Republicans Abandoning Ship?

I don't know how much of this is bullshit. But I have been trying to figure out why so many in the party, and now The National Review, have not fallen in line behind Romney's refusal to release his returns. I have been surprised at how little attention this has received. This is the party of Reagan's infamous rule, "yea thou shall murder, lie, cheat, and steal, but thou shall not speaketh evil of another repuke" or whatever. I know that McCain hated him. It's fun to say that McCain got a look at his tax returns in 08 and went with Palin, but the fact is anyone watching those debates understood that McCain hated this guy and it was personal. I don't buy that he's disliked for not being conservative enough. McCain was widely considered not conservative enough and he was not hated by Republican insiders.

"There are those of us who think that Romney is destined to lose, and they are behaving accordingly," said the former manager of another campaign, who also declined to be quoted because his boss has endorsed Romney.

"Everybody's looking ahead to the next round. They won't say it, but they are."


I would think this was just bitter grapes, except for the fact that so many high profile Republicans are going on record that he needs to release his records. This indicates hating him enough to be willing to cut off your own nose to stick it to him, or...the belief that he's going to lose and not wanting to be tied to him in any way.


WASHINGTON -- Months after he mathematically locked up the Republican presidential nomination, Mitt Romney remains a political hairball that GOP insiders -- conservative and otherwise -- wish they could cough up before the convention in Tampa, Fla., next month.

The likelihood of their doing so is slim to none, party sources said. But that doesn't mean that they are happy to have Mitt atop the ticket.

That is the real, unspoken political meaning behind he remarkable, rising chorus of voices calling on the presumptive party nominee to release more of his federal tax returns to the public.

"The fact is, no one likes the guy or believes in him," said the campaign manager for a former Romney rival, who declined to be quoted by name because his former boss is on record supporting Romney's campaign against incumbent President Barack Obama.

"Look back at our 2008 primaries," he said. "Who did all the other candidates dislike? Romney. Look at this year. Who did all the other candidates dislike? Romney. No one wants Obama to win, but no one likes the guy who is running against him."

Republican leaders, especially conservatives, see Romney as a malleable, cynical power-grabber without principle or compass. They warned voters that Romney would be unable to take the fight to Obama on health care because he had fostered a similar program as governor of Massachusetts, and they argued that a wealthy, well-connected son of privilege was not a good spokesman for selling free-market ideas to the middle-class.

Over the last week, a disparate array of Republican and conservative leaders have called on Romney to do what he is clearly loathe to do: release several years if not a decade or more of his federal tax returns. it is an unspoken form of payback.

The list is not only a veritable who's who of the party, but a not-so-subtle roster of people who opposed Romney for the presidential nomination. That they have not fallen in line behind Romney's stonewalling is a telling sign.

Among those who have called on Romney to disclose are figures tied to the candidates who opposed Romney in the Republican primaries, and who are clearly not willing to do him any favors now. They include Rick Tyler, a close and longtime advisor to former House Speaker Newt Gingrich; John Weaver, who served in a similar capacity in the campaign of former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman; former GOP candidate Rep. Ron Paul of Texas; Gov. Rick Perry of Texas (who said that ALL candidates should disclose their returns); and conservative pundit William Kristol, who is close to former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, among other former candidates.

Normally, defeated primary rivals quickly fall in line behind the strategy and message of the winning candidate. In this crucial case, Romney's former rivals have done just the opposite on what Romney has made clear is a crucial issue.

Equally noteworthy are the party leaders and pundits who have left the Romney Alamo. They include former party chairs Haley Barbour and Michael Steele, and pundits George Will, David Frum, the editors of National Review and, to a degree, the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal.

As if to add insult to injury, the GOP's 2008 standard-bearer, Sen. John McCain, said on Tuesday that he had picked former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate because she was the best candidate for the job -- a sock to the jaw to Romney, who had been on McCain's veep list.

Even before the tax return issue had come to dominate the campaign, News Corp. boss Rupert Murdoch had complained about what he regarded as the ineptitude and lack of focus of the Romney team.

And Congressional Republicans were upset with Romney's insistence that his health care plan in Massachusetts was based on "penalties," not taxes. The GOP wants to run against the president on the notion that his version of health care -- similar to Romney's -- is a "massive tax increase." Mitt muddled the message.

"Romney threw them under the bus and they aren't going to stand for it," said Hogan Gidley, media director for Santorum's campaign. "The idea that Obama health care is a tax increase is a key to the whole Republican campaign."

Seen as arrogant and aloof by his rivals, Romney is said to have few friends or ties among his former challengers or elsewhere in the GOP and conservative ranks. He has money and a tight and loyal cadre of operatives, but they find themselves without many allies as they try to argue that their boss should be allowed to keep his business dealings and taxes private.

"There are those of us who think that Romney is destined to lose, and they are behaving accordingly," said the former manager of another campaign, who also declined to be quoted because his boss has endorsed Romney.

"Everybody's looking ahead to the next round. They won't say it, but they are."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/18/mitt-romney-taxes-tough-sell-hairball_n_1681636.html
 
Because RINOs like McShamnesty are as much at fault for the shambles this country is in as left wingers. They are more worried about garnering favor with te liberal establishment in DC than doing the right thing. They are more worried about "what the press will say". Well news flash, the liberal press is going to bash you anyway.

Perfect example I his daughter. She talks about all the sex she likes and te weed she smokes but as long as she says he supports homo's marrying the left looks the other way. You can murder (Teddy "the swimmer" Kennedy), belong to the KKK (Robert "sheets" Byrd) and as long as you champion the right liberal causes you will be given a pass by the left wing media. Te mainstream GOP fears this media. Many like Krauthammer and George Will are part of it.

Contrary to popular belief RINOs like McShamnesty were as big a part of the Tea Party uprising as anything OWEdummy did.

I am no fan of Romney and fought hard against him in the primary for this very reason. I was worried that he would not appreciate the onslaught our thug president would bring in an effort to maintain power.

What Romney should do is keep saying what OWEdummy said all during 2008 when he was being secretive with all of his records. "I have released everything required by law" an let the left wing press continue to wring their hands.

Anyone on the right who thinks that by releasing all his tax returns this goes away is a fool.

Oddly enough, the likes of Krauthammer and Will told us that Romney was the best candidate. Well, surprise surprise, the fuckstick wizarsa of smart got it wrong again.
 
Guess what?

Y'all stuck with him now!

Tee hee!

I'm not. Truth is it doesn't matter who wins. Country is headed toward a cliff. I only prepare for the worst which is coming and neither party has the balls or political will tondo hat really needs to e done. Can't really blame them. The American people really don't want to hear the truth either. They whine about government spending bit scream "don't touch my Medicare or social security". Meanwhile the fed keeps printing money and we keep going deeper and deeper into debt. For those who say I am alarmist and that it could never happen, tell that to the people who said te stock market wouldn't go down and housing would always go up.
 
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