What Exactly Does Our Party Stand For?
Rep. McClintock gave the following speech to the California Republican Party Convention, Februrary 21, 2009.
When the Virginia Legislature invited Churchill to address them, he said, “Do you not think you are running some risk (by) inviting me to give you my faithful counsel on this occasion? … I might easily, for instance, blurt out a lot of things, which people know in their hearts are true, but are a bit shy of saying in public, and this might cause a regular commotion and get you all into trouble.”
I apologize in advance for serving up some cold and bitter truths with tonight’s dinner, but the events in Sacramento of the last few days simply cannot be ignored.
This is not a small or inconsequential matter. This is the biggest tax increase in our state’s history – in the worst economy in a generation – one that is aimed directly at the middle-class voters who have been the core of our support for 40 years – engineered by Republican legislative leaders and a Republican governor. It is a huge chunk – about $1,200 on average – out of the discretionary income of every family in this state just as they are struggling to make ends meet.
If the government has run out of money in these difficult times, what makes them think the people haven’t run out of money also?
We have to discuss this outrage as a party because until we address and redress it, our party will have no credibility to speak on this issue for a decade or more to come. It is this issue more than any other that has defined the binding principle that holds our party together. We may differ on many ancillary issues, but the one thing we have all agreed on is that our government is too big, too inefficient and it costs too much.
Take this proposition away, then what exactly does our party stand for?
Abraham Lincoln reminded the Illinois Republican State Convention in 1858 that “a house divided against itself cannot stand.”
So it is with political parties.
A political party cannot stand for two opposite principles at the same time.
A party cannot stand for taxpaying families while its leaders impose crushing new taxes on those families.
A party cannot stand for freedom of enterprise when its leaders impose increasingly draconian restrictions on enterprise.
A party cannot stand for fiscal responsibility when its leaders spend and borrow and tax with reckless abandon.
When our party promises one thing and our leaders deliver exactly the opposite, we lose all credibility with the voters – and rightly so.
When candidates claim our name, and enjoy our organizational, financial and volunteer resources, we have a right as a party to insist that those candidates abide by certain fundamental defining principles. We have a responsibility to remove them from office when they wantonly violate those principles and sully our name.
Fourteen years ago, this party recalled two sitting Republican legislators because they had voted for Willie Brown for Assembly Speaker, an act that didn’t directly affect a single individual in this state.
Fourteen years later, are we going to turn a blind eye to Republican legislators who broke signed promises and voted to hammer California families with an average of more than $1,200 of additional taxes in the midst of the worst recession in a generation?
The Democrats never promised not to raise taxes. We did. And our leaders broke that promise.
The concept of the big tent has always been that however we might disagree over issues such as the right to life, the right to self-defense, degrees of business or environmental, we at least all united in defense of families against the burdens of big government. We were the party of the taxpayers.
Now, in California, we are the anti-taxpayer party – so defined by the actions of our own leaders. To consent to those actions by silence is suicide.
It doesn’t have to be this way.
Having spent a few months now in Washington, D.C., I can tell you that our Congressional leaders understand this reality. They understand that when our leaders abandoned our principles, our voters abandoned our party.
The Republican Congressional leadership is bound and determined to win back the trust of American voters by returning to our Republican principles.
We saw that leadership in action last week when every single Republican in the House of Representatives stood against the most reckless spending bill in the history of our nation. They rallied behind a Republican alternative that would have lifted the tax burdens on productivity and created twice the jobs at only half the cost of the Democrats’ spending plan.
In Washington, at least, the Republicans are again acting as the taxpayers’ party.
And it is working. Last fall, Rasmussen reported that a generic Democratic candidate for Congress had a 16-point advantage over the generic Republican candidate.
Last week, after Congressional Republicans stood firm, the same poll reported that this gap had narrowed to within a single percentage point.
Don’t we have a right to insist on the same fidelity among our elected leaders in California?
And don’t we have an obligation to enforce that insistence at the ballot box?
Ladies and gentlemen, there is an ebb and flow to politics that we’ve all seen and felt. Some people call it the political pendulum.
The new Administration in Washington is flush with victory, it is riding high in the opinion polls, and yet Americans are already taking a long, hard look at the policies they are pursuing and are already showing signs of having grave misgivings.
We’ve seen this before. Those who remember the administration of Jimmy Carter remember these same policies – and what four years of them did to our nation. We had to endure double-digit unemployment and inflation, interest rates over 20 percent, mile-long lines around gas stations, American embassies seized with impunity.
It was hell to go through. But the American people awoke and four years of Jimmy Carter gave us eight years of Ronald Reagan. Looking back, that wasn’t such a bad trade, was it?
It was Reagan who then said that, "Our people look for a cause to believe in.” He called for “a new and revitalized second party, raising a banner of no pale pastels, but bold colors, which make it unmistakably clear where we stand…”
Lincoln said that if the voters get their backsides too close to the fire, they’ll just have to sit on the blisters a while. Our nation has some very painful blisters it is going to have to sit on, but in the next election, our people will indeed be looking for a new and revitalized second party.
But before we can restore our majority, we are going to have to make it unmistakably clear where we stand.
Great parties are built upon great principles – and they are judged by their devotion to those principles.
