The differences between Mitt Romney's 1994 Senate bid, and Scott Brown's successful effort, are striking.
Scott Brown's stunning victory in Massachusetts has predictably generated comparisons of the current political landscape to 1994, when Republicans swept the mid-term elections, propelling them to majority status in both houses of Congress. From local and state level offices all the way to Washington, Democrats suffered severe losses, while not a single incumbent Republican in any congressional or gubernatorial race was defeated.
In the midst of that enormous conservative groundswell, one hapless Republican managed to throw his race even though the Democrat opponent was, according to the polls, more vulnerable than at any other time in his decades-long political career. Sadly, that Republican had bought into the philosophy, popular among GOP "moderates," that casting one's self as a watered-down imitation of the opposition might somehow be a winning strategy. Throughout most of their televised debate, the Republican did little other than to agree in principle with his ultimately victorious Democrat opponent.
This episode is now particularly poignant and ironic, since the seat in question was none other than that of Senator Ted Kennedy. Had he adopted a strategy of highlighting the miserable failures of the liberal agenda and contrasted the superiority of conservatism against it, Mitt Romney, the ill-fated challenger, might well have sent Kennedy off into retirement sixteen years ago.
The differences between Romney's 1994 Senate bid, and Scott Brown's successful effort, are striking. Beyond that, it is apparent that the mood of the electorate is increasingly aligned with conservatism, which could bode very well for the Republicans in November.
Yet if the nation rallies and delivers Republicans a victory this fall, only to have the Party revert afterwards to its arrogant and elitist mindset, the massive public rage unleashed against Democrats at Townhall meetings and Tea Parties during the past year will be thereafter redirected squarely at the GOP. Unfortunately, if past history is any indication, a real danger of this possibility exists.
America is indeed on the precipice of a drastic congressional "house cleaning." Which is why the liberal political establishment on Capitol Hill and in the media has embarked on a strategy of two thoroughly contradictory efforts, proving that both signify posturing, and neither is genuine. On the one hand, they assure us that only "moderate" candidates can win (every effort is now being made to recast Scott Brown as a "centrist."). Concurrently, from Obama down to the most junior members of Congress, Democrats are themselves suddenly sounding very "conservative."
The duplicitous nature of this ploy is abundant for all to see. If moving to the right is a bad idea for aspiring Republican candidates, why would liberals be scurrying in that very direction, at least when posing in front of the cameras?
Last year, many among the "intelligentsia" had concluded quite the opposite. Liberal congressional gains, along with Obama's election, were offered as proof that the ascendancy of liberalism as the dominant national philosophy was complete and irreversible. Several prominent political chameleons, who had infiltrated the Republican Party, presumed that conditions were right to come out in the open and shift the entire political landscape leftward, effectively relegating conservatives to the political "fringe."
Based on such a presumption, former Secretary of State Colin Powell, a Bush appointee, endorsed Obama in the waning days of the campaign. On April 28 2009, barely three months after Obama's inauguration, Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter renounced his alliance to the GOP and joined the Democrats. Others, such as former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Florida Governor Charlie Crist, became cheerleaders for a reinvented Republican Party that would be much more compatible with the statist aspirations and methods of the Democrats.
But their appraisal of real political winds was dreadfully wrong. It resulted from the combination of an unprincipled pragmatism that had remained dormant in seemingly less opportunistic times, and an utterly misguided interpretation of the events of the 2008 election cycle. In truth, public disillusionment with Republican candidates resulted not from conservative excesses, but from their lack of courageous and boldness in advancing conservatism. The evidence, despite media efforts to cloud and suppress it, is overwhelming.
Of course Scott Brown's Massachusetts triumph represents a crown jewel. Even in this bluest of "blue states," Brown demonstrated that an ideology of higher, not merely cheaper, principles will inspire voters to cross over party lines. But his success is only the latest iteration of this pattern, beginning with the stunning rise of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin upon her selection as Vice-presidential running mate for Senator John McCain, and continuing right through the off-year governor's races in Virginia and New Jersey.
