The strange pas de deux between Michael Steele and his party
In our interview this week with Sen. Saxby Chambliss and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, both men refused to comment in any way on the travails or job security of Republican Party chairman Michael Steele. They clearly wanted nothing to do with the subject.
But others have been a little more forthcoming.
Former RNC Chair Haley Barbour, now the governor of Mississippi, was asked about Steele claim that he and President Obama are being held to higher standards because of their race. With that comment, Steele seemed to align himself with Obama, suggesting that critics of the two men were being motivated by race. I can think that message went down very well within the party faithful.
Personally, I think Steele suggestion is ridiculous. In his unique circumstances, Steele race has not made him a target, it has probably protected him and made it harder for the GOP to do what his performance dictates they do, which is fire him.
But back to Barbour, because I do like his response. you a fat redneck like me and got an accent like mine, you too might have to achieve to a higher standard, he told CNN.
While Barbour threw the line out there as a joke, there some truth in it. It also true that in a sneaky way, those low expectations sometimes work to Barbour advantage and he www.immopolisparis.fr knows it. Over the years I watched more than one fellow use that dumb redneck act to disguise real shrewdness.
Sarah Palin, on the other hand, gave Steele a surprisingly full throated endorsement last night on Fox. "I think he's doing a great job," she said, embracing Steele as a fellow maverick.
"Michael Steele is an outsider, she told Sean Hannity. machine, I think, is tough to penetrate. I think it been good to have an independent outsider trying to create some change in the Republican Party. You don think that she too is hiding real shrewdness behind that dumb act, do you? (For the record, I don While she has shown a great instinct for self promotion, I don think it runs any deeper than that. Alabama.
Where is Georgia? Our legislature isn't even having this discussion. They spend their time talking about abortion and guns.
I think we're behind in GA because "progressive" columnists like Jay Bookman never discuss the issue. And the AJC never has any articles about the subject. The newspapers and the state representatives in Alabama are more forward thinking than the ones in GA.
Newspapers all over the country are having this discussion.
Remember when it was almost always the Dems who would snatch www.faire-part-de-bapteme.fr defeat from the jaws of victory via their circular firing squads? And trotting out a litany of lamebrain candidates? (Not that they still don
But NOW the faux conservatives have raised that art to a new level. Look at that presidential in 2008. Something straight out of a Knuckledraggers Convention.
And their darlings for 2012? Same old, same old an occasional Alaskan twist.
The proposal in Alabama was by for it Democrat. What a shocker!
As noted it will likely never get out of committee.
Way too many War on Everything (Let get that 10 Commandments Monument up in Krogers www.marieclairedanen.fr and CVS!)Report this comment
I wonder if the reluctance to discuss Mr. Steele has to do with the media reporting, and the thought so many still hold, that Mr. Steele was at the strip club. Even though he wasn Republicans can get awfully topic avoidance when it comes to anything dealing with sex. Which is a shame, this was a case that hit the Republican virtues of self reliance, nonunion, self employed people pulling themselves up by their bondage straps, keeping their taxes low by participating in a cash economy and being observers on the sidelines, not participating in the system.
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