When it comes to keeping Republican leadership in the House of Representatives from losing its backbone, there’s a new sheriff in town. And he is openly willing to admit that he wants to not only prevent moderation, but actively “pull our leadership back to the right when they veer off course,” to use his words.
In fact, this same man already has plans to aggressively push legislation that will “not only…repeal Obamacare, but also…replace it with conservative solutions that will lower costs for families by promoting competition and innovation without the taxes and mandates in the President’s law?” And in that effort, he has already gotten House Republican leadership to accept the idea that ”achiev[ing] a balanced budget in 10 years” should be a major conservative priority in the future.
Who is the person who has announced his plans to do this? Read on.
Despite the fact that Republicans hold a clear majority in the House of Representatives, many conservatives often express less-than-muted discontent over the state of leadership and tactics among congressional Republicans. This discontent reached a fever pitch earlier this year, when the need to elect a Speaker prompted many in the conservative grassroots to openly question whether Boehner would survive another vote, with more than a little schadenfreude undergirding their questioning.
In the end, of course, Boehner won handily, with barely enough people voting against him to make it into the double digits. However, those who did vote against him were among the House’s most stalwart conservatives, and almost without exception, their votes – for candidates such as Jim Jordan (R-OH) and Eric Cantor (R-VA) – went to candidates who were members of one little known, but highly influential group: The Republican Study Committee, or RSC.
For those with knowledge of the inner workings of Congress, this fact should surprise no one. The RSC, which is known in many circles as the voice of committed conservatives within the House of Representatives, boasts an impressive 170 members of Congress, all Republicans, in its ranks. In other words, while Republicans control the majority in the House, the RSC controls the majority of the Republicans. This may explain why the last minute fiscal cliff deal, which garnered opposition from House conservatives generally, and the RSC especially, passed thanks to the votes of Democrats, rather than Republicans. Such is the pull of this little known group.
The history of the RSC reads in some ways like a who’s who of conservatism. Founded in 1973 by conservative organizing giant Paul Weyrich, who would later go on to found the Heritage Foundation as well, and in whose name a weekly lunch is still held for conservatives. The RSC was explicitly designed to keep a handle on Republican congressional leaders and prevent them from moderating too aggressively. Given that 7 of 9 members of the current Republican leadership in the House are themselves members of the RSC (Speaker Boehner and Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy being the lone exceptions), this mission is presumably much easier in the present climate.
It is not difficult to see why ambitious politicians would flock to this group. Among its past members are two former Vice Presidents (Dan Quayle and Dick Cheney), as well as seven sitting Senators and three sitting Governors. Of those Governors, Mike Pence, the current Governor of Indiana, and a man who many floated in the last election as a Presidential prospect, and no doubt will be floated again in 2016, spent two years as leader of the RSC. Jim Jordan, who until this year was the chair of the RSC, earned more than a few feathers in his cap by nearly passing a budget that outpaced even Rep. Paul Ryan’s in fiscal conservatism, and acting as one of Boehner’s lead internal critics on the debt ceiling deal two years ago.
Here’s Jordan explaining his opposition to making “deals” over taxation:
However, now that Jordan has stepped down, a new face has assumed control of the group, and with it, the position of “conscience” for House conservatives. That new leader is Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana, who was described by the American Spectator this way prior to his election:
In just four years, Scalise has forged a reputation as an intelligent bulldog with an appetite for chomping away at big government. Consider several of his high-profile accomplishments.
First, Scalise authored an amendment that made it all the way into law, despite objections from President Obama, that eliminated four of Obama’s unaccountable policy “czars.”
Second, while everybody else in a committee hearing seemed to be kowtowing to the supposed moral authority of former Vice President Al Gore on cap-and-trade legislation, Scalise effectively raked Gore over the coals, as can be seen in this video link. (He did much the same to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, calling him to account for Chu’s earlier advocacy of high gas prices as a good idea and blasting him for his role in the Solyndra scandal.) Indeed, Scalise has made himself perhaps the “go-to guy” for all House conservatives when it comes to energy policy.
