Showing posts with label Jerry Lewis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jerry Lewis. Show all posts

Monday, November 26, 2012

OK, Election 2012 Was A Disaster For The GOP—But For Immigration Patriots, There Was Some Good News

A very interesting post from www.Vdare.com about the 2012 election. This follows this post about the movie "Red Dawn."   This follows this post about a race hoax at U.T. Austin.  This follows this post about Emmit Till. In the meantime, you can read a very interesting book HERE.

OK, Election 2012 Was A Disaster For The GOP—But For Immigration Patriots, There Was Some Good News




http://www.vdare.com/articles/ok-election-2012-was-a-disaster-for-the-gop-but-for-immigration-patriots-there-was-some-goo

By James Kirkpatrick
Conservatism Inc. snatched defeat from the jaws of victory in the 2012 election. And it is even now hastening to make sure the movement it preys upon, and the US, completes slow-motion suicide.

But immigration patriots should take heart from unreported news around the country showing that common sense on mass immigration is emerging as a winning political issue.



In Arizona, despite a brutal Main Stream Media assault, Sheriff Joe Arpaio once again cruised to a re-election victory. Amidst the wailing and lamentations from the likes of the Phoenix New Times (the kind of “independent publication” that reads the same no matter where you are in the country), Arpaio won with 53% of the vote.

Liberal Republican Jeff Flake managed to reinvent himself as a restrictionist, backing Arizona’s SB 1070 law and thereby securing his own election. Of course, John McCain also did the same thing in Arizona in 2010. Immigration patriots will have to watch Flake very closely. But hypocrisy is, proverbially, the homage that vice pays to virtue.

While not a victory in its own right, state Senator Jerry Lewis, the turncoat Republican who provided the essential “respectable conservative” cover for the recall of Russell Pearce, was easily defeated. His Democratic opponent, Ed Ableser, smeared Lewis as a “tea party puppet”-- showing that, even when Republicans stick to MSM-approved issues and attack their own side, they receive no credit.

Other top Treason Lobby targets also survived:



In Iowa, Congressman Steve King overcame a redistricting process that weakened the traditional conservative majority of his Iowa district, and managed to secure reelection with almost 53% of the vote. Liberals smeared Congressman King continuously as a white nationalist for holding such “extreme” positions as questioning diversity and believing English should be the official language. MSM reportorials have already focused on King as an unreconstructed holdout against the conventional wisdom that the GOP should immediately surrender on illegal immigration. King’s solid victory in the face of difficult circumstances strengthens his position in the upcoming amnesty battle. (Note: in perhaps his most disgraceful performance, Romney lost Iowa 52-46, receiving only a 51% white share).

In Pennsylvania, Congressman Lou Barletta cruised to re-election in a former Democratic stronghold that redistricting painted a deeper shade of red.

Significantly, Barletta shows the effectiveness of the “inreach” that could save the GOP, and the historic American nation…if Conservatism Inc. would allow it. Congressional districts do not neatly follow county lines so it is difficult to make a perfect comparison, but Barletta won a greater share of the vote than Mitt Romney in all but one county in his district. The exception: Perry County, where Congressman Barletta took 67.6% of a smaller voting pool, compared to Romney’s 68.6%.

Romney lost Pennsylvania 52-47, receiving only a 42% white share. But in this critical swing state, where Democrats have a one million registered voter advantage, Barletta proves that the Republicans have a potential blue-collar path to victory--if they will take it.



As former Congressman Tom Tancredo has noted, Reps. Matt Salmon of Arizona and Tom Cotton of Arkansas have both been elected. Both candidates used immigration as a centerpiece of their campaigns. Tancredo informed patriots in an email: “Remember those names—I promise you, they are all rising stars.”

