's centre-left wins presidencies of Senate and Chamber of Deputies

By: Euronews

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Italy’s centre-left wins presidencies of Senate and Chamber of Deputies – Video

Mar 192013

When Rand Paul wasannounced as the winnerof the Republican presidential straw poll at CPAC over the weekend, there was no chorus of boos from the assembled conservatives, a far cry from theresponsewhen his father won the same event a few years ago. Unlike Ron Paul, whose political coalition existedas much outside the Republican Partyas in it and whose numerous straw poll victories were the product of organized event-crashing that irritated party regulars, Rand has dedicated himself to becoming a force within the GOP and CPAC 13 represents the latest evidence that hes succeeding.

The instinct to compare the two Pauls is natural. They largely share the same quirky libertarianism, and when Ron stepped out of politics after his third and final presidential campaign last year, it seemed like he was handing off the movement he started to his son. But Ron Paul probably isnt the best point of reference for understanding where Rand Paul fits in todays Republican universe, and the role he could play in the years to come. A more interesting comparison might be found in the career of Robert A. Taft, the leader of a mid-20th Century conservative movement that was anchored by many of the basic tenets of Paul-ism.

Known as Mr. Republican, Taft was the son of William Howard Taft and represented Ohio in the Senate from 1938 until his death in 1953. In that time, he waged three presidential campaigns, his following growing with each effort. In 1952, he came to the brink of securing the GOP nomination, only to watch helplessly as his panicked enemies in the party rejiggered the convention rules and put Dwight Eisenhower over the top.

Taft favored a libertarian brand of conservatism, one that prioritized individual liberty and was deeply suspicious of big government, big business, and international adventurism. He was one of the New Deals leading critics in the Senate, opposed U.S. involvement in World War II, and spearheaded the Taft-Hartley Act, which checked the power of organized labor. His style washardly populist, but he appealed to a burgeoning army of grassroots individualists and was among the first to see the South as natural turf for conservative Republicanism.

Similarly, Paul is tapping into a Republican electorate that in the Obama-era has shifted toward his libertarianism. His recent filibuster of John Brennans CIA nomination wassomething of a revelation, with Paul using his time to challenge the administrations drone program and numerous Republican senators joining him on the floor. Raising the same questions in the Bush years would have left Paul a marginalized figure in the GOP; but with Obama in the White House, there is far more latitude for a Republican to criticize national security policies on civil liberties grounds.

The sequester also illustrates how the GOP is lurching toward Paul-ism. When Obama proposed the automatic cuts, the assumption was that the prospect of steep Pentagon reductions would provide a strong incentive for Republicans to compromise. Instead, as March 1 approached the consensus among conservatives was to accept the across-the-board cuts. It was Paul, who argues strenuously that the entire federal government the Defense department included should be downsized, whos in the Republican mainstream on the sequester.

At CPAC, Paul railed against what he called a stale and moss-covered Republican Party and spoke of a five-year path to a balanced budget, drug decriminalization and an end to big bailouts. The speech demonstrated his ability to calibrate his message in a way that doesnt automatically alienate huge chunks of his party. Whereas his father would deliver rambling lectures that were heavy on gold and often disconnected from the political news of the moment, Rand Paul communicates a desire to make himself relevant to the GOP conversation. He iscraftier than his fatherand has learned to finesse (or simply change) positions that seem too far out of the GOP mainstream, while strategically seeking out opportunities for showmanship.

TheGOP in the last five years has become far more open to libertarianism, both domestically and internationally, creating a potential opening for a Taft-like leader on the right someone who can push the party toward non-intervention while seriously competing for power. Paul clearly is interested in running for president in 2016, and could conceivably win caucuses and primaries something his father never once did in two runs for the GOP nomination.

Granted, a Taft-Paul comparison is hardly perfect. Taft was a serious intellectual who wasmore ideologically flexiblethan many realize. And while his rhetoric suggests hes on the same page as his father, Pauls specific foreign policy views are actually abit of a messright now. Broadly speaking, though, the GOP is now receptive to Taft-ism in a way that it hasnt been in decades, and Paul is profiting from it. Ultimately, of course, Tafts views werent quite mainstream enough to win him the GOP nomination; it was his non-interventionism that spurred Eisenhowers run in 52. But he very nearly won the nomination and was a major force in the party. It seems to be that example, more than his fathers, that Rand Paul is interested in replicating.

View original post here:
Is Rand Paul the next Robert Taft?

Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference last Friday morning, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had this to say about factionalism within the Republican Party:

“The mainstream media loves nothing more than to sow division among conservatives. They love it when we take shots at each other. It gets more coverage than a D.C. snowstorm.”

As a member of the media, my Illuminati overlords prohibit me from acknowledging media bias. But I might point out that McConnells own crew of Senate Republicans have divided themselves quite ably without anyone sowing anything, based purely on how they have voted in 2013.