Third — and this one was fun — Scalise almost single-handedly stopped Barack Obama from being the Grinch who taxed Christmas trees. Obama tried to assess a 15-cent tax on trees as a “fee,” but Scalise got wind of it and, as Fox News noted, raised such a stink that Obama was forced to reverse himself.[...]
His conservative interest-group ratings are strong, too: 97 lifetime from the American Conservative Union, 100 lifetime from National Right to Life, 100 lifetime from the National Federation of Independent business, and an A+ from the National Rifle Association.
Scalise won election to his position by a close vote against Rep. Tom Graves of Georgia, and is already generating buzz. Said one Senior GOP aide, “RSC Chairman Jim Jordan is a hard act to follow, but it looks to most folks I know that Chairman Scalise is doing it. He’s already pushing back against leadership, advancing some conservative ideas, and banking some wins.”
Here’s Scalise talking about the necessity for serious solutions after the 2012 election on CBS:
To find out how Scalise himself plans to keep “banking wins,” TheBlaze interviewed him via email about his view of the future of the conservative movement broadly and the Republican Study Committee specifically:
TheBlaze: What do you see as the key issues for the conservative movement in the present climate?
Scalise: The primary issue for the conservative movement is preserving the American Dream for our children by cutting spending and getting us on a path to balance the federal budget. I have two young children and every vote I take I think about the impact it will have an their ability to have the same opportunities I enjoyed when I grew up. Washington needs to work towards solutions that will reduce our debt and deficit so that we can get our economy back on track and future generations are not burdened by our mistakes today.
TheBlaze: In the past, you have stated that the RSC “needs to actually focus on implementing conservative solutions.” What conservative solutions do you think should be offered, and to which issues? Will you be introducing legislation on these issues?
Scalise: There is a place for conservative solutions to all the big problems that are currently facing America and I plan for the RSC to continue bringing legislation forward to solve those problems from a conservative perspective. One example of legislation RSC will be promoting involves health care, where our Members have bills not only to repeal Obamacare, but also to replace it with conservative solutions that will lower costs for families by promoting competition and innovation without the taxes and mandates in the President’s law. We also plan on bringing an RSC jobs bill that focuses on economic growth by lowering tax rates, increasing American energy production, and rolling back the radical regulations that are killing jobs and stifling growth.
RSC members have and will continue to produce conservative legislation. The latest conservative solution that is being embraced by leadership is achieving a balanced budget in 10 years, which was has been a hallmark of the RSC’s budget.
TheBlaze: Given that you control a majority of House Republicans, including 7 of the 9 current members of leadership, how closely do you expect to work with the leadership to push the RSC’s goals?
Scalise: The job of the RSC is to be the conservative rudder of the House, and that means we should fight to promote conservative legislation to our nation’s problems and push our leadership to bring those bills to the House Floor, but we also stand ready to pull our leadership back to the right when they veer off course.
TheBlaze: You’ve stated in the past that it is necessary for Republicans to “unite as conservatives if we’re going to get things done.” How far does the necessity to unite extend? Will you still push back on leadership?
Scalise: With more than 165 members, the RSC is a powerful bloc of votes in the Republican conference, and I intend to unify the RSC around conservative solutions as we present common sense alternatives to the problems facing our nation. House Republicans have been most united when we are fighting for conservative principles, whether it was our support for the RSC-proposed “Cut, Cap, and Balance” legislation, or our united opposition to the failed stimulus and Obamacare. There will be times when we are in agreement with our leadership’s approach to the challenges we face, but there will also be times when we disagree with our leadership. During those times when we disagree with our leadership, we will work to pull them back to the right, but also stand ready to fight any proposals that violate our conservative principles.
TheBlaze: What areas of public policy do you think conservatives have ignored to their detriment?
Scalise: Conservatives have not paid enough attention to getting our agenda enacted into law. We have come up with great solutions to America’s problems, but have been largely unsuccessful at getting conservative policy enacted. A bill that does not get passed, no matter how great the bill is, does not help American families who are struggling under the weight of Obama’s failed agenda, and this Congress I hope to work with the RSC to pass bills that will help preserve the American Dream, put us on the path to a balanced budget, and finally cut spending so we can reduce the mountain of debt that has been piled on the backs of our children and grandchildren.
