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Keys to Conservative Success Found in NY-23 Loss

Will making spending and budget issues paramount — rather than abortion and gay marriage — bring Republicans back at the polls?

by
Lorie Byrd

Bio

November 6, 2009 - 12:00 am
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Unemployment has reached levels not seen in decades in some states. People are hurting and want someone to do something to address the problem quickly and forcefully. The stimulus bill is not working. As a result, even many of those who voted for Obama and supported him in the past see the need for a different approach. The majority of Americans now believe the country is on the wrong track.

Putting more attention on social issues rather than on jobs, taxes, spending, and growing government control over the private sector is something voters in the current economy are not likely to view positively. Obama and the Democrats in Congress have moved swiftly to dismantle the free enterprise system when it comes to health care, banking, and even cars, and the consequences of their policies have already proved disastrous. A swift response is needed, and that is what most voters have foremost on their minds.

The conservatives that won this week did not do so by abandoning their conservative values, social or otherwise, but they did make the issues of jobs and spending their top priorities. Looking forward to the 2010 midterm elections, conservatives can be confident in the knowledge that conservatism is a winning platform for electoral success — even in blue states like New Jersey.

As long as conservative candidates listen to what the voters are saying and respond to the concerns most important to them with common sense conservative solutions, the successes seen this week in Virginia and New Jersey will be repeated around the country in November 2010.

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Lorie Byrd discovered the world of political blogging in 2004 and has been writing about politics ever since. When she is not busy being a mommy her writing can be found at Wizbangblog, Townhall.com and American Issues Project

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21 Comments, 21 Threads

  1. 1. Marc Malone

    I’ve said this before, but it bears repeating in this light. The Culture War is the long war. You have to focus on the here and now. However, one must always seize one’s chances to advance the longer agenda.

    When we are successful in the short term, it’ll make people take another look at the long term, because we’ll have the credibility.

    So, yes, in this climate, we put it down the list of priorities, but we must still talk about it. At least I want to hear a candidate express his views, because I can more readily trust a socon to be a true fiscon, than a fiscon alone, although not always (see Huckabee). Too often, a fiscon thinks he is a fiscon, but the rest of his agenda usually means more spending. Like McCain supporting cap-and-trade during the campaign. Oh, yeah, now he opposes it. Opportunistic bastard, always trying to be one of the cool kids.

  2. 2. Andrea

    NY23 was a strange case.
    We must gear up inside roar,shining Our light within just one year time to renew GOP grassroots

  3. 3. mttopforge

    Excellent insights, very well written.
    Bravo!

    I believe you are spot on in regards to the importance of jobs, prosperity and smaller fiscally responsible government why they are the driving force in the recent election results. My self as a “Conservative” place high value on these tenets. If you have Liberty, self determination and prosperity the other issues have a way of working out in the positive. It is one aspect of our Republic and why this form of government works. And works very well.
    May be simplistic perspective, but I’m a simple working stiff and that is why I agree with your assesment.

    God bless you. Please keep up the great writing.

  4. 4. Hello

    Could it be that voters are fed up with creeps, but not enough so that they’ll accept a fire-sale dud?

  5. 5. Joe

    I agree with Roger Simon. While it is important to know the views on abortion, gay marriage, etc. it is more important to the man or woman without a job right now to know they are going to be voting for someone who is interested in helping get the job market back on track. And of course, local issues are important to voters. I just hope the Republicans use their common sense in the coming years and not sink us at the dock with another election like the one that put Obama in the White House.

  6. 6. Dougf

    “Will making spending and budget issues paramount — rather than abortion and gay marriage — bring Republicans back at the polls?”

    Geez — You Think ?

    And with all due respect to Mr.Malone the LESS I hear about someone’s PERSONAL outlook, the better.
    The State should keep out of my bedroom and my wallet as much as is possible. While I can actually welcome some specific State intrusion where the private sector is failing and the social good is suffering, I can never welcome some busybody telling me what to do because he/she has a bee in his/her personal bonnet.
    Live your life as you feel to be right and BUTT OUT of mine.

