The Next RNC Chair: Captain Of The GOP Titanic?

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First Posted: 11-17-08 12:51 AM   |   Updated: 12-17-08 05:12 AM

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Titanic

The steadily growing number of prospective candidates for the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee share a collective dream: that 2008 will be a repeat of 1992, when a newly-elected Democratic president, backed by strong majorities in the House and Senate, stumbled, producing an across-the-board victory for the GOP in 1994

At the same time, GOP aspirants face the possibility of a nightmare scenario: taking the helm of a party so weighed down by doctrinaire hard-liners and hectoring moralists that no one, especially an RNC chair, will be able to change course and avoid a tsunami of culturally disinhibited, secularizing 'creatives,' Hispanics, African Americans, and a young netroot-savvy demographic cohort larger than the Baby Boom.

***

After Lyndon Johnson crushed Barry Goldwater in 1964, much was written about the death of the GOP. Four years later Richard Nixon was sworn into office, kicking off nearly forty years of conservative dominion. There is a big difference between 1964 and 2008, however: no one argues that the McCain campaign marks the start of an ideological insurgency that is just beginning to gain strength.

Some 16 years ago, in the wake of Bill Clinton's victory, Haley Barbour ran for and won the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee. Many thought the 1992 Democratic victory would whittle the bourbon-drinking, glad-handing lobbyist down to size. Instead, Barbour emerged as one of the heroes of 1994 when the GOP took over the House and Senate. Today he is the happy governor of his home state, Mississippi.

Republican success in 1994 was almost entirely dependent on initial missteps by Clinton. There is no evidence that Barack Obama will follow the Clinton precedent; if anything, evidence suggests that Obama and his team are acutely aware of the dangers which may befall them. In that sense, the GOP has a hard row to hoe.

Here are the threats to the GOP:

—The continuing decimation of the GOP's moderate wing in the House and Senate - "where do you find road-kill? In the middle of the road" - has left the party's House and Senate ranks dominated by Christian conservatives and free market zealots -- at a time of economic crisis brought about by an under-regulated financial sector run amok. "I'm rather pessimistic about seeing something comparable to David Cameron's remaking of the Tories in Britain," Furman political scientist Jim Guth told the Huffington Post. "Various types of conservative hardliners are too firmly entrenched in the GOP to give way so easily, and at the moment, none of their conservatisms is going to sell to the American public."

—The South, for four and a half decades the driving force in American politics and the engine of the new conservatism, shows signs of returning to its outlier, marginalized status. As the rest of the nation demonstrated little difficulty in voting for an African American on November 4, the Deep South and the Appalachian South turned in the other direction, with Southern whites voting against Obama (whites nationwide, 43 Obama, 55 McCain; in Mississippi 11-88; Alabama 10-88). (Adam Nossiter's "For South, a Waning Hold on National Politics" is an insightful analysis of these developments.)

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The Grand Old Party, believing that the nation's political geography has turned against them, is slinking away from the battleground once owned by moderate Republicans like Rockefeller, Saltonstall, Chaffee, Mathias, and Weld. Democrats in the meantime have worked up their nerve to go after states hitherto thought off limits. Harvard political scientist Steve Ansolabehere notes that Democrats "have been building infrastructure in states like Montana and North Carolina, and . . . remain competitive in the southern state legislatures."

For over a decade, and most strikingly during the past two elections, the intensely anti-immigration stand of Republican House and Senate members, and their insulting rhetoric, has proven to be a loser. Republicans have lost House seats in predominately white Southwestern districts which conservatives believed would be a hotbed of anti-immigrant sentiment. In 1996, Republican mishandling of the immigration issue converted California into a reliably Democratic state, and now it looks as if the Republicans are on the road to repeating the feat in Florida, Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico and, potentially, Texas and Arizona.

The single largest block of Republican votes is made up of conservative white Christian evangelicals, who cast 4 out of every 10 ballots McCain received. These voters are overwhelmingly anti-abortion; they see homosexuality as a sin and as voluntary; many believe that women are subordinate and obliged to submit to the authority of men. These deeply held beliefs are increasingly out of tune with an electorate that has, in the main, come to terms with the sexual and women's rights revolution. Such trends are one of the reasons that the only age group McCain carried is people 65 and older - the voters who will die soonest.

The overall picture for Republicans at this point is bleak. Democratic consultant Bill Carrick catalogues the list of barriers: "Almost total lack of support from non-white voters, young voters are voting strongly Democratic and it may become a lifetime Democratic loyalty, the West is becoming more and more Democratic, the Democratic lock on the West Coast may be duplicated by a Democratic lock on the Atlantic Coast, in the post-Bush era Texas may become two-party competitive again, the once solidly Republican Mid-West is becoming a Democratic stronghold, Republicans are dramatically losing voters in the suburbs, and I could keep going on and on."