Salmon is a former Congressman who has reclaimed now Senator Jeff Flake’s old seat. Cotton is a young Harvard-educated former Army Ranger heavily promoted by the Establishment conservative movement. (NRO's Jay Nordlinger did a four-part series of columns on him.) He has been endorsed by Tancredo and Team America PAC and is saying the right things--but it will be interesting to see how this rookie Congressman will react to the push for amnesty by both Establishment Republicans and Conservatism Inc.



Almost unremarked in the MSM, the South continued its transition to a one-party Republican stronghold. Arkansas is now Republican territory for the first time since Reconstruction: the GOP captured the state Senate and installed a Republican speaker in the House. Republicans also won a supermajority in Tennessee in both chambers of the legislature. And Republicans won another decisive victory in the swing state of North Carolina, where they expanded their majority in the general assembly and won the governor’s race.

In Kansas, Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s endorsed candidates won over half of their races, as the state GOP maintained its majorities and pushed further to the right. Even the Treason Lobby mouthpiece Imagine2050, which sneered that Kobach was somehow hurt by the election, conceded that general view in Kansas was that the patriotic immigration reform community’s rising star had his hand strengthened in the state.

Around the country, most members of State Legislators for Legal Immigration (SLLI), a group of state legislators opposed to illegal immigration, won re-election. Thus Daryl Metcalfe, the current leader of the group, was elected with 100% of the vote, running unopposed.

Another example: Kieran Michael Lalor, an immigration patriot who attracted VDARE.com’s attention particularly because of his eloquent denunciation of New York State Democrats’ use of taxpayer money to help undocumented Democrats through the Obama Administrative Amnesty process (undenounced, needless to say, by Mitt Romney), was elected in New York’s 105th State Assembly district. Wikipedia’s entry on Lalor (which, curiously, had not been updated at presstime to reflect his election) does report that he published a book, This Recruit, about his experiences going through U.S. Marine Corps basic training in Parris Island.

There was other positive news in referendums from the states.



In Oklahoma, anti-white racial preferences took a hit, with voters approving a ban on Affirmative Action in state government hiring, education, and contracting. The ban passed by 59%-41%.

In Montana, patriotic immigration reformers won a crushing victory when Referendum 121 dramatically restricted certain state services from illegal immigrants, including the ability to acquire state licenses, employment, welfare, or aid for university students.

The Montana ACLU predictably opposed the measure, using the “no human being is illegal” slogan (in Spanish). Some state legislators were also opposed, claiming that referendum 121 somehow was an expansion of government bureaucracy, even though it was an attempt to limit the use of government programs. Montana’s own low-rent $PLC, the “Montana Human Rights Network,” also condemned the measure as a “right wing legislative referenda undermines our shared values of dignity, security, and fairness.”

But Referendum 121 passed with a greater measure of support than any other initiative in the state. Almost 80% of voters in the state voted for it.

Significantly, this far surpassed the less than 55% of voters who supported Mitt Romney--in a state that is supposedly solid red.

Generally, because of the donor-driven decision of the Romney campaign consultants to dial down primary themes like “self-deportation,” immigration played little role in the 2012 general election.

But immigration patriots certainly suffered painful defeats in this election cycle. One of the worst: the referendum passage of the so-called DREAM Act in Maryland, guaranteeing discounted tuition for illegal immigrants while denying it to actual Americans from out of state. (Needless to say, this referendum was a grass-roots initiative, the state GOP having run away).

But the DREAM Act’s margin in the occupied Old Line State was less than President Obama’s margin--only 58% of voters supported the DREAM Act, while Obama won 61.7%. (It should also be noted, amidst the cries for “moderation,” that same -ex marriage only squeaked to victory in Maryland by 4%.)

Immigration patriots should draw three lessons from the 2012 elections.



First, Peter Brimelow and Edwin S. Rubenstein’s 1997 prediction of “electing a new people” is coming true--but it has not taken over the entire country (yet). Conservatism Inc. is rushing to surrender, but some conservative writers are recognizing what patriotic activists have been trying to tell them for decades. This opens up intellectual space for patriotic immigration reformers.

Second, regardless of what the Beltway Right tries this cycle or next, the immigration battle will continue in the states.