    Fiscal Conservatism is a public gesture ; social conservatism MUST remain a private affair.

  7. 7. bill

    If social conservatism is the problem, why did McDonnell win the governor’s seat in Virginia even after his “extreme” views from his thesis were pounded into the electorate’s soul? Why did the ostensibly “progressive” state of Maine vote 53% against gay-marriage? Hoffman lost because of the contorted nature of the race. If he had been the Republican nominee from the beginning, he would be the congressman-elect. What they now try to label “Social Conservatism” was not too long ago referred to simply as common decency. As Marc Malone said, it’s the long war and it’s worth fighting.

  8. 8. Greying Wanderer

    I think this is a good analysis. Don’t back away or compromise on the social conservative side, *briefly* tick all the boxes, but then spend the bulk of the time on the things that have the biggest impact on people’s daily lives. Otherwise you can end up looking out of touch and more like a single-issue pressure group than a political party.

    RINOs say the problem is social conservatism because they’re so hen-pecked by the media but if there is a problem i think it’s much more to do with time allocation than the beliefs themselves.

  9. 9. justasimplepatriot

    We have 2 generally unmovable groups in the conservatives and the liberals. The libs are of a mindset – “there has to be a better way”. They don’t know what this better way is but know that it involves class warfare.

    Conservatives are more in tune with the things that truly drive this Country’s strengths and are comfortable with the concept of laissez-faire market management, capitalism, meritocracy and limited government.

    The independents are neither political junkies nor ideologues. They don’t spend a lot of time trying to figure out what they want but they know when they don’t like what they have. Being without keel or rudder, they are blown here and there by the reality of the moment. If Obama and company continue their destructive policies, the pain will continue to intensify and the flotilla of the independents will find them selves in the “anything but Obama” column – unfortunately, without really knowing why.

  10. 10. TexEd

    We need to establish an honest, structured source of funding. I sent a modest check to Hoffman.
    Next year, many of us will support honest candidates who don’t wish to destroy our country but who live in other states and districts.
    My checks will (always) be modest but if enough of us send one we can get rid of some of the Pelosi crooks.
    But, we should also have a central source, to which small contributions can be mad, that has the knowledge to use the pool of money with the greatest leverage. The Republican National Committee used to be able to fill this need but, today, simply can’t be trusted.
    Every Congressional democrat, black or white, who votes with Pelosi this weekend should know that there are millions of Americans, from all over the country, who will fund efforts in that Congressman’s home district to help him/her switch careers in 2010!

  11. Bill said “why did McDonnell win the governor’s seat in Virginia even after his “extreme” views from his thesis were pounded into the electorate’s soul?”

    Easy. McDonnell campaigned on fiscal solutions. Even those who disagree strongly with his social views (like me, although I’m not in VA) were comforted by the fact that he said he’d moved beyond them, it was 20 years ago, he has 50% senior female staff. And he had specific fiscal gameplans.

    Hoffman ran more as the anti-Dede, but didn’t put the practical meat on the bone that McDonnell did regarding how he would be a quantitative fiscal improvement. Solid free-market supporters went Hoffman anyway, but he didn’t articulate enough of a practical distinction for independents, the way McDonnell did.

  12. 12. Jamie W.

    Voters are making their views known in the ballot boxes re: social conservative issues; our candidates don’t need to worry about them. Instead, they should be doing just as you say: pushing for fiscal restraint, free market economy ideals, and jobs jobs jobs. Let the libs get hysterical about the social issues instead – which they will if our candidates just smile and refuse to discuss them. Ever try to argue with someone who won’t argue?

  13. 13. myth buster

    6. Defending the life and liberty of the defenseless is not having a bee in one’s bonnet. Child sacrifice is such a heinous act that anyone who tolerates its existence should be shunned from polite company. I oppose anti-sodomy laws outside of the military because what two consenting adults do in private is their own business, but gay marriage goes beyond that to asking me to endorse this behavior, and that I cannot tolerate.

