Rising Conservative Star Patrick Ruffini Riles The Right

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First Posted: 09-23-08 09:27 PM   |   Updated: 10-24-08 05:12 AM

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Bush And Paulson And Bernanke

One of the rising stars of the conservative movement, Patrick Ruffini, has sent a shiver down the spines of his colleagues who fear that Republicans in the House and Senate might follow his call to vote against the "Bush-Pelosi Wall Street bailout."

In an analysis on his NextRight.com web site, Ruffini wrote:

"God Himself couldn't have given rank-and-file Republicans a better opportunity to create political space between themselves and the Administration. That's why I want to see 40 Republican 'No' votes in the Senate, and 150+ in the House. If a bailout is to pass, let it be with Democratic votes. Let this be the political establishment (Bush Republicans in the White House + Democrats in Congress) saddling the taxpayers with hundreds of billions in debt (more than the Iraq War, conjured up in a single weekend, and enabled by Pelosi, btw), while principled Republicans say 'No' and go to the country with a stinging indictment of the majority in Congress."

The strategy is reminiscent of Bill Kristol's key December 2, 1993 memorandum calling on Republicans to "'kill' -- not amend -- the Clinton [health care] plan because it presents a real danger to the Republican future: Its passage will give the Democrats a lock on the crucial middle-class vote and revive the reputation of the party."

But there is a big difference: Kristol sought to defeat a Democratic proposal, correctly arguing the political benefit to conservatives of defeating the health care bill would far outweigh the costs to the GOP. Ruffini, in contrast, has proposed an strategy to torpedo legislation designed to pull the country back from the brink of economic catastrophe. The hyperbolic but influential Ruffini is asking Republicans to take a substantial risk in opposing the bill -- on the questionable assumption that Democrats will pass it.

Ruffini's exhortations are not sitting well with some of is fellow-activists.

In a posting on The Weekly Standards web site, "A Time for Grown-ups," Dean Barnett wrote "Patrick Ruffini and I were colleagues at Townhall.com; he's one of the smartest young conservatives on the web. Thus, I found the following blog post he authored utterly dismaying."

Republican and Democratic Senators, Barnett argues, "realized that the economy was teetering on the brink of calamity. They knew that if promised government action didn't soothe Wall Street's panic, then partisan concerns would look very small. Moreover, the senators likely knew that if Wall Street perceived the way out of the financial crisis had become a political football, the panic could easily resume."

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The Paulson bailout plan is problematic on a host of fronts, Barnett writes, "But here's the problem - Congress simply can't punt ....Just as there are Republicans crassly calculating how they can leverage the current situation to their political advantage, there are obviously Democrats doing the same (although I'm not aware of any who have been so silly as to say so publicly). Fortunately, the grown-ups in both parties have controlled the situation. If the grown-ups decide this situation has become a political opportunity rather than a legitimate national emergency, we'll all have a problem - 'problem' here being a mild euphemism for an economic disaster."

Similarly, even John Podhoretz, who has taken delight in throwing stink bombs in the past, finds the Ruffini strategy excessively risky, writing on the Commentary web site:

"Everyone who is now talking about the potential horror of this new deal -- we need to slow it down, how can Congress give the administration a $700 billion blank check, etc. -- is kibitzing. By which I mean, they are complaining about it without offering much in the way of alternative options. Nobody thinks a bailout is avoidable. The question is whether there's time to ruminate about it without causing a massive crisis of market confidence that simultaneously kills the credit market off entirely even as it drains liquidity from the world economy."

In a striking display of confidence in what will surely be a Democratic Congress with very possibly a Democratic White House next January, Podhoretz argues, "There is one thing for certain: A piece of legislation, passed now to deal with the crisis, can be cleaned up and revisited in the next Congress, in early February.... There will have been four months to consider the longer-term effects of the bill. That is probably the best to be hoped for, and is, perhaps, the only responsible way to deal with the question of what needs to be done this week."

Ruffini, a 2000 University of Pennsylvania graduate in political science, describes himself as "an online strategist dedicated to helping Republicans and conservatives achieve dominance in a networked era." During the 2006 election, Ruffini was the Republican National Committee's eCampaign director, and in the 2004 election he helped run web operations for the Bush-Cheney campaign.

Ruffini's proposal has begun to echo through the blogosphere, and is producing some counter-strategizing among Democrats.