TheBlaze: The RSC was founded by Paul Weyrich, who was never elected to Congress. Do you foresee grassroots activists and other outsiders being able to influence Congress so directly in the future?
Scalise: I see the grassroots as an important part of the RSC, and in fact just Wednesday I spoke at the Weyrich lunch. The RSC would not be the powerful force we are today without this strong grassroots influence, and I look forward to continuing to work with conservative outside groups to help us achieve our shared beliefs and goals so we can advance the conservative movement.



























































































































Chaly
Jan. 26, 2013 at 1:04pmThe sad thing about the current Republican Party is that they are all talk and no action. It’s all just so much B.S. which shouldn’t surprise anyone about politics. I looks to me like both parties are on the same side and when it comes down to reality they don’t give a squat about the normal citizen who goes to work every day or would like to. Where have our voter’s gone? When has anything ever ‘trickled down’ to you! We are heading to socialism or aristocracy which means that it won’t matter much to you, same end result. The country is heading down the sewer because ‘conservative’ is just another sound bite like ‘progressive’. Thanks so much!
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Secret Squirrel
Jan. 27, 2013 at 10:13amThe GOP was dead when they re-elected Boehner as speaker.
Boehner has systematically trashed the Tea Party, and any conservative movement.
Don’t tell me about “conservative values” in the GOP now.
Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, it ain’t gonna happen.
The GOP message of 2016 will be, “Elect us, we’re almost as bad as they are.”
The GOP dumped the conservatives, and the conservatives dumped Romney.
I’d like to congratulate Hillary on winning 2016.
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dont_drive_slow_in_the_left_lane_obliviot
Jan. 25, 2013 at 10:12amIf the RSC is really in charge of the GOP, then why did we end up with Boenhed again?
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G-WHIZ
Jan. 25, 2013 at 12:05pmWho’s family(s) were in real danger if they did not vote “their” way??
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Protoham
Jan. 25, 2013 at 12:26pmA real leader has a point man.
That is what Obama is, a point man, he certainly is not the leader.
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beacon01
Jan. 24, 2013 at 5:18pmI think that it would be a good strategic move for this RCS leader to submit a bill to clarify the uses of executive orders, and also to craft a bill to identify and penalize the economic and media terrorism being used by Progressives to take our guns away and take our suppliers of guns and ammo away.
Then we all breathe a little easier as we fight against this attempted take over of America by the Progressive Party.
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smv803
Jan. 24, 2013 at 5:36pmIf you have to keep bringing or reminding people back to conservatism, You never had them to begin with!
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JohnofOregon
Jan. 24, 2013 at 10:25pmIn conversations with staff for governor kitzhaber this morning it was repeatedly pointed out that Obama has signed no ” executive orders” on gun control . What he signed were ” presidential directives”
I called sen merkley’s office in dc. They said the same thing. I know from experience that executive orders are subject to judicial review. I also know the white house has not published any executive orders from the media event a week ago.
Does anyone out there know what th heck this is?
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guns-an-bibles
Jan. 25, 2013 at 11:42amJohnofOregon
This is from Wikipedia:
Presidential Directives, better known as Presidential Decision Directives (or PDDs) are a form of an executive order issued by the President of the United States with the advice and consent of the National Security Council. The directives articulate the executive’s national security policy and carry the “full force and effect of law”.[1][2][3]
Since many of the Presidential Directives pertain to the national security of the United States, many remain classified.
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Jake Dog2
Jan. 24, 2013 at 5:16pmSUPAH_PATRIOT is a TROLLMONGER clone with a little ENCINOM DNA thrown in.
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Mein_Land
Jan. 24, 2013 at 3:52pm@ soybomb315_II
you said “Even the kings of old went into battle with their soldiers….But those kings were still murderers. What would you call a king who orders his men into battle and doesnt even go?”
