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For 30 years this state has served as the firewall for establishment Republican presidential hopefuls, the place where insurgents who emerged from Iowa and New Hampshire went to die.
In 2012, that tradition might end.
GOP activists attending county party conventions last weekend here and in next-door Greenville County – the heart of the conservative Upstate –made scant mention of Mitt Romney, Haley Barbour and Tim Pawlenty. Instead, the talk is of Michele Bachmann, Donald Trump and even Allen West, a rookie Florida congressman who’s shown no interest in running for president.
Originally posted by MisoirThe only Southern state which is one of the four first primary states is now apparently turning away from its heritage of establishment Republicans to the new era Republicans from the Tea Party. With Romney, Barbour, and Pawlenty pushed aside this has left the door open to the grassroots Republicans to fill the gap for 2012.
Problem I see however is that Mike Huckabee is an establishment Republican with a more populist tone. He is not mentioned in this article at all and I found that interesting since he is generally seen as a Southern darling of the GOP. Having Romney, Daniels, Pawlenty, and the others like them fail in this state, even this region, would be no surprise to those who follow the politics of the Deep South.
I do believe 2012 will show a large schism in the GOP between the Establishment Republicans or, Old Guard, and the Anti-establishment Republicans or, Tea Party. This division will be known well before the primaries actually begin as campaigning heats up. Eventually there will have to be a champion of the Tea Party and a champion of the Old Guard selected and they will have to battle each other for the nomination.
2012 is shaping up to be a very interesting year indeed.
Originally posted by OldCorp
PEOPLE WANT THE TEA PARTY!
Originally posted by Misoir
reply to post by OldCorp
Thanks OldCorp.
Now I have never really spent much time listening to the Tea Party or reading about their ideological preferences except here on ATS and the news outlets (which I do not trust to be honest). Since I am going to assume from your statements that you are a Tea Partier might I get your opinion on a few subjects?
1. What is the general position on foreign affairs? Isolationist, Non-Interventionist, or Interventionist?
2. What is the general position on globalization? Pro or Anti?
3. How about protectionism both in trade (import tariffs) and immigration (restrictions and/or quotas)? What is the general position on that?
Seeing as how I consider myself more in line with the Old Right; Isolationist, pro-tariff, support immigration restrictions, opposition to welfare state and federal income/corporate taxation, opposition to a national welfare state, staunch states’ rights advocate, and a cultural conservative, would you say that general classification is what the Tea Party is mostly about?
I pretty much hate all Neoconservatives, Liberals, and Socialists alike.
Originally posted by OldCorp
*Get us OUT of these wars, and don't start any more unless the US is directly threatened.
*The UN wants us to lead a "coalition" like Libya? Fine, I can deal with that - as long as the UN PAYS for every dime of the operation.
*REFORM Medicare & Medicaid's rules before just taking an ax to them. Their rules (with the help of the DEA) are forcing doctors to write prescriptions for the latest, most expensive medicines available rather than allow the use of Generics. If the DEA would just get their noses out of the doctor/patient relationship and stick to investigating actual crimes, we could save BILLIONS and not have to cut benefits to those who need the assistance most of all: the elderly and disabled.
*Legalize marijuana. After 40 years of the failed War on Drugs, with the DEA ADAMANTLY refusing to let it even be studied as a medicine by researchers, the DEA has finally done a 180 stating that marijuana IS an effective medicine, and the agency is considering allowing pharmaceutical manufacturers to do what they do. Of course, then again we will run into the problem of patented medicine that is WAY overpriced. The taxes collected can be folded right back into Medicare/Medicaid to increase their solvency. California collected $15 BILLION in tax revenue from the sales of JUST medical marijuana last year. If it were completely legal in all 50 states, I can't even begin to calculate the possible revenue.
*Reform Social Security. SS was supposed to be a safety net for those whose jobs did not provide for retirement, but it's gotten way out of control. If I were King, I'd stop payments to those who make a certain amount of money each year - say $250,000 - from other sources. Did you know that even millionaires collect Social Security? And they get BIG monthly checks too. Take SS benefits away from ONE millionaire, and you can provide them for 100 "regular" people. That to me is a no-brainer. Think of it as a "Luxury Tax."
