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Thursday, December 03, 2009
Public Option Trickery
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 8:40 AM
Rick Scott of CPR has a good post up over at RedState on "Public Option Trickery." 

Here's an excerpt:

What are we up to now, six different names for the public option? Let us count the ways desperate Democrats have tried to re-brand, re-tool, re-name or re-invent what is, by all accounts, a plot that will ultimately force millions of Americans into the waiting arms of government health care bureaucrats.

During the 2008 campaign, the public option was described as “government-run plan similar to Medicare.” Whoa…really? The same Medicare plan that cannot now meet its own financial obligations and is projected to be come up short by $38 trillion by the time the youngest Americans will need it? No wonder we haven’t heard that description much lately.

A while back, I wrote of how important Scott's efforts have been to fighting socialized health care (most people thought it would sail through this summer).  As this debate continues in the Senate, look for him to ramp up efforts to defeat it...





Friday, November 13, 2009
Perry Leads Hutchison 46% to 35%
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 8:25 AM
According to Rasmussen Reports:

Governor Rick Perry is back out front of Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison with an 11-point lead in the 2010 Republican Primary gubernatorial race in Texas.

A new Rasmussen Reports telephone survey of Texas GOP Primary voters finds Perry with 46% of the vote while Hutchison earns 35%. Four percent (4%) support Debra Medina, a tea-party activist who joined the GOP race a few months ago, and 14% are undecided.







Thursday, November 12, 2009
Liberal Groups Boycotting DNC
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 3:16 PM
Yesterday on MSNBC, Amanda Terkel and I discussed President Obama's failure to fulfill his campaign promise to his base, regarding "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"...






Thursday, November 12, 2009
Happy Birthday Morton Blackwell!
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 1:56 PM
On November 16, Morton Blackwell will celebrate his 70th birthday.  Tonight, there will be a dual celebration: Morton's 70th birthday -- and his Leadership Institute's 30th birthday.

If you're not familiar with Morton, you should be; few modern conservative leaders have done more to advance the cause of liberty.

Morton has had a long and distinguished career.  Before founding The Leadership Institute (Li) in 1979, he was Barry Goldwater’s youngest elected delegate to the 1964 Republican National Convention in San Francisco.  In 1980, he organized and oversaw the national youth effort for Ronald Reagan.  He then served as Special Assistant to the President from 1981-1984.  In 1984, he became the full-time President of Li.

Having worked at Li for four years, I can personally tell you that the organization is one of the most important in the nation -- and that Morton is one of the most dedicated and honorable men I have ever known.  I feel truly blessed to have known him and to have worked for him.  Clearly, I would not be doing what I am doing were it not for the lessons I learned from Morton.

Aside from being dedicated to training the next generation of conservative leaders, Morton and his wife Helen are proud grandparents.  And Morton also has an interesting hobby: He is an avid beekeeper. 

Morton has said of his late friend Paul Weyrich that, "If there were a Mount Rushmore for conservative leaders, Paul's face would have to be on it." 


I think it's fair to also say that Morton's face would be right there, too...





Thursday, November 12, 2009
Republican Lowden the Front-Runner in Nevada
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 1:36 PM
http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/assets_c/2009/10/reid_lowden_split-cropped-proto-custom_2.jpg

I have been around enough campaigns to know that you can usually identify the front-runner as the candidate who has the most wacky, personal attacks thrown at them. 

Sue Lowden is the front-runner in the Republican primary to unseat Majority Leader Harry Reid, and if the election were held today -- she would win by double digits (so would Republican Danny Tarkanian, by the way).  Still, there's a long way to go -- and she will surely have to fend off attacks from her Republican opponents, as well as from the Harry Reid political machine.
 
The latest controversy regards accusations that, as Chairman of the Nevada GOP, Lowden may have suggested using showgirls to spice up a 2008 John McCain campaign rally at the Las Vegas airport.  On a phone interview this morning, Lowden denied officially submitting this idea as proposal, though she said it's entirely possible she may have joked about it at some point. 

Regardless of the veracity of this, the accusation hardly seems controversial.  After all, it is typical protocol for Las Vegas' Mayor to greet dignitaries at the airport with Show Girls.  Having showgirls greet a candidate in, say, Alabama, might raise some eyebrows -- but in Las Vegas, of all places -- it's not really taboo.  In fact, it's an iconic part of the Las Vegas tourism industry. 