Let me answer that for you.
you “libs” say that King Obama killed Bin Lauden
we “repubs” say that the Seals killed Bin Lauden
You “libs” call your king a hero
we “repubs” choke with discuss over your claim about your king who has never walked in the boots of our great military.
so I put the same question to you. is your king a murderer or a hero.
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soybomb315_II
Jan. 24, 2013 at 5:49pmI have a king but he doesnt live here
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Delcy
Jan. 24, 2013 at 3:45pmI have no idea what half of these “posters” are talking about. They refer to “he” without naming names, or to an unidentified troll. Much of the grammar is of a third grade level and punctuation is not used.
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Eternal
Jan. 24, 2013 at 7:19pmCut them slack may have thick fingers n small keypad you judgmental narrow minded sissy
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media-bias-steals-elections
Jan. 24, 2013 at 3:13pmThat’s a good article, and good news, thank you!
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freedomofspeech
Jan. 24, 2013 at 4:32pmDitto that, great reporting!
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yoshik
Jan. 24, 2013 at 3:13pmThen he better sharpen the knives. Conservatives have had about enough of this crap.
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AmericaMustBeFree
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:40pmThe left is all about bringing America to its knee’s and until American’s do exactly that.. thats what will happen! It is a part of their agenda.. they have dumbed down our children.. and pushed or shoved down our throats Socialism/Communism! Wake up America!
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financemanager
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:31pmAdd your comments
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gwiii
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:02pmI think most conservatives do not feel that congress is fighting the good fight. They lack good communications, and strong leadership. Two very important facets of a successful party. In addition, the current administration has the media in their hip pocket. The republican party has for an opponent, a celebrity, not a leader. They cannot fight a celebrity, until they take away his popularity. Obama has done so much to hurt middle class Americans, and the GOP cannot communicate those facts. Obama’s policies are creating Americans decrease in discretionary income. The GOP needs to battle a celebrity, not a president, or a political leader. You cannot battle a celebrity using logic and facts, he must be attacked and exposed as the hypocrite that he truly is.
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guns-an-bibles
Jan. 25, 2013 at 11:55amgwiii
I absolutely agree with your statement. I just wish we could get them to see it that way. You and I understand that he is trying to look like Santa Clause but why can’t they see what he is doing?
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jtv
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:01pmThe handful of real conservatives will never make a dent in the control of the Old Guard that have been picking our presidential candidates for decades. Quit wasting time with the Republican Party and begin a new, third party so that we can finally pick real conservative representatives and fight against Obama with coherent messages that are conservative, with principle and conviction.
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SimpleTruths
Jan. 24, 2013 at 3:21pmGood plan, get back to us in about 20 years. Meanwhile we’ll continue on with the job of rebuilding the country and the respect of the rest of the world that we once had but was destroyed in the previous 8 years before Obama.
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Joe_The_Patriot
Jan. 24, 2013 at 4:06pm@simpleUNtruths
Are You Kidding?? The economy continues to flounder, unemployment continues to be way above 7%, The rest of the world sees a spineless weak leader in the white house, Scandal after scandal, lie after lie…. Class warfare, racial divisionism of a level I have not seen in my lifetime…. Your truth is rooted in lies and disinformation…
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beacon01
Jan. 24, 2013 at 5:33pmAgain it is a two party system. It is too hard to start a third one. The tea party, the liberty groups, and now the Frederick Douglas republicans have banded together to renew the Republican party. Join us!
The only way the old Rino-type Republicans will keep in the game, and to win, is to get behind and even join the conseervative groups named above. If you are with the tea party you can and will likely win. If not you will surely lose. Independent voters better get their act together as well, or we get another Obama in there in 2016, such as Hillary.
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guns-an-bibles
Jan. 25, 2013 at 11:59amJoe_The_Communist
You must be watching CNN or NBC!
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guns-an-bibles
Jan. 25, 2013 at 12:01pmJoe_The_Patriot
Sorry Joe I grabbed the wrong username. I meant Simplelies
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Robert999
Jan. 24, 2013 at 1:12pmFinally, someone to hold to the Conservative cause in Congress. Impeachment anyone? Who cares if the Senate will not convict, at least the point will be made.
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Red Meat
Jan. 24, 2013 at 1:21pmThe GOP will betray you.
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Keatonc333
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:01pmimpeachment on what grounds?