To find out how united or divided both Republicans and Democrats are in the current senate, I started with a simple concept: For every member, I calculated which other senators voted the same way at least 75 percent of the time. In effect, this organizes the senate as a mini-Facebook of 100 users, in which any given pair of senators are friends if they meet this 75-percent threshold. When visualized, the picture looks like the final stages of cell division when a Paramecium reproduces, in which a formerly unified body has nearly split into two distinct creatures.

Visualizations like this one work by treating the senators as particles that repel one another, and treating the connections between them as springs that hold them together. Because the Democrats vote so cohesively, with few defectors, they are held together by a large number of springs. Because Republicans are less organized and less disciplined in their oppositionor more bipartisan, depending how you want to cast ittheir side of the network is more diffuse.

The 75-percent figure Im using to draw connections is a bit arbitrary, so you can adjust it with the slider at the top to see how connections materialize or disintegrate based on that threshold of bipartisanship. As you drag the slider to the right, youll see that the Republican coalition breaks up far faster than the Democratic cluster. In fact, 22 Democrats have voted together in all 37 votes so far in 2013.

If 37 votes doesnt seem like enough information to draw any conclusions, just select a previous congress from the dropdown menu in the upper right corner. Its the same picture for every session of congress.

You may also notice that voting discipline seems to be function of whos in charge, not an intrinsic value of liberalism. (Anyone who has seen Democratic politics from the inside knows this in their bones.) If you select the Republican-controlled 108th Congress, you can see a similar effect in reverse. At a 75 percent threshold, there is not a single connection between the clusters. As you drag the slider to the right, you see the blue dots scatter much faster than the red dots.

Alexander Furnas, a political scientist and fellow at the Sunlight Foundation who examined this data for me, suggests this is because of the control the majority party holds over what comes to a vote.

The majority is unlikely to bring things to vote unless they can garner 60 votes to be filibuster proof. Given that usually the majority does not have a filibuster-proof supermajority, that means that they are bringing things to vote that they know can peel off a few votes from the minority, he said. It is likely that that process contributes to the lower voting cohesion in the minority party.

See the original post here:
What does the Senate have in common with single-celled organisms? This diagram.



Sen. Cruz Defends Second Amendment in Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing on Guns
03/14/2013.

By: SenTedCruz

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Sen. Cruz Defends Second Amendment in Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing on Guns – Video

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–

Trikona calls for Congressional hearings of the Cayman Islands tax shelter racket and the efforts of Cayman courts and Cayman judges to extend their control over US courts and US sovereignty. Trikona will call upon Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Speaker of the House John Boehner, and the Senate and House Committees on Foreign Relations to investigate Ugland House, Judge Jones, and the efforts of Cayman judges and Cayman courts to interfere in the US. Trikona will also call upon Secretary of State John Kerry and Connecticut Senator Christopher Murphy, who sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, for the same purpose. Maples & Calder is the law firm in Ugland House operating these tax scams. Its former head, Andrew Jones, is now a judge in the Cayman Islands, after retiring with a fortune from Maples & Calder and while living a good part of the year in New York City. Judge Jones, in order to protect the Cayman tax shelter racket, and the fortunes of other Caymanian lawyers making money off of it, is now trying to batter down US protections against extension of Cayman tax shelter rackets so as to interfere with US sovereignty and US courts.

Ugland House, is the infamous Cayman Island building where 18,000 companies are located. In a 2009 speech President Obama said about Ugland House that either this is the largest building in the world or the largest tax scam in the world. In 2008 a key US Senate tax panel called for a crackdown on the Cayman Islands tax shelter racket. Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., Chairman of Senate Finance Committee, said: Were going to find a way to make a huge dent in this problem.

The US, through a law called Chapter 15, has tried to cordon off interference by the Cayman Islands (and from other like tax shelter havens) with US courts and US sovereignty. Trikonas lawyer, Michael Gilleran of the Boston law firm of Adler Pollock & Sheehan, commented: Chapter 15 is designed to create a wall against interference with US courts and US sovereignty by courts in tax shelter havens like the Cayman Islands. Courts in such places are trying to batter down the protective wall against them. The wall enacted by Congress, a wall built to protect a great public good, must hold. Cayman courts and Cayman judges, in order to protect their tax shelter racket and the fortunes they have made and will make off of it, are trying to ignore or sneak around the US laws against them.

Judge Jones, has now in the Cayman Islands appointed liquidators to interfere in law suits by a company, known as Trikona, in Connecticut against one of its directors for breach of fiduciary duty. One of these suits is pending in US District Court in Connecticut. Trikona says in the court filings in the Connecticut litigation that its (former) director, Mr. Rak Chugh, formerly of Lehman Brothers, while still a director of Trikona, stole its customer database, used the customer database to set up new companies, competed with Trikona through these new companies, and misappropriated Trikonas business opportunities. The Cayman liquidators, appointed by Judge Jones, are about to be funded by the defendant in the Connecticut litigation, namely, Mr. Rak Chugh. Mr. Chugh is about to or already has, through straw companies he controls, paid the liquidators $500,000 to interfere in the Connecticut litigation against him.