University of California-Los Angeles public policy professor Mark Kleiman, citing Ruffini, argues on his RealityBasedCommunity blog that "Democrats don't trust the Republicans not to double-cross them by allowing a bailout to pass (thus satisfying the Republicans' paymasters) while mostly voting against 'the Bush-Pelosi bailout' and running as populists." To prevent that, Kleiman suggests that "Harry Reid should announce right now that no bill will reach the Senate floor unless both Presidential candidates have signed on as sponsors."

As the Ruffini strategy gets picked up in the blogosphere, for example by Portfolio and The Hill, its call for 'no' votes by the GOP has already raised the level of distrust between the two parties, each fearful of taking the fall for bad legislation. Simply by entering into the public debate and touching a nerve in a climate where blame shifting is endemic, the young Republican gadfly has increased the odds of both Democrats and Republicans voting 'no' in an attempt to avoid responsibility for whatever unknown dangers lie down the road.

One of the rising stars of the conservative movement, Patrick Ruffini, has sent a shiver down the spines of his colleagues who fear that Republicans in the House and Senate might follow his call to vo...
One of the rising stars of the conservative movement, Patrick Ruffini, has sent a shiver down the spines of his colleagues who fear that Republicans in the House and Senate might follow his call to vo...
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One of these words is not like the other:

Paulson, Republican, Goldman Sachs, deregulation, Ruffini, McCain, Bush, Bernanke, Cox, Pelosi.

Pelosi is guilty because Bush chose and supports Bernanke, Cox and Paulson. Yep, makes perfect sense.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 AM on 09/24/2008
- lwfky I'm a Fan of lwfky 12 fans permalink

And the Republicans claim, "Country first". These people are disgusting. I hope America is smart enough to remember which party used the biggest financial disaster since the Great Depression for political gain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:22 AM on 09/24/2008

That needs to be addressed big time by the Obama campaign! Talk about scary!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:49 AM on 09/24/2008
- Joeinloth I'm a Fan of Joeinloth 3 fans permalink

Punk kid! This is what Penn's turning out these days? Please restore my confidence in the Ivies by demanding your diploma back! If this is the best spokesman conservatives have, they are (and should be) SCREWED!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:16 AM on 09/24/2008
- faust2001 I'm a Fan of faust2001 3 fans permalink

So this numbnut's idea is to obviate the arsonists of responsibility for starting the fire? IN today's America, it might just work. Clearly the American people are just imbecilic enough to go along with it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:12 AM on 09/24/2008
- ebanks84 I'm a Fan of ebanks84 126 fans permalink

What's even more clear is that the American people have no earthly idea of what's going on here and the government are the "imbecils", kind sir!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 AM on 09/24/2008
- Kindheart I'm a Fan of Kindheart 10 fans permalink

I wish there was someone out there who could talk to the citizens of the country about this debacle. He/She would have no axe to grind or nothing to gain or lose with this purposed bailout.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 AM on 09/24/2008

The hate on the right is so strong that it should scare everyone to death. I was just watching a clip on Hannity showing a young 11yr old and his father. The kid was told to take the terroist shirt about Obama because it was disrupting the class. His father was saying such hateful things about liberals no wonder the kid thinks the way he does. The right has such a big responsiblity for letting this pent up time bomb show itself. If Obama wins (which he should) the right won't be happy. There is such hate to think they deserve this power forever. They are so blinded that they don't even see that they are slowing losing their freedoms from this administration and blaming the democratics. It really is that can't see the forest for the trees. I definitely think that both Obama and McCain need to put the seal of approval on this bill or I wouldn't support it. That way neither party can use it against the other.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:56 AM on 09/24/2008
- journey80 I'm a Fan of journey80 4 fans permalink

And here it is - the Rove plan, out in the open at last! Have we been set up or what?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 AM on 09/24/2008
- ebanks84 I'm a Fan of ebanks84 126 fans permalink

Big time! I say let their butts drown in their financial doo doo!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 AM on 09/24/2008
- charon I'm a Fan of charon 23 fans permalink

Yep, if they can drive America into insolvency, we would have to beg money from the IMF, who would then demand that we "restructure" our government, and interest payments on the loan would keep us insolvent and enthralled to Big Money for generations. We would basically become just another third world country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 AM on 09/24/2008
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 89 fans permalink

charon,

I vote that we begin the process of incarcerating these fools as of now. Quantanamo has some cells available. lets fill them with these idiots.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 AM on 09/24/2008
- edwcorey I'm a Fan of edwcorey 20 fans permalink