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guns-an-bibles
Jan. 25, 2013 at 12:10pmKeatonc333
I won’t try to understand how you think in order to ask such a silly question as “impeachment on what grounds?” because I’m sure it will cause my brain to fog, but I will say this. You need to get away from the liberal media because you aren’t learning much from them. Look up information on your own instead of taking someone else’s word for anything.
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soybomb315_II
Jan. 24, 2013 at 1:07pmthis article demonstrates why i am not a conservative
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DLV
Jan. 24, 2013 at 1:57pmFrom all your posts you seem pretty co
Conservative.
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truthnstuff
Jan. 24, 2013 at 12:58pmWho cares what these politicians say. When they do as they say then they will be proven. Hell, even the A whole bohnor can pander.
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toledofan
Jan. 24, 2013 at 12:44pmI think there a lot things going on behind closed doors, at least I hope there is, to define the new stratigies for the party down the road. Let’s’ face there is so much money involved ,the team that’s in change holds the purse strings, so, regardless of what happened in 2012, lessons were learned and there will be another leader developed before 2016. The Heritage Foundation is a great success and clearly shows the path for Conservatism, now the non Rinos are listening, it’s just a matter of time before they take over.
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bigbear_awake
Jan. 24, 2013 at 12:32pmhttp://www.gopusa.com/commentary/2013/01/24/napolitano-guns-and-the-president/?subscriber=1
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jungle J
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:45amThey are all frauds until they go to Afghanistan and fight along with the infantry. If Bush was a true patriot he would have sand n his boots….he could at least cheer lead.
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Cavallo
Jan. 24, 2013 at 12:07pmBush visited Afghanistan twice and Iraq three times. If you’ve seen his heartfelt treatment and appreciation of soldiers since his retirement you’d likely not question. If nothing else, he has a secure and honored place in his heart for the men he ordered into battle.
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SendTheMeteors
Jan. 24, 2013 at 12:54pmThe House voted 31 times to repeal Obamacare in the last two years. You might wonder why they do this over and over when those bills have no chance of passing the Senate or being signed by the President. Simply for show that’s all. They are making a mockery of our government.
Guaranteed: there won’t be a single bill that comes from this group that will ever become law. Not one and they know it. Their only accomplishment will be to make this congress the least effective in United States history by blocking every bill that comes their way.
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soybomb315_II
Jan. 24, 2013 at 1:10pmEven the kings of old went into battle with their soldiers….But those kings were still murderers. What would you call a king who orders his men into battle and doesnt even go?
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Cavallo
Jan. 24, 2013 at 1:41pmA do nothing congress is better than one that acts to strip my rights, freedoms, liberty, wealth and prosperity.
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hypnos
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:08pm@ meteors the senate dem controlled hasn’t passed a budget in 4 years. I’d rather have standstill then blind obedience to the progressives.
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DLV
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:55pmSoy- some were sure. But just because a king goes into battle with his troops doesn’t mean he is a murderer. Are you high come on now? It could be in self defense
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pooka_yc
Jan. 24, 2013 at 4:28pm@SENDTHEMETEORS
What would you suggest they do? Capitulate and go along with the Progressives so that we won’t have “the least effective Congress in United States history”? Nothing ventured, nothing gained. If you don’t try to get legislation passed, what are you there for? Should they only voted defensively and never go on offense?
If the choice is more Progressive legislation and gridlock, I’ll take gridlock every day. And I would like to see more single issue legislation instead of “comprehensive” legislation. Every time I hear a politician say they want “comprehensive” legislation, I know something nefarious is coming our way. They use those huge pieces of legislation to hide pork and regulations that they know the American people don’t want. And they don’t put the legislation on the Internet in advance so anyone can read it; the leadership doesn’t even give the Congressmen and Senators time to read the legislation before calling for a vote. I would automatically vote “NO” if I were not allowed to read a bill in advance.
Obama made all kinds of phony promises about transparency, public hearings on healthcare reform, posting legislation on the Internet so it could be read in advance. It’s too late to hold him accountable, but I suggest that we keep peppering our Congressmen and Senators with demands of transparency and public posting of all legislation for a minimum of 3 days before a vote. The larger the bill, the more days should be req
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soybomb315_II
Jan. 24, 2013 at 5:00pm@DLV
I didnt mean he was murdering on the battlefield….I meant he was a murderer even though he wsa chivalrous. For example, find me a king that did not torture and kill his own people.
