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One of my first
jobs in
Washington was
working as the
press secretary
to former
Congressman Bob
Walker of
Pennsylvania. In
addition to
being a great
boss, Bob was
also a member of
the Conservative
Opportunity
Society.
One of my
responsibilities
was to attend
the group’s
weekly meetings.
The year was
1989. I vividly
recall sitting
along the wall
of the cramped
Cannon
conference room
where they met,
watching Bob,
Newt Gingrich,
Duncan Hunter
and the other
members of
C.O.S. talk
strategy and
policy over
doughnuts and
coffee.
Two things stand
out from those
meetings. The
first was how
often the group
talked about
recapturing the
majority in
Congress. The
second thing
that stood out
was how much the
group talked
about ideas.
Passing a
Balanced Budget
Amendment.
Cutting the
capital gains
tax. Reforming
welfare. The
ideas that
formed the basis
of the Contract
with America
were hashed out
right there in
that room.
Nearly five
years later, I
went to work for
the National
Policy Forum.
NPF was a think
tank that Haley
Barbour
established when
he became
Chairman of the
RNC. Between
November 1993
and June 1994,
the organization
conducted a
“Listening to
America” tour.
It held 70
public meetings
in communities
across the
country. The
meetings
featured
Republicans from
all levels of
government and
focused on many
of the same
issues the
members of
C.O.S. would
talk about on
Capitol Hill.
According to
Barbour, the
objective of the
tour was not
just to promote
the GOP. It was
also to promote
ideas.
I bring all of
this up now
because one of
the debates
underway in
Washington these
days has to do
with why
Republicans lost
their majority
this past
November. Some
believe it is
because the
Republican Party
ran out of
ideas. Others
believe it is
because
Republicans ran
away from the
ideas that made
the Party
great.
I tend to think
it is the latter
and not the
former.
Indeed, the core
principles that
helped
Republicans win
the majority 12
years ago –
principles such
as lower taxes,
free markets,
limited
government, and
a strong defense
– remain vital
and salient
notions today.
Moreover, they
are notions
that,
historically at
least,
Republicans have
successfully
branded as their
own.
Unfortunately,
as the mid-terms
revealed, the
Republican brand
in this regard
has been
severely
compromised.
Nowhere is this
truer than in
the area of
spending and
ethics. Enough
has been written
about Republican
failures in
these areas to
warrant no
further
explanation in
this space. But
for those of us
who worked in
the minority
during the late
1980s, there was
a sense that the
Republican
majority of the
past few years
had, in these
two areas
especially,
become no better
than the
Democratic
majority we had
worked so hard
to defeat. To
say it was
disappointing is
an
understatement.
Republicans now
face an uphill
battle. In
waging this
battle, they
should look at
what has worked
in the past.
Specifically,
the Party should
begin talking
again about the
ideas that
helped them win
control of
Congress in the
first place. The
example Haley
Barbour set at
the National
Policy Forum
might be a good
place to start;
get the Party
outside the
beltway and go
directly to the
American people.
Fortunately,
Republicans have
a wealth of
talent to help
achieve this
goal. Over the
next year and a
half, the GOP
should showcase
this talent by
conducting a new
“Listening to
America” tour.
Have Senator
Judd Gregg and
Congressman Paul
Ryan lead a team
on balancing the
budget and
Senator Chuck
Hagel and
Congresswoman
Kay Granger take
the lead on
national
defense. Recruit
Governors like
Missouri’s Matt
Blunt, Hawaii’s
Linda Lingle,
Minnesota’s Tim
Pawlenty and, of
course, Governor
Barbour of
Mississippi to
talk about how
they are meeting
the challenges
in their own
home states.
Send them into
communities
where polling
indicates they
will do the most
good. Follow-up
their
appearances with
ads paid for by
the RNC that
reinforce the
messages being
delivered.
Make no mistake
– the results of
this past
election were
not an
aberration. They
were caused by
an abdication of
ideas. The key
thing now is to
begin a new
dialogue with
the American
people – a
dialogue based
on ideas, and
one that will
help restore the
public trust in
the GOP.
Only then will
Republicans be
in a position to
recapture what
it took four
decades to win
and just over
one decade to
lose.
RF
Louis M. Zickar
is the Editor of
the Ripon Forum. |