State Chair's View of the Future of the Party
I had the opportunity to ask Minnesota Party Chair Tony Sutton a few questions about the role of moderates and progressives in the party along with his opinion on how to broaden the party's base.
RLC-MN: Do you feel there is room for moderates & progressives in the Republican Party of Minnesota?
Extreme social stances are a losing strategy
By Aren Cambre:
Extreme social stances are a losing strategy for two reasons.
1: They are paradoxically liberal. If we fully legislated my state platform's social stances, we would make the government the moral compass, usurping the proper role of the church and individual wisdom.
2: They turn away mainstream conservatives and moderates. This is proven by two polls:
State GOP chooses Sutton as new chair
This past weekend the Minnesota GOP elected Tony Sutton the new chair of the Party. Michael Brodkorb was elected Deputy as well. Sutton previoulsy served as Secretary/Treasurer. Brodkorb, more famously know as heading up the blog minnesotademocratsexposed.com served as Communications Director for the Senate Republican Caucus.
The GOP's Challenge to Win Back Young Voters
by Kristen Soltis
In Jon Stewart's 2004 satirical textbook on government and politics, America: A Citizen's Guide to Democracy Inaction, the chapter on elections features an illustration of a graveyard of political parties, complete with an archway sign reading "abandon political viability all ye who enter here." There, next to the Whig and Bull Moose parties, was a freshly dug grave with a tombstone reading "Democratic Party 1828 - ".
Oh, how things have changed.
Moderates in Congress feel health care push
USA Today
As Congress considers an overhaul of the nation's health care system, pressure is mounting on a small circle of Senate moderates who helped advance President Obama's economic stimulus this year.
Centrists in both parties, including Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb. — both of whom played a critical role in shaping the stimulus — are being courted by interest groups and the White House as lawmakers seek a way to provide health care to 46 million uninsured people.
Texas GOP: does the "core" hold the reins?
By Aren Cambre:
Texas’s 2010 gubernatorial primary is a key battle for the Republican Party's future.
The GOP's Purity Problem
LA Times
The dust-up between Rush Limbaugh and Colin L. Powell over whether Powell is still a Republican is more than the political equivalent of a show-business feud. It reflects the perennial -- but for Republicans in 2009, painfully pertinent -- question of whether it's good for a major political party to be a big tent or whether too much inclusiveness turns it into a three-ring circus.
Republicans, Let's Play Grown-Up
by Chad Crowe
"Let's play grown-up." When I was a child, that's what we said when we ran out of things to do like playing potsie or throwing rocks in the vacant lot. You'd go in and take your father's hat and your mother's purse and walk around saying, "Would you like tea?" In retrospect we weren't imitating our parents but parents on TV, who wore pearls and suits. But the point is we amused ourselves trying to be little adults.
And that's what the GOP should do right now: play grown-up.
Powell, Ridge: GOP is too shrill
By Douglass K. Daniel
The conservative vs. moderate split threatening to rupture the Republican Party played out across the airwaves yesterday, with Colin L. Powell and Tom Ridge denouncing shrill and judgmental voices they say are steering the GOP too far right.
Karl Rove challenged Powell to lay out his vision and "back it up" by helping elect Republicans.
At stake is the GOP's status as a major party, Powell suggested.
As parties drift apart, independents grow rapidly
By Reid Wilson
Voters who call themselves Republicans or Democrats are increasingly turning a deaf ear to each other as partisan views harden, making the growing ranks of independents key to any long-term political gain.
Those independent voters, according to data from the Pew Research Center and the Gallup Organization, are becoming more socially liberal while dividing between liberalism and conservatism on the economy.