Of course, this is really a distraction from the issues that matter, and from the fact that Lowden seems to have the best shot at ousting Harry Reid.  If you are interested in the conservative record of Sue Lowden and what kind of Senator she would be, read her recent op-ed on BigGovernment.com.





Thursday, November 12, 2009
Mark McKinnon: Bob McDonnell's Election Shows Card Check is a 'Huge Liability for Democrats'
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 9:59 AM
Yesterday I had the chance to chat with Mark McKinnon, a media expert and a former presidential adviser to George W. Bush and John McCain

After dispatching with out conversation about the circa-1970's Austin, Texas music scene, talk turned to card check. 

McKinnon is advising The Workforce Fairness Institute, a group dedicated to educating Americans about the dangers of what they have dubbed, the "Employee 'Forced' Choice Act."

As you may recall, card check was a big issue a few months ago.  But, it seems, Democrats have warned big labor to back off the issue, at least, until health care reform is passed.  But make no mistake, the issue is dormant, not dead.

McKinnon pointed out to me that Bob McDonnell, who recently was elected governor of Virginia, focused on only  a few national issues, but card check was one of them.

As McDonnell said on FOX News's Hannity Show, "Some of the policies that this Congress has pursued and supported by the president like cap and trade and card check and tax increases ... I've made those issues in this race and I think Virginians are not enamored with those policies."

Pointing to the McDonnell victory, McKinnon described card check as, "a huge liability for Democrats."  The question, though, is whether or not Democrats will walk the plank in order to pay back big labor.  Clearly, this is a vitally important issue to watch, and I will continue monitoring it. 

... On another note, I did have a chance to ask McKinnon about a recent controversial quote he gave the Washington Post, in which he appeared to disparage attendees of a "Taxpayer March" as, "right-wing nutballs." 

McKinnon tells me the quote was taken out of context -- that his point was that the media would seek to interview only those attendees who were most on the fringe, in order to negatively portray mainstream conservative attendees. 

Ironically, the Post seems to have made McKinnon's point by picking and choosing the most controversial of McKinnon's own quotes.  McKinnon tells me that he's been around long enough to know that he should have avoided giving them an opportunity to use his quotes out of context.





Thursday, November 12, 2009
'V' is for Obama? Not So Fast
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 8:10 AM
Photobucket

Some activists have apparently begun appropriating imagery from the "V" sci-fi series

... I argue that's not necessarily a good thing.





Wednesday, November 11, 2009
NY-23: The Loss That Could Propel a Conservative Surge
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 1:21 PM
My latest column deals with the possibility that conservatives might take the same energy used in NY-23, and replicate it in primaries across the nation. 

Here's an excerpt:

... significant primary races dot the horizon: In Texas, Gov. Rick Perry (a trailblazer in reducing the size and scope of government) seeks to fend off a challenge from moderate Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. In California, conservative Assemblyman Chuck DeVore seeks to paint former Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina as an establishment liberal in their race to win the GOP nomination to challenge Sen. Barbara Boxer. In Florida, former House Speaker Marco Rubio is running for U.S. Senate against moderate Gov. Charlie Crist.

When all is said and done, we will have seen a tug-of-war for the heart and soul of the GOP playing out in three of our largest states (by population). Something to note is that the timeline allows for conservatives to focus and transfer their energies from one state to the next. The Texas primary is in March; three months later the battle shifts to California; after that, it's on to Florida for an August primary.

Read the whole thing here.





Monday, November 09, 2009
Newt Has Ideas...
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 10:05 PM
Sometimes I write something, only to later discover the perfect quote that should have been included.  This, of course, is terribly frustrating.

It happened again recently. 

The other week, I wrote a column describing why, in my estimation, Newt Gingrich would not suffer for his endorsement of Dede Scozzafava in NY-23.  As I explained,

... Newt Gingrich is brilliant, and liberals know it. We conservatives like that. In an era when conservatives are criticized for lacking ideas, Gingrich is an idea machine.

This weekend, while thumbing through Jon Meacham's "Franklin And Winston," I discovered a quote about Winston Churchill which seems to sum up my hypothesis regarding Newt:

In 1918, Felix Frankfurter was visiting Cliveden, Nancy Astor's country house in England, and listening as she attacked Churchill, who was not there, at length.  At last, A.J. Balfour, a former prime minister, told her: "Nancy, all you can say about Winston may be true, but Winston has ideas, and to a statesman with ideas much shall be forgiven."

While I do not wish to make too much of the Churchill/Gingrich comparison, it is fair to say that Newt has ideas, and, thus, "much shall be forgiven"...