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DLV
Jan. 24, 2013 at 5:07pmsoy- King David, I don’t think Queen Elizabeth did, Charles V I don’t think did, Charlemagne as far as I know, plenty of English Kings didn’t go around killing their own people, Alexander the Great, Cyrus hte Great certainly he helped the Jews rebuild if anything, Napoleon, etc etc etc. sure there are plenty of monarchs that harmed their own population, but many didn’t.
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soybomb315_II
Jan. 24, 2013 at 5:17pmKing David would possibly be the only one who did not torture or kill his own people….But we wouldnt know if he did. Pretty much every english king had to deal with uprisings – and there is only one way to deal with it back then. Napoleon had his domestic adversaries removed/eliminated.
Anyways – not worth arguing about. maybe some day we will find these answers
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DLV
Jan. 24, 2013 at 6:13pmsoy- Personally, I think there were plenty of good kings. And just because there is an uprising and you have to put it down doesn’t mean it’s bad. I mean if English kings let them go unchecked everything would melt to chaos. But yes, I sort of see your point.
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guns-an-bibles
Jan. 25, 2013 at 12:35pmSendTheMeteors
The House voted 31 times to repeal Obamacare in the last two years because they know that the majority of Americans told them not to vote for it and if they did choose to vote for it they would lose their jobs next election.
Mockery of our government? I don’t think the dimwitcrats need any help with that!
“Their only accomplishment will be to make this congress the least effective in United States history by blocking every bill that comes their way.”
You know what? If that is all they can do until we can get rid of the garbage you put in the white house, than, SO BE IT!
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MiCurmudgeon
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:30amRepublicans should learn not winning is not a death sentence. Mitt Romney is a logical person to be the Voice of the Party in opposition to Obama’s liberal governing. He is not running for anything and would be free to question Obama on any and all topics. Other countries have a very vocal party out of office and this is one thing we can learn from them. A non-political spokesperson could get a lot of air time which would be a breath of fresh air from listening to the babble of Jay Carney.
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crazyrightwingmom
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:51amI love Mitt, but don’t think he “has it in his gut.” That’s what we need…someone who doesn’t have to think about his conservative principles but lives and breathes them.
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soybomb315_II
Jan. 24, 2013 at 1:11pmLOL MiCurmudgeon – GOOD ONE!
“Give me Romney, or give me DEATH”
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The Third Archon
Jan. 24, 2013 at 1:16pmOther countries’ political systems aren’t structured so as to REQUIRE virtual unanimity among a 1.5 party system to get ANYTHING done (legislatively–not even examining the influence from political conflicts between branches of government)–that’s a BIG difference.
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financemanager
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:26pmLeo Durocher said “Nice guys finish last.” Obummer is a street fighter and has the language to prove it.. We need a leader who understands that he has to talk the language. Not Harvard or Yale. No. The streets. Romney looked like a multi-millionaire, acted like one, and talked like one. I supported him because he was a decent person. Obummer is not. NOT in the least. Paying billions to Planned Parenthood tells his story. He doesn’ t care about life or death or certainly not life after death.Some people wonder what happened to the culture of America. You see any connection with Obummer and the slumbums, barbaric,element of this country? It’s not hard to see. He stole 40% of your wealth and ruined the country. Do you need any more info? It probably is going to take four yars to educate the masses when the country fails. We need to start now. No backbone-Boehner is not our man. Weneed someone much stronger and less concerned about himself and getting a nice invitation from Obummer as his reward. A strict conservative who knows the time to quit wild spending is today. This hour, this minute. Right now. Not three onhs or years from now. NOW IS THE TIME!!! Finance Manager
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hypnos
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:33pm@ third go live under another countries government. Our democratic republic was suppose to work painfully slow at times because we are a nation of laws not men/women and their selfish agendas.
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The Third Archon
Jan. 24, 2013 at 3:30pm@HYPNOS
It’s not supposed to not work AT ALL.