The defining principle of the Republican party has always been summarized in one word: FREEDOM. The closer we have hewn to that principle, the better we have done; and the farther we have strayed from that principle, the worse we have done.
The Republican leadership in the House of Representatives is newly re-dedicated to that principle, and the American people are already responding.
Tonight, the people of California are reeling at the news that the party that had promised to protect them from higher taxes has now socked them with a tax increase so great that it will be felt keenly around every kitchen table from Eureka to San Diego.
They are looking to this, the State Convention of the California Republican Party, for an explanation.
The very first answer we owe them, and the very first step in that long and painful road to Republican redemption must be to repudiate the decidedly anti-Republican policies that have been enacted by our leaders in our name.
And now my fellow Republicans, I leave you with this question: What are YOU prepared to do about it?
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Neat speech. Now what are
Neat speech. Now what are you doing to represent the people of the 4th District of California? You were not hired to run for Governor or to cheerlead for the Republican party. HERE ARE SOME THINGS TO BELIEVE IN...WORKING AMERICA, UNIVERSAL HEALTHCARE, AFFORDABLE EDUCATION, ALTERNATIVE ENERGY SOURCES, FLAT TAX, CONTRACEPTION, BORDER PATROL, E-VERIFY... Pick something and get to work! We don't need to hear another Republican waxing poetic about Ronald Regan. You are one of the fortunate people in the 4th District to have a job...now get to work!
Tom, don't spend too much
Tom, don't spend too much time in DC. WE NEED YOU HERE!
Great convention speech in
Great convention speech in Sacramento!
right on tom. the party has
right on tom.
the party has lost credibility. it's time to get credibility back by voting out the old republicans and voting in new republicans. and never lose credibility.
Great stuff. I wonder how
Great stuff. I wonder how you can get more visibility into your blog. Have you thought about Townhall.com?
One of my big complaints has been there is no one representing the middle class. As an example, the costs to support illegals and their offspring are enormous, but who benefits, and who pays? The illegals and those who hire them benefit by being able to have jobs that are effectively subsidized by middle class taxpayers by way of the government services they pay for.
Another example is the great social security rip-off, in which a trillion dollars was taken from the middle and lower classes to fund government programs.
We need leadership that wants to keep mobility alive in America. At least that's my view. I see Democrats as putting a millstone around middle class taxpayers, but I see Republicans doing it as well.
Absolutely brilliant! Thanks
Absolutely brilliant! Thanks so much for giving the CA GOP a well needed kick in the you-know-where. Sure wish you were sitting in the Governor's chair during these tough times. A big thanks from San Francisco!
Mr. McClintock: You talk
Mr. McClintock: You talk about the value of freedom when it is now established that the Bush administration and its Justice Department wrtote legal memos excising the 1st and 4th amendment from the Constitution. Where do you stand on these relevations???? Besides Pres. G.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan spent the most of any president since FDR. How can you quote Reagan as a fiscal conservative when he was anything but a fiscal conservative??? Furthermore, your party appears to have been turned over to talk show hosts who demand utter loyalty to the philosophy of the talk host or else removal from the Republican party. Do you support Limbaugh and Coulter running the Republican party??? Are you really telling the 4th Congressional District that you you will vote to remove individuals from the party if they voted for a tax increase. ???? What is your plan to to help the unemployed and evicted voters of the 4th District???? Or don't you care about the people of the 4th, and are just going to focus your attention on those disloyal Republicans that you, Limbaugh and Coulter are so upset with???? And lastly, what is your position on the 4th District using the stimulus money that you voted against???? Are you siding with those Republicans that argue that the money should not be accepted by "real" Republcans.?????
California Tax Revolt begins
California Tax Revolt begins March 7 in Fullerton CA. If you believe that the state of California's legislature is out of control then join us in our cause. This event is for all Taxpayers regardless of party. More information is available from the John and Ken show am 640 KFI vist the web site. Regardless how you feel about them this rally is about the 50 billion dollar increase in your state taxes that our legislature has imposed on us. Just keep in mind that this is just the beginning there will be more taxes...there will be more taxes....sit back and do nothing and ... THERE WILL BE MORE TAXES when is enough enough how about RIGHT NOW.
As a long time Republican and
As a long time Republican and financial supporter of the Party, I have now stopped all monetary contributions to the GOP and have adopted a "wait and see" attitude! I have been deeply disappointed as of late in the actions of our candidates, our party leadership, and direction. You have stated the issues well, but is anyone listening? The past presidential election was a disaster, mismanaged, uninspired, poorly conceived, and highlighted by McCain's total lack of "fire in the belly" as a candidate. The Republicans have been a pathetic shadow of what they were under Reagan. Can they recover?
Right on, Tom! I agree with
Right on, Tom! I agree with Bob and others that I wish you were in the Governor's chair - we tried. And there are too many Rinos in the Republican party. I question Rod's comment about Ronald Reagan spending more than any President since FDR - the Congress writes the bills and the President has to sign them if the government is going to continue working. Perhaps Rod should go back to see who was in Congress at that time. Reagan did not have a line item veto, Rod!!
Now if those states with Rinos in the Senate will put the pressure on them or exchange them for real conservatives, then perhaps we can get bills passed to help the people instead of Acorn, etc.