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| Lessons from Massachusetts | | Print | |
| Written by Bob Adelmann | ||||||||||
| Thursday, 21 January 2010 18:11 | ||||||||||
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Brendan Steinhauser, director of state campaigns for FreedomWorks, founded in 1984 and currently chaired by former U.S. House Majority Leader Dick Armey, became aware of the potential for a victory in Massachusetts in early December: “To be honest, we kind of looked at it and said, this is a long shot,” but he was impressed with the determination and zeal of the organizers. After supporters confirmed the possibility of an upset, Tea Party activists moved into Massachusetts and set up shop. At the time, Brown was 30 points behind Coakley in the polls.
The Democrats supporting Coakley made a number of mistakes. Complacency as pointed out above gave Brown the initial advantage. Coakley’s perceived arrogance in considering herself as entitled to the seat was another. Celinda Lake, a pollster for and supporter of the Coakley campaign, said: “If we had defined Scott Brown earlier, if we had been able to go up on the air earlier, if the Democrats had passed Wall Street financial reform…. There are lots of things that we could have done.” Senator Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), who chairs the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, issued a statement concerning the Massachusetts race: I have no interest in sugar coating what happened in Massachusetts. There is a lot of anxiety in the country right now. Americans are understandably impatient. The truth is Democrats understand the economic anger voters feel, that’s in large part why we did well in 2006 and 2008. Lesson ten: Don’t underestimate the importance of what happened in Massachusetts. The Tea Party movement is going to be a major force in 2010 and 2012. Last lesson: One can hope. Photo of Scott Brown: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (5)
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T. Kyoshi Nagano
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A complete misread of the Massachusetts U.S. Senate Election results. There was a complete misread of the Massachusetts U.S. Senate Election results. They already have universal health care. The voters did not want a different Federal Health Care System and did not want to subsidize, with additional taxes, the same proposed Federal Health Care System. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts created an independent public authority, to subsidize coverage and facilitate the selection and purchase of private insurance plans by individuals and small businesses, titled the Commonwealth Health Insurance Connector Authority, or "the Health Connector" for short. It was proposed by then Republican Governor Milton Romney. The enabling legislation was Chapter 58 of the Acts of 2006 of the Massachusetts General Court, entitled An Act Providing Access to Affordable, Quality, Accountable Health Care. |
Lee Gonzales
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Tea Party putting pragmatism before principle again. No question they are. If the Tea Party had backed the more principled and smarter candidate Joe Kennedy and raised mucho dinero for his ad campaign who knows what would have happened. At least he would be in a position to go after Brown in 2 years or John Kerry in 4. The Tea Party organizers are doing what the GOP has done - going pragmatic instead of sticking to principles. The party pragmatists have a history of putting their "viable" candidate up against the Democrats' liberal candidate and yes they win an election but the Liberals end up winning anyway! Nixon up against Humphrey and we ended up with the EPA, became more dependent upon foreign oil, a liberal Supreme Court Justice who wrote the majority opinion on roe v wade, OSHA, kissing up to Red china, etc. With Nixon, again, the principles were set aside and we lost in the end with more taxes and bigger government. The Democrats inadvertently came to our rescue by watergating the stupid jerk. The GOP did a number on the nation by shoving aside the principled candidate Robert Taft by supporting the "viable" candidate Dwight Eisenhower. Ike had been a life-long Democrat and I doubt he had even changed his Dem party affiliation prior to agreeing to rob Taft of the brass ring at the 1952 Republican convention. The GOP leadership went with the pragmatic angle in 52, and Ike led us to more socialism. Eric Odom says putting the Tea Party behind Brown was necessary to block the Obama-care bill. This strategy has backfired on conservatives time and again. The GOP abondoned the less "winnable" but more principled candidate -Taft to win but the nation went faster and further toward socialism under "conservative" Ike than would have been achievable under Liberal Adlai Stevenson who Ike ran against in the 1952 election. No win for the Constitution there! As long people within these grassroots movement continue to do the pramagtic thing and set aside principle we will keep going backwards into the abyss of socialism. |
Larry Burke
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Tea Party Are we now doing P R for the Tea Party? Shouldn't we be exposing their agenda: Con-Con and Newt Gingrich? And where is their financing coming from? |
SCHNORCHEL
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Keeping Your Eye on the Ball Lest we forget what the founder of the John Birch Society Robert Welch told us: "There is not a dime's-worth of difference between the Republicans and the Democrats." Substantiation of this is in an article in THE NEW AMERICAN, titled APPLES TO ORANGES, at http://www.thenewamerican.com/...o-oranges. |
Dr. Ellen Brandt
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Centrists - Who We Are and What We Stand For Extremists have become so loud, they’re deafening. And because they shout in perfect sound bites, the media birddog their every rant, however irresponsible or outrageous. But we believe the political tide’s about to turn with a vengeance. No matter their party affiliation or lack thereof, Americans are disgusted with those who harass to harass, obstruct to obstruct, tear down to tear down. Compromise, consensus, bridge-building, and respect for differing viewpoints have been the hallmarks of American life as long as there’s been an America. We’re certain they will be again. Please read: The Rest of U.S. – Who We Are and What We Stand For http://newcentristera.wordpress.com/2010/01/06/the-rest-of-u-s-who-we-are-and-what-we-stand-for/ If you like it, please circulate to your family, friends, and colleagues. Or perhaps to your favorite extremist! |





Yesterday the New York Times concluded that Scott Brown’s victory over Martha Coakley for Ted Kennedy’s Senate seat 
Lest we forget what the founder of the John Birch Society Robert Welch told us: "There is not a dime's-worth of difference between the Republicans and the Democrats." Substantiation of this is in an article in THE NEW AMERICAN, titled APPLES TO ORANGES, at 
