Michael Steele told Republican party leaders across the country today that one year after voters handed both houses of Congress and the White House to the Democrats, the GOP is poised to regain prominence on the political landscape.
In his "2009 Political Update," an email sent to the party's list of activists, Steele says the summer's town hall meetings and next week's elections in New Jersey in Virginia prove his first year at the helm of the GOP has been a success. He writes,
"Just one year ago, many political pundits had written the epitaph of the Republican Party. ... Today, Republicans have begun to reestablish the trust of voters on a majority of issues; and, I am proud to say are turning an important corner and are moving forward with strength."
Inside the document, Steele suggests are signs that the GOP still has a few corners to turn before it's back to the ideological unanimity found during its years in absolute power over D.C..
Steele lays out where the party stood in the eyes of most observers at the start of his chairmanship in January, says its thanks to the Democrats that the GOP is resurgent:
"They claimed the nation had undergone a fundamental realignment from the center-right of the political spectrum toward the Democrats, and that the GOP had become nothing but a regional party - at best. ... [But] as Americans' opposition to the Democrats' government-run health care experiment and out-of-control federal spending has continued to grow, President Obama, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid have managed to pull off an astonishing hat-trick: disappointing Democrats, alienating Independents and energizing Republicans."
As evidence of the party's turnaround, Steele points to next week, when the GOP is almost certain to win the governor's mansion in Virginia and could very possibly do the same in New Jersey. But he brings up another election coming up soon that showcases new cracks in the Republican Party infrastructure:
"As the Republican National Chairman, it is my job and responsibility to elect Republicans. In the special election in NY-23 the RNC has provided support to the NY state party to retain the seat vacated by former Rep. John McHugh in a district that President Obama carried in 2008."
Overall, though, Steele concludes Obama is helping to unify the party he soundly defeated in 2008. As proof of his claim, Steele suggests that when it comes to GOP resurgence, money talks:
Finally, the RNC's fundraising this year has been very successful. Dissatisfaction with President Obama's big-government, over-reaching policies has certainly contributed to this success, but so has the RNC's ability to engage our donors in a more creative way. In September the RNC raised $8.7 million - a record for an off-year election month -and the RNC's year-to-date total is nearly $65 million with no debt.

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mcc
October 30, 2009 3:15 PM
Does anyone actually believe the Republicans are better off now than they were one year ago?
For that matter, does anyone actually believe the Republicans will be better off on November 3, 2010 than they were one year ago?
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The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve
October 30, 2009 3:23 PM in reply to mcc
Well, when you're a party dedicated to the proposition that believing something makes it true, you'd just about have to as a definitional matter, wouldn't you?
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TheRealFish
October 30, 2009 5:02 PM in reply to mcc
Only if those disapproving and disappointed in Democratic leadership forget that retribution should hold second place behind barring this increasingly anti-repubic, anti-constitution party from ever having control over the reigns of power again. Ever.
Having an overwhelming majority in the Senate, for example, obviously is only truly "overwhelming" if senate votes don't rely on treasonous, traitorous folks like Lieberman or the Nelsons or any of those other corporate-slave DINOs. Letting that margin slip at all guarantees only that the slow churn of legislation we have now will grind to total stationary intertia. Zero forward movement.
We now understand that "overwhelming" control can only be had by widening that gap even further, through whatever means possible. Otherwise the weight of their obstructionism will eventually win, will eventually turn the tide of popular opinion to that most insane place — where they would be allowed to control the agenda once more.
In short, they gain the momentum when we hand it to them. And that could happen if we treat this interim election as a knock off that doesn't mean anything — if we treat them as though they are already defeated.
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Kuyleh
October 30, 2009 3:32 PM
The delusion is adorable.
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tiowally
October 30, 2009 4:05 PM
Yeah, Mike, ya'll are turning an important corner all right. Right into a cul de sac. Step on it!
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Hidden Oak
October 30, 2009 4:10 PM
Snowballs speeding to hell don't turn corners.
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tweakyd
October 30, 2009 4:20 PM
I guess if you're a cow on the train tracks and the train hits you, you turn around the corner of the cow shovel momentarily as it slices through you and leaves you in pieces at the side of the tracks. Or something like that.
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maya89
October 30, 2009 4:24 PM
I'd love to know what this jerk's concept of "regain prominence" is... if the economy improves in any way shape or form between now & Nov 2010 and/or now & Nov 2012 this joke of a party chairman can kiss his delusions good-bye..
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CT Voter
October 30, 2009 4:27 PM
Today, Republicans have begun to reestablish the trust of voters on a majority of issues
Name a single issue that voters trust Republicans more than Obama or the Democrats.
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mans_best_friend
October 30, 2009 4:52 PM in reply to CT Voter
Protecting the interests of the wealthy and powerful.
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Kuyleh
October 31, 2009 12:56 AM in reply to mans_best_friend
He said voters, not pocket liners.
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Maritza
October 30, 2009 4:34 PM
Yep with the GOP's 25% approval rating.
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acf_ma
October 30, 2009 5:16 PM
They still believe that saying something makes it so. Well, saying they are turning an important corner may be an attempt to buck up the troops, but without changing their ways, it's meaningless. As long as the likes of Limbaugh, Bachmann, and the Teabaggers excite the troops, and the party chiefs fail to turn away from it, nothing changes.
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Icon
October 30, 2009 5:32 PM
"as Americans' opposition to the Democrats' government-run health care experiment"
Well, I suppose this isn't totally wrong. There are some Americans who oppose health care reform.
Problem is they're a minority.
"and out-of-control federal spending has continued to grow,"
It has?
"disappointing Democrats,"
By not being liberal enough.
"alienating Independents"
By not being liberal enough.
"and energizing Republicans."
By not being socially conservative enough.
Steele, please wake up to the fact that your party is even less popular now than it was last year. Your party's reluctance to distance itself from the teabaggers, the birthers and the deathers has created a public perception that Republicans simply have no place in polite society. If any new Republicans are elected next year, it will be not be because they're Republicans. It will be because the Democrats whose seats they take weren't consistently liberal enough.
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boredwitnuts
October 30, 2009 9:03 PM
So Steele is saying... "We lied all summer. We contributed to astroturfing. We scared the seniors. Said no to everything. We have no plan (for anything). We have 19% approval. We started 2 wars. We destroyed the economy, as well as your jobs... and now America sees we, the GOP, are the better choice."
Good luck with that.
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Doc Magnus
October 31, 2009 6:40 PM
When any movement is on the decline, the last to leave are the hard-liners. It stands to reason they are unified. What a great slogan Steele has at his fingertips: A political party with the mind of one!
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