Along parallel lines, Stanford and Hoover Institution political scientist David Brady pointed out that at the moment, the temper of the times is not welcoming the GOP: "What is the market here? A change to government activism in financial markets, more taxes, regulation etc....If Obama governs reasonably from the center-left then the Republicans will not have an easy time of winning control, and the religious part of the party will still be in control or be its base because the issue of traditional values has not nor will go away quickly."

The Republican dilemma is reflected in the comments by Reihan Salam, co-author with Ross Douthat of Grand New Party: How Conservatives Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream:

The composition of the electorate right now is so different in the United States than it was in any of those periods, including 1992, that it's very hard for me to see a very good analogue. We're also living in a country that for a lot of very structural reasons is going to be more inclined to consume government services, and I think there is a real danger there for the conservative movement. If you look at conservative parties in Britain and Sweden where you have much larger public-sector workforces, they are far to the left of our conservative party, the Republican Party. And I do wonder if we have the right strategies for this environment -- whether we're going to be able to fight back against the ratchet effect of creating a much bigger government that is going to increase dependency.....The same Americans who characterize themselves as believers in small government also wanted to increase the size and the influence and reach of the federal government in all of those areas.

There is a strong case to be made that the conservative movement that dominated American politics from 1966 onwards began to peter out in 1998 with the failure of the GOP drive to impeach Clinton, and faltered further in 2000 when George Bush ran 500,000 votes behind Al Gore, and succeeded to the White House by the grace of a split Supreme Court. During his first months in office, Bush's numbers slipped ominously, but he and the GOP got a shot in the arm on 9/11, as national security hurtled to the front of the agenda and revived the Republican Party for two more elections, 2002 and 2004.

With Bush's failure to manage the Iraq war, Katrina, and the epidemic of corruption on Capitol Hill, however, the implosion began in earnest, as the following chart demonstrates:


Steve Lombardo, of the Republican shop Lombardo Consulting, performed a detailed post-election analysis of 2008 exit poll data and found, in a troubling development for the GOP, that Obama's victory cannot be ascribed to any one or two groups that might lose clout in the future. Instead, Lombardo found, "the Obama victory was pervasive and cut across almost all demographic subgroups": Men (+5), women (+5), blacks (+5), Latinos (+14), Asians (+6), whites (+2), all income groups (+5 to +8), independents (+3), conservatives (+5), all religious groups (+4 to +8), and married and unmarried voters (+5).

***

Unknown is the effect on domestic politics of the current economy. With lives, livelihood, even liberty on the table, the party that gets stuck with an era of impoverishment faces long odds. If Obama can right the ship, Democrats could be poised for a winning streak. If not, all bets are off.

Another major caveat in looking toward the future is the issue of terrorism. A new attack could easily surge to the forefront of voters' concerns. This issue is one that Democrats have never gained command of, and Obama's response in the event of an attack would likely prove crucial to his own election prospects and those of his party. The following chart created by Lombardo shows how McCain suffered only minor losses compared to Bush among those who are "very worried" about an attack, while taking a major beating among those less concerned:

John White, a Catholic University political scientist who has worked on the subject of the two parties, has a tough assessment of the GOP's problems. First of all, he told HuffPost, "Republicans have grasped for some time now that they have a party problem, but they have been unable to address it before November 4 because, crudely put, the corpse is still in the White House."

Exorcising Bush will not, however, cure the disease. "The Reagan coalition is dead. New demographics do not give the GOP anything close to a majority," White said. "Forget Reagan. He's part of history, having left office 20 years ago this coming January. Revere him, yes. But Republicans will have to retool for a new century." White believes that Republicans should revive the concept of compassionate conservatism and take a new approach on immigration, although it is difficult to see how incumbent members of the House and Senate could be persuaded to take such steps.

The prolific Chris Cillizza of WashingtonPost.com warns against accepting the notion that "the Republican Party suffered a death blow," but he notes that "much of the Republicans' permanent political class" now subscribes to the view that the party "is beyond saving and must be allowed to die."

Given the scope of the Republican dilemma, the rhetoric of the two announced candidates for RNC chair, Michigan Republican chairman Saul Anuzis and former Maryland Lt. Governor Michael Steele, sounds thin.