Every gambler knows you shouldn't throw good money after bad, and Wall Street is full of untreated compulsives. Why is Paulson, a Wall Street insider, asking for the money NOW, NOW, NOW, with no restrictions or accountability? Because under his watch the Fed has already put out $600 billion of its $800 billion reserves. The Fed is broke, and he won't admit to it. The only way to cover it up is to replenish it and hope that this last big gamble pays off. Guess what? IT NEVER DOES, except in the movies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 AM on 09/24/2008
- ebanks84 I'm a Fan of ebanks84 126 fans permalink

Exactly where they need to be, BROKE and completely OUT OF BUSINESS! I pray the congress has better sense than to allow these criminals back inside. The Fed blew it and they need to chew it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 AM on 09/24/2008
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The notion of using this situation as a political sucker punch is disgusting, at best.

I think Mr. Ruffini is clearly demonstrating the fatal flaws of Neoconservatism. While their rhetoric paints one altruistic, patriotic, puritanical picture, their primary concern has become, once again, amassing and retaining political power. There is no sense of decency or good stewardship, only a sheer, unabashed desire to control - damn the consequences. There is no connection between premise and practice.

This is especially true of fiscal conservatism. The record of Neocons is quite clear; They are not fiscally conservative. They are fiscally reckless.

As an example, I would point to a small town in Alaska that once had no public debt until a "fiscal conservative" was elected to the position of mayor. Under the care of that certain "fiscal conservative", despite collecting millions in earmarked funds from the federal government and despite raising local sales tax, the town of less than 10,000 people ended up with 19 million dollars of public debt and an expansion in the scope of it's local government. There is no way this can be defined as fiscal conservatism. It can't even be described as fiscally responsible.

Likewise, nationally, our "fiscally conservative" President has overseen, if not engineered, a monumental expansion of the federal government and national debt in the forms of The Patriot Act, the war in Iraq and now the $700BN absolution of corporate and regulatory sin.

I hereby declare; Neoconservatism is a failure!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:07 AM on 09/24/2008
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 89 fans permalink

IndySC,

I have to disagree about the fiscally conservative thing. They are fiscally conservative, with their own money, just not with ours. See that's what giving the rich that big tax break was all about. They still have their money, all safe and sound in offshore banks. Ours unfortunately for us will soon join theirs in those same accounts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 AM on 09/24/2008
- benne I'm a Fan of benne 10 fans permalink

I really HATE the Democratic plan. The massive bail-out for corporations is fine as long as we add some token amount for the middle class. A real strategy for the middle class is to vote no on the bail-out. The money will ensure that Barack or anyone can do nothing when they get into the White House -- no healthcare plan, nothing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:05 AM on 09/24/2008
- HHarvey I'm a Fan of HHarvey 30 fans permalink
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you make no sense. I am middle class. I realize we need to pass this bailout as much as it galls me to no end, but if they are going to use our tax dollars we should be able to get stock in these companies should they make a profit in years to come. As for the democratic plan, what the h e ll are you talking about? It's called the Paulson Plan and he is the treasury secretary appointed by Bush. Voting no on the bailout is very wrong. If you vote no the difference would be like paying $1000 dollars now per household to possible paying more money in the coming years if you vote no. The democrats and most republicans in congress want to make sure we americans do not get screwed in the process. The bailout will happen so you better get used to it, but at least we can try to save some of our money and allocate it to things we desperately need in this country right now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 AM on 09/24/2008
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 89 fans permalink

I love how you've managed to label this the Democratic Plan. When did it become the Democrats plan. As far as I can see it's the Fed, The Treasuries and The Administrations Plan. This Administration is Republican, Paulson is an Administration Flunky formerly of Goldman Sachs, and as far as I can tell Bernanke is a Republican shill to. So to me it looks like a Republican Plan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 09/24/2008
- Dynamohum I'm a Fan of Dynamohum 62 fans permalink

Some people just do not understand that a certain amount of the bailouts are at this point completely necessary. The consequences of not acting on this problem at all are worse than throwing money at it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:20 AM on 09/24/2008
- gifu I'm a Fan of gifu 14 fans permalink

These shysters are the founding father's drakest and most vicious nightmares. The worship of money and power at it's lowest. Sacrificing future generations "Aztec Style" all for POLITICAL GAIN!!!!! Insane and offensive. Inhuman.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:00 AM on 09/24/2008
- CTmom13 I'm a Fan of CTmom13 9 fans permalink