Monday, November 09, 2009
Obama's Environmental Policies Could Hurt 2010 Dems, Too
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 3:37 PM
It's not just health care that could endanger 2010 Democratic incumbents. 

As several recent news stories indicate, the Obama administration's environmental policies may also be putting Democrats in a vulnerable position. 

This is especially true, when you consider the impact regulation may be having on the economy and unemployment. 

The Washington Times recently reported on how the EPA's onerous regulations may be harming business:
To appreciate the extent to which the Environmental Protection Agency under President Obama is a regulator reborn, consider this: EPA officials have begun to cut air pollution by invoking the Clean Water Act. …Long quiescent under President George W. Bush, the agency is churning out initiatives and regulations at a pace that pleases its friends in the environmental movement and frightens many in the business community. (Amanda DeBard, “Obama’s EPA is a regulator reborn,” Washington Times, November 4th, 2009)

Read More...




Monday, November 09, 2009
And if a frog had wings ...
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 2:46 PM

Think Progress' Matthew Yglesias clearly doesn't like the American system.  Over the years, he has pointed out time and again that if we had a different system, things would be better (or, at least, more liberal). 

Here's his most recent criticism of our system:

"It's worth taking a moment to appreciate the fact that in a unicameral United States of America, we would now have passed both a comprehensive health care reform bill and also the most important piece of environmental legislation in the history of the world. Now that's not the world we live in. Instead we live in a world where neither of those things have passed and where their prospects aren't clear. But think back on this point the next time you hear someone say Obama is struggling with his agenda because he's not centrist enough, or else that Obama is struggling with his agenda because he's not left-wing enough. The reality is that he's struggling with his agenda because of the way our political institutions are structured."
This is a frustrating argument to continually hear, primarily because one can always make the argument that if things were different, things would be different.

I mean, if the World Series were a best of 13 instead of a best of seven, the Phillies might have won.  Did the Phillies lose because of the Yankees were better, or because of the way "our baseball institutions are structured"?

... If elections were held September -- instead of the arbitrarily decided-upon November -- John McCain might have won the election.  Did John McCain lose merely because the way our political calendar is structured?

... And if we didn't have any pesky Members of Congress -- if Presidents could act as dictators -- we would have a "comprehensive health reform system," as well...

If, If, If, If, If ... What's your point?  Do you really want to abolish the U.S. Senate?





Monday, November 09, 2009
Re: Defending Cao
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 10:03 AM
I normally agree with Quinn Hillyer, but over Rep. Cao, we part ways. 

The fact that Cao represents a horrible district and will probably not be re-elected should have liberated him to do the right thing -- without regard for political considerations.  The fact that he will probably not be re-elected should have reinforced his decision to vote "no" -- instead, it persuaded him to vote "aye". 

Appeasement, of course, never works.  Does Cao really think Democrats will reward him for this?  Does he really think Democrats in Louisiana will prefer a squishy Republican over a real liberal Democrat?

Cao's vote has serious implications, inasmuch as it provides Democrats with the rhetorical cover to argue this was a bipartisan bill. 

Make no mistake, this was a legacy vote.  Cao had one term to make his legacy.  ... And he has.





Friday, November 06, 2009
Rick Scott: Unsung Conservative Hero of the Health Care Debate
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 8:49 AM
I've got a profile up of Rick Scott, the former hospital industry executive who has been stirring up much of the angst about ObamaCare.




Thursday, November 05, 2009
Was Tuesday's Election a Referendum on Obama?
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 8:04 AM
...TIME's Mark Halperin and I discussed this last night on Lou Dobbs Tonight:








Wednesday, November 04, 2009
The Gray Lady Goes Gaga
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 12:59 PM
Over at American Thinker, Ken Blackwell takes the NYT down a peg.



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Lisa Jackson,,,You Lie,,,
 Re: Bad Liar
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I want it!!!
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dreadnaught
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arch
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Axe knows no fur traders!
 Re: NYC Council Speaker Cries Over Another Defeat Of Gay "Marriage"
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munuck is a standup comic now
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This is Obama's Vice,,,,,
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Please
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Stimulous
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why doesn't he debate then?
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Since the whole
 Re: Bad Liar
  By Dennis
axe's snatching at straws
 Re: NYC Council Speaker Cries Over Another Defeat Of Gay "Marriage"
  By dreadnaught
Meredith Jessup 12:36 PM
 Re: What's Wrong With This Picture? Everything.
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Molotov
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
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www.SomethingStinksInDC.com
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Keep your power dry, gentlemen.
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