Anuzis, a savvy political mechanic, is running "to bring back the party of ideas, bring it to every neighborhood in America and harness every tool of the digital age to lead an historic comeback for the GOP in 2010 and beyond." Steele, in turn, believes "we've been kind of wandering and doubting ourselves for far too long. And I think this past election was the culmination of that self-doubt which has to end. We have a message, I think, of empowerment and ownership and opportunity that resonates with Americans. We just need to get back to [it]."

With the near elimination of GOP moderates from the House and Senate, the short term direction of the party on the national front will most likely be determined by its conservative wing.

House Republican Leader John Boehner, no slouch on the ideological front (100 percent rating from the American Conservative Union in 2007), faces a challenge from the right for his leadership post by California Congressman Dan Lungren, whose appeal to a broad electorate was demonstrated in the 1998 California gubernatorial contest when he lost to Gray Davis by 1.46 million votes, 39-59.

For those in the dominant conservative wing of the House GOP, the siren song for the next session comes from Michigan Representative Thaddeus G. McCotter, chair of the Republican House Policy Committee, in an article titled "Now, Seize Freedom!".

Welcome to 'Republican Rock Bottom.' Possessed of no vision, no principle, no purpose, and no appeal, we deserved our fate," McCotter told fellow conservatives. "Finally, we are divorced from self-deceits. Dead is the self-indulgent imbecility of 're-branding' -- as if the Republican Party was a corporate product to be repackaged, not a transformational political movement to be led. Despite what the media will tell you, and what so-called 'conservative leaders' will discuss ad nauseam during 'secret' meetings, this situation is not a crisis. It is an opportunity. Today, we are as the Great Emancipator proclaimed during another time of national trial: unbound by the tired dogmas of the past; and free to think and act anew.

Acting anew, however, does not sound impressively novel.

"What are the Republican Party's principles that will be employed to meet and surmount these challenges?," McCotter asks, and answers:

We have five enduring principles: 1. Our liberty is from God not the government. 2. Our sovereignty rests in our souls not the soil. 3. Our security is through strength not surrender. 4. Our prosperity is from the private sector not the public sector. 5. Our truths are self-evident not relative....We will seize freedom. We will be freedom!

In fact this sounds less like a decision "to think and act anew," and more like a de-poeticized version of Barry Goldwater in San Francisco just 44 years ago:

We must, and we shall, return to proven ways-- not because they are old, but because they are true. We must, and we shall, set the tide running again in the cause of freedom. And this party, with its every action, every word, every breath, and every heartbeat, has but a single resolve, and that is freedom - freedom made orderly for this nation by our constitutional government; freedom under a government limited by laws of nature and of nature's God.
The steadily growing number of prospective candidates for the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee share a collective dream: that 2008 will be a repeat of 1992, when a newly-elected Democ...
The steadily growing number of prospective candidates for the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee share a collective dream: that 2008 will be a repeat of 1992, when a newly-elected Democ...
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- gi I'm a Fan of gi 7 fans permalink
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This article is too long to read I'm sure its bull s**t. Anker awayyyyyyyyyyyy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Yeah they gonna need a life jacket. Oh more like a STRAITJACKET hahahahahaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The Grand Old Party is sinking.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 AM on 11/17/2008
- boing007 I'm a Fan of boing007 9 fans permalink

Yeah they gonna need a life jacket. Oh more like a STRAITJACKET hahahahahaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!!!!!!!!!!!

They mistook the straightjacket for a lifejacket. Big mistake!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 PM on 11/17/2008
- MyGoodMojo I'm a Fan of MyGoodMojo 10 fans permalink
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To paraphrase an old joke:

What do you do when you see the GOP up to its neck in water?

...add more water!

Palin in 2012!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 AM on 11/17/2008
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ICEBURG DEAD AHEAD!

Hot off the AP wire.

"The Republican senators targeted by DCI began hearing from prominent constituents and financial contributors, all urging the defeat of Hagel's bill because it might harm the housing boom. The effort generated newspaper articles and radio and TV appearances by participants against the measure.

Inside Freddie Mac headquarters in 2005, the few dozen people who knew what DCI was doing referred to the initiative as "the stealth lobbying campaign," three people familiar with the drive said.

They spoke on condition of anonymity, saying they fear retaliation if their names are disclosed.

Freddie Mac executive Hollis McLoughlin oversaw DCI's drive, according to the three people.

