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Bennet Kelley

Bennet Kelley's Journal
Bennet Kelley's Journal
October 14, 2012

Romney, Marxism and GOP Dog Food

Romney, Marxism and GOP Dog Food

There is a long-standing strain in conservative thought that America is essentially a conservative country that has been led astray and duped by the “liberal media” and Hollywood. The most recent articulation of this view is in books like “Obama Zombies” and documentaries like “The Obama Deception,” that contend that the election of Barack Obama was the result of a brainwashed electorate.

If that were the case, then one would think conservatives would relish the few hours of live televised debates as their only chance to reach voters unfiltered by the black magic of the liberal media. One would expect this to be the moment when they make an impassioned plea for conservative principles.

So when Mitt Romney took the stage in Denver to debate President Obama, this should have been the moment when the former Governor made the conservative case for his agenda. Instead, Romney turned to Marx – Groucho not Karl – and adopted the “who are you going to believe, me or your lying eyes” approach to questions about his agenda.

Romney could not run fast enough from the details of his plan which all facts to the contrary suddenly did not (a) have a $5 trillion tax cut proposal; (b) which reduced taxes for the wealthiest; (c) raised taxes on the middle class; and (d) exploded the deficit. Nope, not his plan, we must be thinking of some other guy running for President.

In debating health care with the President, this was not the moment when he planted the flag for free market solutions but rather he claimed to have a plan that competed with Obamacare and even covered preexisting conditions (which his staff later conceded was untrue).

This was nothing new, as George W. Bush took the same tact when debating Al Gore in 2000, contending that his tax plan primarily benefited lower brackets and assuring voters that that he would use half of the surplus towards Social Security. This could not have been farther from the truth.

As President, Bush continued this same pattern, leading a number of bloggers such as myself to catalog with astonishment the hundreds of lies emanating from Pennsylvania Avenue. As John Dean would explain in his book “Worse than Watergate”, the Bush administration had elevated mendacity to public policy with all major initiatives cloaked in deception.

After his reelection Bush tried to "cash in" the political capital he believed he had accumulated to achieve a longtime conservative dream – privatizing Social Security. Once the proposal was subject to the cold sun of public scrutiny, the major policy initiative of Bush’s second term died a quick death despite a nationwide campaign by the President.

Far from being embraced by this fictional conservative nation, the Bush administration and Republicans instead faced a public backlash. In the aftermath, one Republican Congressman conceded that the Republican brand was “in the trash can” and that if it were a dog food it would be taken off the shelf. Recent polling suggests that this view remains unchanged.

The Republicans know they cannot win on the strength of their ideas, but rather must rely on hijacking the democratic process. “Hijacking” no doubt is a strong word, but what do you call purging thousands of legitimate voters from the voting rolls and erecting barriers to combat “voter fraud” that they admit never occurred? What do you call holding the country hostage over the debt ceiling extension last summer or their blocking every Obama initiative (even ones they agreed with at one time) through abuse of the filibuster?

What do you call using millions in unregulated campaign funds to sell the American people dog food by telling them it’s something else? That is precisely what happened in Denver, as Governor Romney rebranded his entire platform.

Romney lacked the courage to push his party to adopt an agenda which the country could embrace, so now he must convince the country that his agenda is not really dog food but a taco supreme. In doing so, it is clear that Romney understands one important point that the conservative zombie theorists refuse to recognize– as long as the Republican Party continues to push their extremist dog food, the American public are never going to say “yo quiero GOP.”

Profile Information

Name: Bennet Kelley
Gender: Male
Hometown: Providence, RI
Home country: USA
Current location: Santa Monica, CA
Member since: Wed May 24, 2006, 11:57 AM
Number of posts: 142

About Bennet Kelley

Bennet Kelley is an award winning columnist, a political commentator, radio host and the former Co-Founder and National Co-Chair of the Democratic National Committee\'s Saxophone Club (its young professional fund raising and outreach arm during the Clinton years). He also is the founder of the Internet Law Center in Santa Monica and a past co-chair of the California Bar Cyberspace Committee. Since 2011, Bennet has been host of Cyber Law and Business Report which airs Wednesdays at 10AM Pacific on WebmasterRadio.fm. In winning two Southern California Journalism Awards for his writing for Huffington Post and the Santa Monica Daily Press, judges praised his work as \"an entertaining and compelling mix of bite, intelligence and humor,\" \"exceptionally piercing,\" and for not being \"afraid to tell it the way he sees it\" . For more information go tohttp://www.BennetKelley.com.
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