McCain and republicians put POLITICS FIRST, COUNTRY LAST and this guy proves it

We cannot afford another 4 yrs of republicians with McCain/Palin

Obama/iden 08

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:55 AM on 09/24/2008
- avraamjack I'm a Fan of avraamjack 21 fans permalink
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.
Alternative option: Use the .7 trillion to set up new banks. That will unfreeze the credit market without rewarding the uncautious.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:42 AM on 09/24/2008
- benne I'm a Fan of benne 10 fans permalink

We need more thinking like this. I'm against a bail-out. We should be demonstrating in the streets against it. And, the media needs to stop this "everyone did it," as if all Americans got into these risky mortgages or always decided to buy a bigger and more expensive house. I know a lot of Americans, myself included, that stayed in a modest house, refinanced at a low-interest fixed rate, and saved, when others were telling us to go to one of those mortgage houses, get a variable rate, and take the money back to go on a cruise (pay off credit-card debt, etc.) Why do we have to pay for others mistakes, and why -- more importantly -- do we have to pay finance corporations, who knew or should have known that these mortgages were risky but made them anyway because, after all, they could off-load them to someone else?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 AM on 09/24/2008
- HHarvey I'm a Fan of HHarvey 30 fans permalink
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It's now gone past the mortgage crisis benne. If we vote no on this bailout then that means that all the money I have privately invested in my retirement is gone, completely gone, since my private retirement fund is invested in these very banks. McCain was the one for pushing private retirement and this just goes to show what can happen when things go wrong. This does effect people more than you can grasp. This is not a black and white issue and I wish republicans and people on this board would stop shooting from the hip and put some thought into this. Granted the plan needs revision and that is a no brainer, but it's not rocket science here. The banks fail and so do we. Get it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 PM on 09/24/2008
- avraamjack I'm a Fan of avraamjack 21 fans permalink
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Thank you.
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:01 PM on 09/24/2008
- edwcorey I'm a Fan of edwcorey 20 fans permalink

Absolutely right. And make sure the person parceling the money out is not a member of the old boys' network, like Paulson is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 AM on 09/24/2008
- avraamjack I'm a Fan of avraamjack 21 fans permalink
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Thank you.
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:01 PM on 09/24/2008
- Cedman I'm a Fan of Cedman 28 fans permalink

Country First. This guy and people like him think this is a game but, what if this bailout fails and we plunge into a 1929 like scenario? He really wants to risk this for some sort of political advantage?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 AM on 09/24/2008
- benne I'm a Fan of benne 10 fans permalink

There's a lot we can do with what will be a trillion dollars and more when it's all over. How about a massive public works program that employs citizens, improves our infrastructure, even as it infuses money into the economy? The bail-out is unprecedented and, to quote Al Gore, a risky scheme.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 AM on 09/24/2008
- BushBites I'm a Fan of BushBites 33 fans permalink

Ruffini is the worst kind of unprincipled, Fox News-type sleazeball.

Absolutely no ethics or morals whatsoever.

Just wants to destroy the entire country to win an election.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 AM on 09/24/2008
- schatsie I'm a Fan of schatsie 90 fans permalink

Just like Kristol... I love that note about the healthcare business...Just think, if Hillary's plan had passed then, we would have avoided milllions of bankrupcies and who knows how many foreclosures... But that would not help the top 1% would it????

The chickens from the last 30 years are coming home to roost. Barack needs to be ready to run with new taxes for the wealthy and healthcare and getting out of iraq.... All of these if done correctly will reduce the deficit....and then we can move on to education and equity...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 AM on 09/24/2008
- HeIsTheOne I'm a Fan of HeIsTheOne 206 fans permalink
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Last night on Rachel Maddow, Congressman Barney Frank called Ruffini "that hack". Frank's candor is not only enjoyable, but required these days.

Ruffini describes himself as an online strategist, however, during the 2006 election, Ruffini was the Republican National Committee's eCampaign director, and in the 2004 election he helped run web operations for the Bush-Cheney campaign.

Watch Frank lead an inquiry of Paulson and Bernanke at the House Financial Services Cmte. hearing today at 2:30 on CSPAN 3.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 AM on 09/24/2008

What, they don't even support each other?

DEBATES SCHEDULE!! This is going to be one heck of a show.

http://myrealitytelevision.com/2008/09/the-presidential-debates-2008full-schedule/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:06 AM on 09/24/2008
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