"Hollis's goal was not to have any Freddie Mac fingerprints on this project, and DCI became the hidden hand behind the effort," one of the three people told the AP."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 AM on 11/17/2008
- grizhead63 I'm a Fan of grizhead63 16 fans permalink
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Excellent article! With idealogical maroons like Rep Thaddeus 'Godis a Conquering Conservative' McCotter leading the Republicans on their deathmarch it will be over for them fairly quickly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 AM on 11/17/2008
- rextrek I'm a Fan of rextrek 38 fans permalink
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Last week...a Republican Rep/Congressman Pence...was saying that 2012...the GOP, should concentrate on the "Sanctity of Marriage"...??? HUH>? Hows that worked out for them?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 AM on 11/17/2008
- boing007 I'm a Fan of boing007 9 fans permalink

The Republicans will never make a comeback if they continue to spout anti-intellectual rhetoric and constantly demean those of us who support high standards of education in the sciences, mathematics, technology and the arts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 11/17/2008
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The Republican Party "re-tool"? I don't think so. I think they will continue to be marginalized on the national stage for the next generation. The current batch of Republicans serving in Congress virtually all come from very safe Republican districts. I don't see them changing their stripes. They continue to deify Ronald Reagan, but they forget that the "Reagon revolution" was won, not by the partisan rhetoric of Mr. Reagan, but by his willingness to work with, and actually compromise with, Democrats. The current batch of Republican office holders would rather sink with the ship than actually consider a compromise of their core values. That is why the demise of Republicans as a national party seems to be at hand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 AM on 11/17/2008
- teasley I'm a Fan of teasley 8 fans permalink

Is everyone that posts on these boards under 20 years old.Try looking at history. If history is any indication the Democrats will become drunk with power, just as they have in the past. ( and as the Republicans have also.) And in 2 years, 4 years or whatever they will need to be put back in their place, at which time the media will trumpet their demise. You may want to look at the number of independents who have no allegiance to either party, this year they went Democrat, if Obama and the congress preform well they will reward them. If they believe they have a mandate to run too far to the left, they will be punished. It's really not that complicated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 AM on 11/17/2008
- kgb999 I'm a Fan of kgb999 32 fans permalink

No, but it's a bit more complex than you state. There are systemic problems within the GOP that transcend the "too far left" framing.

Regardless of where they run, left or right, America will continue to give the democrats support as long as they appear to be effective. The GOP has removed any meaning from "left" and "right" ... and turned to concept of "right" into a parody - a malignant cancer bereft of any ideas that might achieve the results presented as desirable.

America just wants someone who can achieve measurable positive results. Simply sitting in opposition and preventing action will reflect badly on the GOP ... not the democrats. But supporting democratic actions will help the democrats achieve success at the expense of GOP electoral prospects. The GOP is in a pickle - their only visible course of action is either supporting democrats or being obstructionists at a time when everyone agrees significant government action is needed on many fronts. They deserve the bed in which they lie.

You won't hear a true independent framing their assessment of government effectiveness in terms of left or right. That is a frame of the parties. Expect many GOPers to start asserting what American independents want ... but understand they are no more independent than 'ol Joe "the plumber". It's like when an atheist claims to be agnostic to avoid the uncomfortable fact that their beliefs are ultimately religious.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 AM on 11/17/2008

"Try looking at history. ... It's really not that complicated."

Which history would that be? The selective history period that fits your simplistic uniformed reality?

The Democratic Party held both houses of Congress from 1933 to 1981, except for two 2 year periods. They held both houses for 22 of 24 sessions of Congress, and held the White house 16 of 22 sessions. They also held the House from 1981 through 1995 through out the entire Reagan/Bush terms.

The Dems had control of Congress and the White House through out FDR's entire Presidency, all through Truman's Presidency. They only lost control in 1953 by narrow margins, losing 2 seats in the Senate to drop to a 46-48 minority, with 2 from other parties/independants. They promptly took back both houses in the next election under Eisenhower and built huge majorities by the end of Eisenhower's term (64-34 in Senate, 262-175 in House).

So not sure how you seem to think that "history" shows that Dems become "drunk with power" and get "put back in their place" because of ONE time (Bill Clinton). Reagan didn't win because of Dems being "drunk with power", and he only brought along the Senate, not the House... and those Senators he brought with him... lost 6 years later on re-election.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 PM on 11/17/2008
- nevadagirl I'm a Fan of nevadagirl 5 fans permalink

I'm 50, educated, hot, and I've been a Democrat since I was in high school. There is nothing in the Republican platform that appeals to me. And the Catholic church can bite me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 PM on 11/17/2008
- Mike169 I'm a Fan of Mike169 53 fans permalink
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Quick - sink all the life boats!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 AM on 11/17/2008
- reliant1 I'm a Fan of reliant1 24 fans permalink
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LOL!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 AM on 11/17/2008
- boing007 I'm a Fan of boing007 9 fans permalink

