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The Republican Party fights ... with itself

Intra-party squabbling among conservatives – especially with Tea Partiers thrown into the mix – is not good news for the GOP. They're beginning to act like Democrats.

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Writing in The Hill newspaper, Alexander Bolton points out that “the Gun Owners of America went even further, blasting McConnell in an e-mail sent to members in Kentucky, noting previous times McConnell failed to stop legislation and accusing the GOP leader of helping Democrats advance the ‘ObamaCare legislation’.”

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Down in Florida, Gov. Charlie Crist (R) is running for the US Senate. Here’s what his main opponent has to say about him: “Charlie Crist will need to spend every last cent trying to convince voters that his support for wasteful stimulus spending, cap-and-trade schemes, tax increases and liberal judges are acceptable Republican practices.”

That’s former state House Speaker Marco Rubio lambasting his fellow Republican, in what sounds a lot like that recent special congressional election in upstate New York where a conservative third party candidate in effect helped elect the first Democrat in the district in more than a century. So far, Rubio has the backing of the conservative anti-tax outfit Club for Growth and the socially conservative Family Research Council.

Taking the broader view, University of Virginia history professor Jennifer Burns notes the resurgence of interest in the works of novelist and philosopher Ayn Rand. In a recent Monitor op-ed, Dr. Burns, author of “Goddess of the Market: Ayn Rand and the American Right,” notes that “her ubiquity should tell us that tectonic plates are shifting under the surface of American politics.”

And of course no discussion of intra-party squabbling is complete without remembering what Will Rogers said in describing himself as a Democrat: “Not a member of any organized political party.”

Writing in the Monitor this past week, congressional correspondent Gail Russell Chaddock observes that Democrats won congressional seats in 2006 and 2008 by recruiting candidates who could win in conservative districts.

“The ‘majority makers,’ as Speaker Nancy Pelosi dubbed them, fit the moderate-to-conservative districts they aimed to win,” Chaddock writes. “They railed on big government, spending, and taxes. Some challenged the merits of government regulation, called for more limits on abortion rights, opposed any softening of illegal immigration policy, or appeared in photos toting rifles. Now, with legacy bills for Democrats on the line, many are voting that way. On issues ranging from healthcare and climate change to social issues, the ‘majority makers’ often find themselves challenging the very majority they helped to create.”

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