  14. 14. Joshua Chamberlain

    I am so sick of this kind of advice. Opposing gay marriage is a winner for the GOP because gay marriage is VERY UNPOPULAR. What is so hard to understand about this?

  15. 15. Roger

    It would be a betrayal of conservatism to neglect social issues. If all you are is an economic conservative, then you aren’t a real conservative, you are a libertarian.

    Social issues are winners. Every time there has been a vote on gay marriage it’s been defeated. Conservatives need to make an Equal case for Social and Economic issues. That is the Only way to Win.

  16. 16. Zinovi Golodner

    Has it occurred to anybody that in NY23 the more physically attractive candidate won? Owens displayed confidence and looked much better on TV than his opponent and with voters, especially with young, that could be the decisive factor.

  17. 17. Richard

    The only reason to put up with a social conservative that wants to legislate matters of my bedroom is if they can manage to cut spending and lower taxes.

    Modern republicans have shown their zeal in getting involved in my bedroom and raising taxes and adding spending as a way to do it. In other words, they welched on the deal.

    Who knows if Hoffman would have walked the fiscally conservative walk like he talked it. Personally I’m tired of all these “small government” conservatives who can’t resist the urge to use the oppressive power of government to shove their social views down my throat. Its one thing to have social views that you think are right; its another thing to go shoving them down everyone else’s throat with the power of the federal government.

    I’m sick and tired of hearing conservatives whine about how this or that bill funds abortions instead of abstinence education. A principled position would be to get the government the hell out of the whole deal and advocate your social position privately. But no, the conservatives are just as bad as the liberals — once they get in charge they start using the power of the purse to shove their views down everyone else’s throats.

    Get the government out of it and put the people back in charge, or go suck eggs.

  18. 18. narciso

    I’m stillstruck
    on how this continues to be an argument. Hoffman was endorsed by the Club for Growth, who are
    free market conservatives,
    He campaigned on the failure
    of the stimulus
    and the up
    coming health careleviathan, and cap n trade. If there was a failing by some lights, it was in not focusing on those local issues so much.
    But if your currency is debauched and your economy kneecapped, the local bypass between Watertown and Plattsburgh will be redundant

  19. 19. Greying Wanderer

    “Defending the life and liberty of the defenseless is not having a bee in one’s bonnet.”

    “Opposing gay marriage is a winner for the GOP because gay marriage is VERY UNPOPULAR.”

    “It would be a betrayal of conservatism to neglect social issues.”

    It’s not the issues it’s the emphasis.

    The media will try and paint socially conservative candidates as *solely* social conservatives – that’s the point. Tick the social conservative boxes briefly and then move on to talk about the economy – candidates need to avoid being pinned down as one dimensional.

  20. 20. narciso

    The media lies about Hasan’s background and motivation, http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/take_look_at_hasan_old_mosque_tqVGxjbLxWz8SV5tnpmV2N,
    about the FCCER which is effectively the death panel,in the stimulus bill, about the damage that cap n trade will cause, and they lied about
    this campaign.
    Their purpose
    was obtained to get a yes
    vote for this
    detestable plan

  21. 21. SteveB/Colorado

    #6 DougF and #17 Richard: Well said.

    #15 Roger “Social issues are winners…..” Maybe in your state. As I have posted elsewhere, the social values/anti gay rights/anti abortion faction has controlled the Republican party here in Colorado in recent years. They write the party platforms and have worked hard to purge out those who don’t share their religious views.

    Since 2004, thanks in large part to the heavy handed and inept leadership from the social values group, Republicans have lost the governorship, a Senate seat, two House seats, and control of both houses of the state legislature for the first time in over 40 years. It’s bad enough that the Dems, by keeping their radical lefties under control, have positioned themselves as the party of fiscal responsibility.

    In 2008, the social values crew, led by Focus on the Family, tried to amend the state constitution to declare a fertilized egg as a “person,” with all rights thereon. The initiative failed by a 27% to 73% margin. Yes, Colorado has a law banning gay marriage. But in general, social issues only candidates do not do well here.

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