Posted by Richard on 2nd November 2006
Next Tuesday we exercise our traditional voting rights for members of the Congress - - - in Virginia, we will vote for one US Senator and for our particular U S Representative.
Electing senators and representatives who will vote for Republican organization of their respective chambers is simply essential to winning the war we are in, and thus to defending America successfully - - - whatever the individual imperfections of any individual Republican candidate.
Some of our brethren unfortunately have not grasped the full dimension of the Islamic radicals’ war against the US. These conservatives see our fight as a distraction from other parts of our agenda, rather than as the preeminent challenge which the nation must surmount - - - along with the critical work of getting control of our borders, right-sizing government, taking back education from bureaucrats and multi-culturalists, and advancing a low-tax, job-growth economy.
All of us who work to help those conservatives and others see how the world we once knew is ending, should read and digest Mark Steyn’s definitive (to date) primer on this war and why we must win it. Steyn titles his book America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It.
Victor Davis Hanson in his review of America Alone spells out the heart of Steyn’s message:
“Instead, day in and day out, on the op-ed pages of the British, Australian, Canadian, and American daily papers, Steyn has brought home the simple fact of this war: whatever mistakes we have made are not fatal if we keep our heads. As he puts it near the end of the book, the problem is not merely that we are only employing a fraction of our physical power: ‘This book isn’t an argument for more war, more bombing, or more killing, but for more will.’” [Underscoring added.]
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Posted in Election 2006, The House, The Senate, National Security | 1 Comment »
Posted by Richard on 18th October 2006
There are too many reports of conservatives acquiescing in a 2006 Congressional defeat, perhaps escaping into their fantasy that Republicans will somehow be “punished” for straying from historic principles, and that a consequently “cleansed” party can return to power easily in 2008.
Theirs is a perilous path to follow. Jim Geraghty in National Review Online addressed this line of thought last May:
“Your effort to re-conservativize the Republican Party in Washington by staying home this year will have the effect of massacring the actual conservatives and empowering the moderates who you disdain. Perhaps we can call this counterproductive maneuver ‘RINO-plasty.’
But that’s okay, the staying-at-home-conservatives insist. The GOP will win back the House and Senate in 2008, establishing a true conservative majority.”
Geraghty explained:
“. . . [w]hat kind of lengths do you think the Democrats will go to in order to keep power once they’ve got it? Does the “Fairness Doctrine” ring a bell? You think Pelosi and Reid wouldn’t try that tactic to hinder conservative talk radio? How about McCain-Feingold 2.0, with a particular focus on controlling “unregulated speech” on the Internet and blogs?”
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Posted in Election 2006, The House, The Senate, Fairfax, Loudoun, Taxes | 4 Comments »
Posted by Richard on 10th October 2006
On Friday, I argued that the “U.S. House of Representatives has, on most survival issues, been the unrecognized strongpoint for conservatives.”
Yesterday National Review on Line commentator Mark Levin struck and amplified the same chord. Levin writes:
“The fact is that the House is more conservative than either the Senate or, in many cases, the executive branch. The House pushed for energy exploration in places like ANWR, only to be thwarted in the Senate. The House pushed for a border-security- first agenda, against the “comprehensive” amnesty bill first demanded by the Senate and the president. And while the House can be blamed legitimately for spending too much, the Senate spends more and the president refuses to use his veto. Moreover, some of those who condemn House spending are unwittingly condemning the House for getting behind the president’s big-government initiatives, including Medicare prescription drugs, expanded farm subsidies, and federalizing education.
We conservatives need to be honest with ourselves. If the House, the most conservative of the elected bodies, is not conservative enough, then the Republican Senate and the Bush presidency are worse. Yet I don’t hear much clamoring for sweeping the Senate clean or much criticism of the president from our corner. And the most effective politician at obstructing many conservative polices initiated by the House and the president is John McCain. But McCain is said to be among the top candidates for the Republican presidential nomination. Somehow he escapes the wrath of those who are frustrated with Republicans. As I write, he is busy traveling the country raising money, securing endorsements, and campaigning for, well, Republicans.”
After watching the Republican pundits “pile on” and patronize House majority whip Roy Blunt during the January leadership contest, I began to suspect many center-right bloggers of sharing some of the same class outlooks as their left-wing contemporaries.
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Posted in National Races, The House, The Senate, Inside Beltway, Outside Beltway | No Comments »
Posted by Richard on 6th October 2006
There are just four weeks and a day or two between now and the Congressional elections.
The consequences of Democratic control of the U. S. House of Representatives would be appalling, and former presidential speech writer (and occasional Administration critic) David Frum spells them out:
“. . . [T]hey will seek to harry and destroy the administration through the use of Congress’s investigative powers. For them, one useful thing about investigations is that the investigators are not required to agree in advance that any wrongdoing actually occurred. Left-wing Democrats convinced that the country was deceived into war by a sinister neoconservative cabal can work alongside more moderate Democrats, who will tell themselves that they are just asking neglected questions. And both factions can then happily go fishing for something damaging to turn up.
For those on the receiving end, a groundless investigation is every bit as time-consuming and excruciating as a meritorious one. And for those on the questioning end, investigations can be nearly equally damaging. They tempt senators and their staffs to see plots rather than problems, to seek revelations rather than solutions, and to think like prosecutors rather than policymakers.”
These are not normal times, but a time of war, even if many people of both parties do not accept that fact.
- We are in a world war against the terror-masters of Iran and Syria, abetted from time to time by North Korea and other unfriendly states.
- We are in struggle on our doorstep to preserve our electoral system, law and order, and our economy against indiscriminate opening of our continental borders.
