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Neocon Nuttery See other Neocon Nuttery Articles Title: Only 20 Percent Claim To Be Republican, A 26-Year Low New ABC/WaPo poll out finds that only 20 percent of Americans claim to be Republicans, a 26-year low. Additionally, while a majority believe the country is on the wrong track, 49 percent trust Obama to make the right decisions for the country, versus 34 percent who trust Congressional Democrats, and a paltry 19 percent who trust the Congressional Republicans. (The 20 percent claim to be GOP number is apparently not in the data to which I linked, but ABC reported it on their evening newscast). It seems reasonable to conclude that the only people who trust Congressional Republicans are those who declare themselves to be Republican (in my case, what else would I be?). I guess I would be in the one percent who admits to being a Republican, but who has no faith in the Congressional Republicans. But cheer up! I don't have faith in the Democrats or the president either! The Republicans are plainly in serious trouble. Typically, a third of all Americans identify with the GOP, a third with the Democrats, and a third call themselves independent. The balance of power in US electoral politics goes to the party that can attract independent votes. The GOP has withered away to the bone -- and if the Carville-Greenberg focus groups can be believed, it's going to be a walking skeleton for some time yet. There will be a number of conservatives who dismiss the Carville-Greenberg findings because those men are partisan Democrats. I have to say that their findings seem accurate to me, and square completely with the mail and conversations I've had over the past few months with many conservatives. What did they find? I quote the executive summary below the jump, but in brief, they say that the hardcore conservatives truly to stand far apart from the rest of the country. They don't hate Obama because of his race; they despise him because they really do believe he's a socialist out to change the country forever. They have little use for the GOP, and see themselves as part of a cohesive minority of Americans widely mocked by the media, but who understand what's really happening in this country, and who are determined to "take it back." Here's a lengthy quote from the Carville-Greenberg summary, followed by my commentary: And yet remarkably, these voters had virtually nothing positive to say about the Republican Party. They see their own party as weak, old, and out of touch. They feel it has lost sight of conservative values and conservative voters and is in desperate need of new leadership. They identified a clear disconnect between 'the people' and 'the politicians,' which poses a growing threat to the party's ability to challenge Democratic control in Washington. While they continue to defend George W. Bush personally, his presidency is an embarrassment to them and represents the culmination of a creeping betrayal of conservative values that started with the election of his father more than 20 years ago. The lionization of Ronald Reagan in these groups was as strong as we have seen for any political figure, as was the desperate desire for a new Reaganesque figure to lead them out of their current wilderness. Looking at the current political debate, it was evident in our focus group discussions that the divide between conservative Republicans and even the most conservative-leaning independents remains very, very wide. Independents like those in our suburban Cleveland groups harbor doubts about Obama's health care reform but are desperate to see some version of health care reform pass this year; the conservative Republicans view any health care reform as a victory for Obama and are militantly opposed. Asked about the issues of greatest importance to them in choosing a candidate for Congress, health care ranked sixth among the Republicans, below issues such as tax cuts, immigration, and a candidate's personal values and faith; but for the independents, health care was number one. The language they use further reflects this divide. Conservative Republicans fully embrace the 'socialism' attacks on Obama and believe it is the best, most accurate way to describe him and his agenda. Independents largely dismiss these attacks as partisan rhetoric detracting from a legitimate debate about what many of them do see as excessive government control and spending. You've really got to read the whole analysis. This is absolutely true, in my experience: I can't tell you the number of times I've found myself in conversation, either face to face or in e-mail, with a partisan conservative who literally cannot accept what I'm saying. I mean, they literally think I'm lying to them when I give my opinion about something political, and believe that the only people one should listen to are people who already share their exclusive and somewhat paranoid worldview. This is what I think Mark Thompson and Freddie de Boer don't get when they criticize conservative dissidents for not leading the GOP base. The GOP base doesn't want to be led by people who don't agree with them 100 percent. They don't even want to listen. Here's the Carville-Greenberg conclusion: They view FOX News as another media outlet, decidedly conservative in its point of view but no more or less biased than any other media outlet; their assumption is that every outlet has a bias that reflects the interests of its own bottom line. FOX is no different, and certainly not a source of special insight and information that cannot be gained elsewhere. They generally laugh at conservative commentators such as Limbaugh ('overbearing,' 'egotistical,' 'idiot') and Beck (one man called him a 'crybaby'). When it comes to Sarah Palin, there was almost universal agreement that she could never be elected president, with most citing her inexperience and baggage as obstacles too great to overcome. But even more important to them, most felt she was ultimately driven by greed and ambition more than anything else and would rather use her newfound fame to enrich herself than improve the country. All of which underscores how much the conservative Republicans are a world apart - with big consequences for the Republican Party. By this standard, I guess I would qualify as an independent voter. Independents really are a world apart from the GOP base, because they are not as extreme, and crucially, not as dug in on their principles. They don't see politics in such apocalyptic, paranoid terms -- precisely the terms the base expects its allies to agree with, or to be counted as a fellow traveler with the socialist Obama. All this is a recipe for continued marginalization. Being the party of No To Obama will always be good for a certain number of votes, but you can't build an effective governing majority on it. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2.
#2. To: Brian S (#0)
BS. The public will be shooting at any Rep or Dem politician standing in front of the Federal Reserve or Goldman Sachs.
There are no replies to Comment # 2. End Trace Mode for Comment # 2.
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