All hands on deck! Time to walk the gangplank!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 AM on 11/17/2008

If there is any truth in this article, then we all owe Bushco a big "thank you" for allowing the corrupt, outdated, unworkable ideologies of the repigs to run their course. We have seen how unworkable and unlivable the Reagan doctrine of unfettered capitalism truly is for the majority of US citizens. And the horror of world domination espoused by the Bush doctrine is strewn with broken lives and destroyed countries. The difference between dems and repigs is not merely a difference of opinion. It is the difference between self destruction and growth through an intelligent desire to adjust to a constantly changing world.
Let's hope that it is not too late to save this country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:17 AM on 11/17/2008
- cgri I'm a Fan of cgri permalink

Excellent analysis Ed

Reagan managed to cobble together an alliance between two completely incompatible groups... the Religious Right and libertarians or advocates of small and "non-interfering in my life" government. We are witnessing the collision of these two philosophies and I wouldn't be very surprised to see this alliance implode and the potential for a split into two political parties.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 AM on 11/17/2008
- NotMcCain I'm a Fan of NotMcCain 85 fans permalink
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I don't know why people are writing off the GOP. They will continue (robustly) as the party of "say one thing, do another" and the party that uses divisive cultural issues to exploit voters' intolerance, ignorance, and fears.

Now that they've given us the biggest deficit (and national debt) in history.....now that they've saddled us with two unwinnable wars and a bankrupt economy, they're ready to pin the blame on Obama.....say they're the party of "small government and prudent fiscal management"---throw in a dash of isolationsism....pseudo-patriotism.....and fear//hate-mongering.....and they surely still have their tried-and-true formula for success.

Lies and fear will still work.

They just need to find someone better at doing it, that's all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 AM on 11/17/2008

The Reagan error is one of the most over rated decades in US history, the fact is it looked a lot like the last 8 years, on a smaller scale. Chrysler bail out, 2 recessions, one very deep with 10.2% unemployment, Iran Contra, shell game tax increases, spotty yoyo economy which benefited the investment bankers, more than anyone else. The Reagan error marked the decline of American industry and innovation, the decline of labor unions, who supported Reagan by the way. The Reagan Administration ran up highest deficit, and trade imbalances until now, Reagan is given full credit for end of the Cool War, yet a combination of the Soviet-Afghanistan war and behind the seens diplomacy by Bush 41 and James Baker as well as moderate Soviet leader brought the Soviet Union to the table. The right wing persist in the fiction that old blood and guts Ronnie Raygun did it by himself. Like Bill Maher says, the right wing is gay for Ronald Reagan, who left office 20 years ago, and they can't seem to move on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 AM on 11/17/2008
- Dystopic I'm a Fan of Dystopic 20 fans permalink
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not to mention turning infrastructure spending into socialism

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 AM on 11/17/2008

The Next RNC Chair: Captain Of The GOP Titanic?
_______________________________

Just as long as Kate Winslet gets off safely, I'm cool with ship going down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 AM on 11/17/2008

Great article, Mr. Edsall. I hope Haley Barbour DOES become the chairman of the RNC and new face of the Republican party. Mr. Barbour is a bigger redneck and a dumber idiot than Dubya. He will not be accepted by any region than the South. Has anyone ever heard this guy talk? He's one dumb yahoo. It appears that until the few social moderates who are left in the party (Guilliani?)can tear themselves away from the new Christian Party that has become the Republican Party, they will continue to lose and lose. The religious right was given litmus during Reagan's tenure (Ronnie invited Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson and others to the WH) and we saw its fruition with the election of George W. Bush. Ronald Reagan opened up a veritable pandora's box of religious fanaticism that has continued to grow. Sarah Palin is the darling of these fanatics. Haley Barbour is also beloved by them. The rest of the U.S. will progress and move on into the 21st Century leaving these idiots behind kicking and screaming that abortion, the teaching of evolution, school prayer, and the suppresion of gay people are the greatest issues facing this nation. While Rome burns.........

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 AM on 11/17/2008

Haley Barber is not that dumb, he wangled 300 million dollars in Katrina relief with no strings attached and funnel it to the Hotel Casino and shipping industries. Private home owners were lost in the sauce losing there valuable water front property to condo development. Mississippi is the poorest state in the Union, worest in education and more corrupt than Alaska if thats possible. If Barber is a yahoo, he is one slick, good old boy yahoo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 11/17/2008
- Dystopic I'm a Fan of Dystopic 20 fans permalink
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political luddites

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 AM on 11/17/2008
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