- We are in a longer-term cultural battle to restore teaching the fundamentals of western civilization within taxpayer-supported and many private schools systems (from K through graduate school). Far too many schools no longer transmit our heritage, propagating instead a “multi-cultural” vision hostile to traditional values as well as sound learning of fundamental skills.
The Bush Administration does not have a perfect record in all these matters. But this is not the place to reiterate their shortcomings, which most conservatives understand quite well.
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Posted in The House, The Senate, John Warner, Frank Wolf | 1 Comment »
Posted by Richard on 28th September 2006
Readers’ attention is invited to Scott Johnson’s analysis today of Larry Sabato’s charges against senator George Allen.
Johnson yesterday had raised questions about Sabato’s statements.
Powerlineblog, written by three lawyers, ranks among the very best of conservative blogs.
One hopes that Allen can move promptly to get the public’s focus back on national policy issues and the record of his opponent. Continually responding to ad hominem attacks of this nature becomes a mug’s game for the Senator. It is long since time for a scrutiny of Jim Webb’s public record and his views over the years.
Posted in Election 2006, The Senate, George Allen, James Webb | No Comments »
Posted by Richard on 28th September 2006
The House-Senate conferees on the FY 2007 Department of Defense authorization bill reportedly have dropped the House of Representatives-approved safeguard allowing military chaplains freedom of conscience and speech in their public prayers. (For background, see my earlier post.)
The House safeguard had stated:
Each Chaplain shall have the prerogative to pray according to the dictates of the Chaplain’s own conscience, except as must be limited by military necessity, with any such limitation being imposed in the least restrictive manner feasible.
But Defense Department voices had objected:
This provision could marginalize chaplains who, in exercising their conscience, generate discomfort at mandatory formations. Such erosion of unit cohesion is avoided by the Military’s present insistence on inclusive prayer at interfaith gatherings–something the House legislation would operate against.
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Posted in The House, The Senate, National Security, Religion | No Comments »
Posted by Richard on 28th September 2006
(***Scroll down to an important Loudoun County meeting on the “Hallowed Ground” scheme next Tuesday.)
The “culture of governmentalism” can beguile even long-time Republican House and Senate incumbents, and certainly their unwary staffs.
Such appears to be the case with H.R. 5195, “Journey Through Hallowed Ground National Heritage Area Act of 2006,” whose principal House sponsor is Frank Wolf of Virginia, and its Senate counterpart, S.2645, sponsored by George Allen.
In prepared testimony this morning before a House of Representatives panel, Peyton Knight of the National Center for Public Policy Research declares:
“Worse than run-of-the-mill pork, which wastes federal tax dollars, this legislation would actually purchase preservationist special interest groups, many of which have histories of anti-property rights activism, and encourage them to urge State and local lawmakers to restrict land use, modify zoning and even acquire private property or interests in private property.” [Emphasis added.]
Knight, the director of environmental and regulatory affairs at the National Center, explains:
“Specifically, H.R. 5195 would create a 175-mile long federal corridor, the boundaries of which encompass portions of Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia and Pennsylvania. It would assign a ‘management entity’ consisting of the Journey Through Hallowed Ground (JTHG) Partnership (an umbrella group of preservation activists and lobbyists who stand to directly benefit from the bill’s passage) and the Interior Department to oversee development and land use in the area.”
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Posted in Real Estate, The House, The Senate, George Allen, Frank Wolf | 2 Comments »
Posted by Richard on 23rd September 2006
The Good: Last week, all sorts and conditions of Virginia House Republicans came together to support the Federal Election Integrity Act, H.R. 4844, requiring photo-identification to vote in Federal elections and proof of citizenship to register for Federal elections.
And, as a bonus to fiscal conservatives, Virginia Representative Eric Cantor teamed up with Indiana Representative Mike Pence to offer legislation, H.R. 6057, eliminating the capital gains tax on inflation. Some tax authorities argue that the Administration could do this by executive order. (Full disclosure: your correspondent was one of 20 signers of a coalition letter to Congress urging an end to taxing inflation on capital gains.) The Club for Growth has made H. R. 6057 a priority. That pro-growth voice reports 67 co-sponsors of the measure last evening.
The Bad: In a time of porous U.S. borders, one would think members of all parties would be eager to secure the US voting system. Lamentably, Virginia U.S. Representatives Robert Scott, Rick Boucher, and James Moran voted not to do so.
And Tenth District challenger for the U.S. House Judy Feder crows:
People in this district—indeed, all across Virginia and across America—are desperate for change and accountability in Washington, DC.”
But apparently that promised accountability does not extend to explaining where she stands on securing our voting system. NoVaPolitics asked Ms. Feder for her views on the Federal Election Integrity Act. She failed to respond.
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Posted in The House, The Senate, John Warner, Jim Moran, Judy Feder, Eric Cantor, Robert Scott, Rick Boucher | 4 Comments »
Posted by James on 19th September 2006
“Women can’t fight” vs. “Macaca,” courtesy of RCP Blog.
Or is it cowboy boots vs. combat boots? This much the NY Times is right about:
Some Republicans worry that the growth of Northern Virginia, with its increasingly urban voters and what some pollsters say is discontent with the status quo in Washington, poses a real challenge to their party. Mr. Webb’s allies, for their part, worry he will not have enough money to hold his own against Mr. Allen on television.
The anxieties on both sides point to a central truth: Virginia, at the moment, is a very competitive race.
Posted in Election 2006, Local Races, National Races, The Senate, Politics 101, George Allen, James Webb | No Comments »