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Ruraldweller
Jan. 24, 2013 at 3:55pmYou will need someone with integrity…..is there anyone out there?…….
Integrity….DOING THE RIGHT THING “EVEN” WHEN NO ONE IS LOOKING.
I’m not sure this exists anymore.
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constitutionisbest4all
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:12pmthe problem with mitt romney is he is just slightly less progressive than john mccain, if he had been elected we would still be moving the same direction “he” is moving us, just at a slower pace. we need real statesmen and believers in the constitution in office, until the repubs learn to run actual conservatives they will continue to lose. most people want real conservatives.
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LarryL2
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:29amWhere’s the vision for America? Things like health care for all are standard in all developed nations except the US. Stop acting like the world is ending. Work to develop an efficient and cost-effective model for what’s right. Stop acting like government is the issue. It isn’t. Is change needed? Sure. But start acting like a caring nation that works for the middle-class and not executives. If you haven’t noticed middle-class jobs disappear due to allowing corporations to go for cheap labour overseas. That is the fault of the Democrats and Republicans.
Nothing in this entire article talked about real policies for the GOP. Just stopping Obama. Stop fighting him. Work with him. Find middle ground. And stop acting like your democratically elected President is a tyrant. He isn’t. He won. Work with him. And stop acting like anyone who isn’t Republican is a taker. Grow up and lead. Not by fighting every single policy. But with reasonable expectations and policies. Sadly I don’t see how that is possible with all the rhetoric that constantly appears on these pages. None of it is real. None of it moves the country forward. If you want to win the Presidency in 2016, find people who can govern. Not whine like babies over every bloody proposal.
Did you see Bobby Jindal’s comments. Take them to heart. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2013/01/24/bobby-jindal-speaking-truth-to-gop-power/
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Cavallo
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:49amI will not compromise my freedom for your fascist whims. The US has access to healthcare, universal access to healthcare. What you want is a government controlled and rationed healthcare system. Just listen to your own words… “ALLOWING corporations” as if their freedom to do business in a foreign country is granted by you and your fellow statist puppets.
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americangrammy
Jan. 24, 2013 at 2:05pmEvery “bloody” proposal? Why Larry, which of the socialist European countries do you come from? I lived in one of them and saw their health care system up close and personal. If you aren’t really sick, you might do okay. If you ARE really sick, you better start praying because you just might cost the “collective” more money than they are willing to pay. That’s why the “elites” of these countries come here for their health care! And you want that for us?
No thank you.
Stopping Obama’s dragging the U.S. into the same failed European Socialist nightmare is priority one! We are in a political war for the future of this country and the lives of our children and grandchildren! We gave Obama four years to show us if his way was better, and we are now reaping a bitter harvest. NO MORE! Thank all the gods that be that there are still men and women who will stand up and fight to stop the deliberate destruction of this country. This country is not moving forward! We are being pushed and shoved into the death of our Republic. We won’t go down quietly, you can count on that!
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brntout
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:20amYou think Boehner would even lend credence to this guy and give him a position of authority if he wasn’t in lock-step with him? Get real. spout all you want about who you’re for. ***** is all I need to say.
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MrArbitrage
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:20am“Obama’s Jewish Patsy”
Persecution is coming
http://youtu.be/tE_wnnJebFQ
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copatriots
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:19amThe bigger question is……how long will it take for them to be corrupted? It’s typically only a matter of time OR they get gerrymandered a la Allen West.
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Supah_Patriot
Jan. 24, 2013 at 11:17amLOL, “prevent moderation.” This just proves that conservatives do not wish to govern for the people. Party over country for them, it seems. Why govern for just a small percentage of Americans? Oh well, pass the popcorn!
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The_Cabrito_Goat
Jan. 24, 2013 at 12:12pmHi encinom
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RJJinGadsden
Jan. 24, 2013 at 12:35pmTHE_CABRITO_GOAT, Nah, this guy is a real idiot along the lines of our former TROLLMONGER. You are actually insulting ENCINOM in my opinion.
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flipper1073
Jan. 24, 2013 at 12:46pmMy theory is SUPAH_PATRIOT
is Missing HorsesAss (Avatar) his name had patroit in it.
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