Read more:
Cayman Islands Seeks to Protect Its Tax Shelter Racket by Seeking to Extend Its Sovereignty to the US; Trikona …

Mar 142013

The Kentucky senator and Tea Party hero gets a chance to follow up on his filibuster success with an appearance at conservatives’ prom

Two of the GOP’s rising stars Sens. Rand Paul and Marco Rubio will deliverclosely watched speeches in the opening hours of the annual Conservative Political Action Conference on Thursday afternoon. The meeting, coming just months after President Obama thwarted the GOP’s effort to retake the White House, is being hailed as a chance for the right to begin mapping out its strategy for bouncing back. This focus on the future will be evident in the back-to-back speeches by Rubio, a party favorite, and Paul, a libertarian Tea Partier who was seen as a GOP outsider until his recent 13-hourtalking filibustermade him something of a political hero. Could CPAC be the chance Paul has been waiting for to go mainstream and establish himself as a frontrunner for the GOP’s 2016 presidential nomination?

This event certainly appears tailor-made for the Kentucky libertarian. He and Rubio are already the Senate’s highest-profile GOP presidential possibilities, and political handicappers will be hanging on every word in their back-to-back speeches. The “crowd might be more Paul-friendly than a normal Republican crowd,” say Aaron Blake and Sean Sullivan at The Washington Post. “Supporters of his father, former congressman Ron Paul, have regularly flooded CPAC in an effort to win the straw poll,” and the younger Paul “will certainly have plenty of devotees in the building.” Plus, says Frank James at NPR, the timing couldn’t be better for the senator from Kentucky.

SEE MORE: The bright side of Google Reader’s demise

Paul, especially, can be expected to get the hero’s treatment as he continues to bask in the glow of his widely covered, though ultimately unsuccessful, counterterrorism drone-inspired Senate filibuster of Obama’s CIA nominee, John Brennan, who has since been confirmed. And Paul is popular with the young libertarians who have comprised a significant part of CPAC’s attendance in recent years and venerated his father. [NPR]

The heroes of the moment are a trio of senators with far fewer substantive accomplishments but a far tighter emotional bond with the GOP base: Marco Rubio of Florida, Rand Paul of Kentucky, and Ted Cruz of Texas.

SEE MORE: Today in history: March 14

It all amounts to a jarringly rapid turn of events for the GOP’s rock stars of 2009, whose off-year victories in competitive gubernatorial elections brought cheer to a dejected Republican Party and whose accomplishments since taking office set them near the head of the pack of conservatives nationwide. [Politico]

Paul’s speech at CPAC will likely draw a large crowd and resounding applause, compounded because of his recent filibuster publicity. The overarching conflict between conservatism and libertarianism, however, will take more than 12 hours and 52 minutes to resolve. [Washington Times]

SEE MORE: Why MSNBC is demoting Ed Schultz [Updated]

Originally posted here:
CPAC: Rand Paul’s big moment?

Is the GOP Doomed?

Misc Comments Off
Mar 132013

Stalin called bourgeois parties “the dancing bears of social democracy.” Toothless and undignified distractions personifying the function of electoral politics–to channel the energies of the oppressed into bullshit discussions about trivia and inanities.

His phrase comes to mind as the corporate pundit class prattles on about the supposed current crise de coeur of the GOP. How can the Republican Party maintain its relevance?

The Republicans-could-go-extinct meme is a manufactured crisis. The Party of Hoover still controls the House. It holds 27 state legislatures and 30 governors’ mansions.

All this hand-wringing over the alleged danger that the GOP could fade into irrelevance ignores the fact that Barack Obama only defeated Mitt Romney by a few percentage points. Republicans lost a few seats in the House and a pair in the Senate, but things basically remained unchanged. Not bad for a party that failed to present any new ideas.

The argument that Republicans need to reinvent themselves boils down to two factors, the first shoulder-shruggingly silly: Given what a terrible job Obama did with the economy during his first term, the Republicans should have done better.

The worry that Republicans really should focus on is demographics: an influx of immigration, especially by Latinos alienated by decades of GOP race-baiting on illegal immigration, coupled with a seemingly long-term trend among young adults toward increased liberalism on social issues.

“The question now facing Republicans,” Brian Montopoli of CBS News wrote in November 2012, “is whether they shift toward the middle or instead try to appeal to growing demographic groups while staying planted firmly on the right side of the political spectrum.”

Karl Rove addressed the California Republican convention, making the case for tokenism: “We need to be asking for votes in the most powerful way possible, which is to have people asking for the vote who are comfortable and look like and sound like the people that we’re asking for the vote from.”

In his pamphlet “Go For the Heart: How Republicans Can Win,” David Horowitz, argues that the Republican victories of the future rely on a combination of hope and fear, making voters feel that Republicans care about them and that liberals want to enslave them in some imaginary nanny state.

The trouble is that neither argument stands a chance. If Republicans have been successful at anything, it’s that convincing Americans that, not only do they not care about them, Americans don’t deserve to be cared about.

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Is the GOP Doomed?



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