Patriotic immigration reformers are winning at the state level and are performing better than the national party as a whole. Unlike tax cuts for billionaires, common-sense immigration reform has the ability to draw Reagan Democrats and split the “progressive” coalition. Regardless of the party line, state legislators want to win. They will continue to pursue this issue as long as they continue to receive pressure (and votes) from their constituents.



Third, and perhaps most important: the transformation of the GOP into the “Generic American Party” is continuing--regardless of what the Beltway Right has to say about it.

In areas of Republican strength, notably the South, the GOP has become the “white party.” There are entire states where every white state elected official is a Republican and every black is a Democrat. [Southern White Democrats Face End of Era in Congress, By Naftali Bendavid, WSJ, August 8, 2012]

Even if the Beltway GOP completely switches sides on amnesty, there is no evidence to suggest that their surrender will do anything to win over minority voters---and it will simply hasten Republican decline.

The good news for patriotic immigration reformers: it is now clear that the only way to create a Republican Party that “can win again” is to focus on “inreach” to the white base, work hard to court working class voters, stand for economic fairness and protection of American jobs, and boldly proclaim an immigration moratorium.

The bad news: Conservatism Inc. would rather lose than be accused of being Politically Incorrect.

James Kirkpatrick [Email him] travels around the United States looking for a waiter who can speak English.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Defeat of AZ Immigration Law Author is Bad Omen for Borders

An urgent post from http://www.debbieschlussel.com/ about the recall loss of Russel Pearce. This follows this post about an attempt to stop the president from suing enforcement states like South Carolina, and previously Alabama and Arizona. This follows this post about how to Report Illegal Immigrants such as the 30,000 openly illegal immigrants in the border town of El Paso, where President Barack Obama recently bashed immigration enforcement! For more that you can do to get involved click HERE and you can read a very interesting book HERE!

Defeat of AZ Immigration Law Author is Bad Omen for Borders

Friday, December 10, 2010

Did You Vote Republican For Nothing?

A very interesting post from www.redstate.com about the Republican House Assignments. This follows this post  about the Lame Duck Congress and this article about  the recent news about ending the ban on offshore drilling which would encourage American energy independence This is a key issue to prevent money from going to hostile countries such as Iran  and Venezuela. For more that you can do to get involved click HERE!


Did You Vote Republican For Nothing?



Posted by Erick Erickson (Profile)

Did you show up at the polls on November 2nd for nothing? It seems that way. The House Republican Leadership has decided to put Jeff Flake (R-AZ) on the Appropriations Committee and that’s pretty much it. They are sending a signal to the tea party movement that this is all they’ll get.



John Boehner and Eric Cantor want Hal Rogers of Kentucky to serve as Appropriations Chairman. Hal Rogers is a big spending porker who has been a champion of earmarks. So brazen in his lust for your money, Rogers wants to put a Lockheed Martin lobbyist in as staff director for the Appropriations Committee — a lobbyist in charge of doling out the dollars.



But the fight is not over. Today the House GOP must ratify the leadership’s decisions and we can still get Jack Kingston into the Chairman’s chair. Go to our action center and fight to stop this. Call your Republican Congressman this morning. Tell him to support Jack Kingston as Appropriations Chairman.



Stand up to John Boehner and Eric Cantor. Fight for your principles.



CALL YOUR REPUBLICAN CONGRESSMAN THIS MORNING.



THE VOTE WILL BE TODAY.



If you believe the GOP must change their ways, you must then fight against Hal Rogers’s appointment and support Jack Kingston instead. This fight is too important. We must rebuke House Republican Leaders and compel them to do the right thing.



I’m going to make it easy for you.



Go to our action center here. Call your Republican Representative and tell him to support Jack Kingston for Appropriations Chairman. Kingston, like Rogers, was an Appropriations Sub-Committee Chairman. Only Kingston turned in a budget on time and under budget.