The electoral reverberations have not stopped there however. Arlen Specter faces a real challenge from Pennsylvania Congressman Pat Toomey. And that is if he even survives a challenge from within his own party during the Democrat Primary. In Arizona, McCain now faces a similar challenge from former Republican Congressman JD Hayworth. Historically steadfast conservatives, both Toomey and Hayworth embody the sort of unfailing conservatism and devotion to the traditional and constitutional values that energize and inspire the "grassroots" of real America. As such they hold a clear advantage in the current political climate.
Likewise, Florida Governor Crist now finds himself trailing Marco Rubio, a conservative Republican challenger who, last summer and fall, was as much of a "long shot" to win the Primary as Brown was once considered to be in the Massachusetts General Election.
In the face of renewed conservative optimism and energy, Democrats are scrambling and floundering. It is critical that real Republican conservatives assert themselves, reaffirm the conservative and constitutional foundations of the GOP, and prevent party "moderates" from moving the debate to the fabled "center," thereby throwing the liberal opposition a lifeline.






























If conservatism is presented in its entirety, it rarely loses. The problem is, to many politicians have their fingers in the wind hoping for guidance. May Crist and McCain have a comfortable retirement.
Whoa! Scott Brown is pro-choice. Doesn't that, at least to some measure, make him left-leaning? Unfortunately, I think Dr. Jackson, if I understood some of his previous posts, is right. Politically, the GOP cannot win with the total conservative package in blue states. On the fiscal conservative point, it appears to pay to be unwavering. On the abortion and social issues–I'm a trump-card voter–the GOP may have different strategies in different demographics.
Christopher,
Your analysis is essentially correct. In 1994 Romney cast himself as 'democrat light'. If given the choice, especially in a blue state; why would anyone go for 'diet' liberalism when they can choose 'full flavor' liberalism?
Progressives know that conservatism works every time it's tried. This is why they are so focused on marginalizing conservatism. They've been preaching for years that conservatism is a 'radical' philosophy; an ideology so far outside the mainstream that no reasonable person can ascribe to its principles. Their major reason for this is to attempt to select the battle ground. If they can convince republicans to campaign as 'moderates' they can always frame the debate to their advantage.
The ultimate goal here is to proclaim victory in the ideological campaign of ideas. If they can convince enough republicans to accept their definition and 'moderate' away from conservatism, they win the ideological firefight.
Elections would then always be fought on the Left's issues and on the Left's terms, and in which "conservative" parties no longer talk about small government and individual liberty but find themselves retreating to one last pitiful rationale: that they can run the left-wing state more effectively than the Left can.
This is essentially what has occurred in the European Union. When Nicolas Sarkozy was elected Prime Minister of France in 2002, and again when German Prime Minister Angela Merkel was first elected in 2005; mainstream media outlets ran stories along the lines; "Is Social Democracy finished in the EU?" I suspect they were being deliberately disenguiniuos. Social democracy wasn't 'finished' in the sense of defeat, but it was finished in the sense that it was complete.
My above paragraph regarding elections; "… always be[ing] fought on the Left's issues and on the Left's terms…" is exactly descriptive of the manner in which elections are now fought in the EU.
In 1974 President Gerald Ford intoned; "A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have." This is an erroneous statement. The countries of the EU have proven, time after time, that a government big enough to give you everything you want has tied its own hands once you get USED to getting all you want. Each time any EU country tries to cut back on its 'welfare state' delivery system, the people are soon seen demonstrating in the streets. As it turns out; everyone likes 35 hour work weeks, six week vacations, and retirement with full pension at 55. Who'd have thunk it?" Turns out this is also the reason none of the former European heavyweights can project power any longer. If you give the population a choice between guns and butter; they'll choose butter every time.
If we keep allowing the left to define conservatism for us we'll end up as a health care program with an army, or even worse, France with Swedish tax rates.