Pages

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Let's Listen to the Tea Party Movement And Then Begin To Consolidate

Historically speaking if a third party manages to actually run on a row, one party loses out much more than the other. Insofar as I realize anti-incumbency feelings and some anti-congressional thought aimed at both Republicans and Democrat representatives, 2010 is a make it or break it election for a change. The Republican Party has not shown bipartisanship in the health care debate but neither have the Democrats who shut their adversaries out for the most part. The Republican Party exhibited air tight solidarity and crafted ideas which were not given too much respect in a quirky and unprecedented OK corral bill passage. I have never in my life seen such contentiousness toward a subject that was dear to the hearts of any American who has ever been sick.Now states, lawyers, Attorneys General and just plain folks all in unison desire a repeal. The tea party must understand that their ideology is close to the Republican Party and in this debate they showed much more professionalism as a unit. Revamping Congress whether leaning Republican or a total capture will be difficult and certainly not a given. Mr. Obama at 50% popularity still has admirers. Our success will be impossible unless tea party officials begin discussions now with Mr. Steele and staff to consolidate and win. Protest votes have never won an election, our American voters tend to vote for either of the two major parties and that will not change so let's work with what we have.