Between Rogers and Kingston, Kingston is a stronger fiscal conservative who will work to cut spending.



Tell your Congressman that putting a huge porker in charge of Appropriations with a lobbyist as staff director is an insult to all the work you did to get the GOP back into the majority.



Call this morning. Stand up to John Boehner and Eric Cantor. Fight for your principles

Monday, December 6, 2010

Lame duck Congress should wrap up and go home

A very interesting post from http://www.hughhewitt.com/  about the Lame Duck Congress. This follows this post about California and this article about  the recent news about ending the ban on offshore drilling which would encourage American energy independence This is a key issue to prevent money from going to hostile countries such as Iran  and Venezuela. For more that you can do to get involved click HERE


Hugh Hewitt: Lame duck Congress should wrap up and go home

TAGS: hugh hewitt
Examiner Columnist

.By the end of this week, the House and Senate GOP will have branded themselves in the eyes of many millions of activists, especially with the Tea Partiers hot-wired into the lame-duck doings and worried that all of their work and all of their money will have produced just another group of Beltway Republicans. Speaker-designate John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., have been fighting to establish the new GOP's credibility on a range of issues, but House seniority imperils the Boehner effort, while the Senate's legendary ability to deafen an individual senator to public opinion is at work even on GOP senators facing perilous roads to re-election in 2012.



On the House side, the selection of three chairmen for three key committees this week will telegraph the depth of the GOP's resolve to tackle the nation's problems. If Alabama's Rep. Spencer Bachus is named chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, every Sarah Palin supporter will instantly conclude Boehner is against them. When Bachus slammed Palin last month, he made this chairmanship contest a test of Boehner's commitment to the new activists.



If Georgia's Rep. Jack Kingston isn't leading the House Appropriations Committee by Friday, the message will be that, while spending may be curbed for a moment, the old bulls are simply biding their time.



The likely election of Michigan's Rep. Fred Upton to head the House Energy and Commerce Committee will not damage the leadership's credibility with the grass roots if California's Ed Royce takes over Financial Services instead of Bachus and Kingston gets the gavel at Appropriations.



But if Upton rises with Bachus and California's Jerry Lewis atop of Appropriations, the message will be loud and clear: The Beltway Republicans have returned.



Boehner has a huge choice before him, and throwing himself into the fight for reform will mean a tough conversation with some old friends, but the new speaker will never get a second chance to make his first impression.



On the Senate side, the letter from all 42 members of the GOP caucus on the need to extend all the tax rates was a great start, but individual senators immediately began to announce their own positions on various issues, and thus returned that familiar feeling of a caucus held hostage by its most liberal members. A two-year extension coupled with massive spending will be seen as a major collapse of the GOP.



Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., is pushing to railroad ratification of a crucial international arms accord, START, a terrible idea for a lame-duck Congress under any circumstances and for any major treaty as such accords must have the credibility of the United States behind them, not the smell of a rushed and fragile deal.



Lugar is a fine public servant, but this crusade at this time will almost certainly draw for him a destructive primary challenge that will be fueled by the genuine shock that he worked to allow lame ducks like Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut a vote on such a matter, while denying all the new Republican senators-elect a say on such a matter.



Then there is "don't-ask-don't-tell," which must now be amended to add "don't debate." If, as reported in some places, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., vote to rush a repeal in the lame duck, the insult will be immense to the activists of their states who worked and spent to support successful candidates across the country who should have a vote on this major issue.



Collins would imperil re-election of her seat mate, Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, and Brown his own with such an empowerment of a lame-duck Congress.



The lame-duck Congress ought not to be deciding anything of consequence. That is the deep-felt position of the GOP base, and the Beltway GOP should honor it.



Examiner Columnist Hugh Hewitt is a law professor at Chapman University Law School and a nationally syndicated radio talk show host who blogs daily at http://www.hughhewitt.com/


Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/2010/12/hugh-hewitt-lame-duck-congress-should-wrap-and-go-home#ixzz17LVarSTx