*Suspend ALL foreign aid (yes, including to Israel.) Most of the people to whom we provide monetary aid (NOT humanitarian aid) hate our guts anyway, and nothing we do will ever change their minds. We're just wasting that money. Our allies, such as Israel, will be fine. I'm all for helping those who are in REAL need of aid, but IMO charity begins at home. As long as there are hungry and homeless in the US, we have no business giving away a single penny to other countries.
*Tax the HELL out of US based multinational corporations. GE is the second largest company in the entire world, yet last year they didn't pay a single DIME in taxes. There's something wrong with that. If the government wants to give tax breaks to businesses, I'm cool with that - to a point. I would tax the companies that "offshore" their workforce to the point where it is economic idiocy to do so. This would not only substantially increase our tax revenue, but it would also provide millions of desperately needed jobs right here in the US. Two years ago I had an MRI done. I asked the tech when I could expect the results, and I was told, "As soon as the radiologist reads your films and send back his report." "Sends it back from where?" I asked. "Oh," she replied, we email the images to INDIA where they are interpreted." Not even doctors are safe from losing their jobs to workers in other countries.
*Scale back - or eliminate - government bureaucracies. The Department of Education is not only a joke, but education belongs under the purview of the states, and not the federal government anyway. I can't recall them all, but there are multiple redundancies in the federal government that could be consolidated. I like the idea of hiring an accountant, like in the Kevin Klein movie "Dave," to go through the books and eliminate stupid, wasteful, government programs.
I could go on and on, but it's just common sense really. The idiots we have in Washington only care about one thing: getting re-elected. Term limits come to mind, as does Athenian democracy where everyday citizens took their turns at the helm of the ship of state, and when their term was up they went home. The Greeks did just fine for several hundred years under this mode of government until the Romans came along with their Republic. Republics can all too easily become dictatorships as history has shown - then AND now.. Professional politicians are the bane of modern democracy, and it is obvious that they "serve" themselves rather than their constituents once elected.
Peace,
OC (Ron Paul's 2008 precinct captain and personal bodyguard.)
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/9fcded86fc04.gif[/atsimg]edit on 4/13/2011 by OldCorp because: Added Pic
Originally posted by Misoir
I pretty much hate all Neoconservatives, Liberals, and Socialists alike.
Bluffton, South Carolina (CNN) - Texas Rep. Ron Paul won the latest in a string of presidential straw polls being conducted in key South Carolina counties this month ahead of the state Republican Party convention in May.
Paul won the vote at the Lexington County Republican Party convention on Saturday, taking 16 percent of the 139 ballots cast. Lexington is considered a bellwether county in Republican primaries and is home to South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, but the party organization there has seen an uptick in libertarian-leaning Paul supporters in recent years.
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who has done almost no presidential spadework in the crucial early primary state, had another respectable straw poll showing and finished in a tie for second place with business mogul Donald Trump, taking 12 percent of the vote.
Romney finished fourth in a Greenville County straw poll last weekend and second in a Friday night vote at the Charleston County convention.
Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, who won the Charleston straw poll and attended Saturday's Lexington event in person, finished with 10 percent and tied for fifth with former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee.
Lexington GOP Chairman Rich Bolen also asked party members to pick their second choice for the Republican nomination. Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann won that poll with 18 percent of the vote.
In the grand scheme of presidential campaigns, of course, straw polls are only informal surveys conducted by a relative handful of party activists. But they can be helpful in providing an early read on how the GOP's most dedicated voters in key primary and caucus states view the 2012 field. Some straw polls are more informative than others, however.
Heavily Democratic Orangeburg County hosted its GOP convention on Saturday and ran a straw poll with 30 names on the ballot, including several noncandidates such as former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, Michigan Rep. Thaddeus McCotter and House Speaker John Boehner. But only 25 Republicans attended the convention.