
The Republican National Committee is headed to Hawaii this week for its winter meeting. One of the top issues on the agenda, being put forward in a series of resolutions on Friday by Indiana committee member James Bopp Jr., is whether the party's candidates will be conservative enough -- and what steps the party can take to enforce it.
Bopp is offering two key resolutions. The first is a test that requires GOP candidates to show that they hold conservative positions on eight out of ten key conservative positions, such as opposing President Obama on health care and the stimulus, in order to receive RNC funding. This has been commonly referred to in the media as the "purity" test. The other, which Bopp calls the "accountability" resolution, would empower the chairman to cut off party funding for a candidate if the chair judged them to be insufficiently conservative. In an interview with TPMDC, Bopp explained that the resolutions serve an important need of maintaining the party's credibility.
"Well, we would just like to pass some forceful provision that requires accountability and puts our money where our mouth is, not just talk," said Bopp. "We're great at talking a game, but people don't trust us to follow through, and that's what we're trying to fix. So if we put our money where our mouth is, I think people will believe us."
"The party already has the power to determine who receives RNC funding," said Bopp, explaining the accountability resolution. "This would empower him [RNC Chairman Michael Steele] to consider ideology. Currently, he does not believe he can do that, he has told me. He believes, and I think most chairman did, that his duty as chairman is to support all candidates without regard to ideology. This would empower him to consider ideology."
Last year, Bopp has offered a resolution to call upon the Democratic Party to be renamed the "Democrat Socialist Party." Steele intervened in that matter, and negotiated a compromise measure that instead condemned the Democrats "march to socialism." Would Bopp be open to any similar compromises, I asked?
"Of course, just like I was on other resolutions. As long as we can accomplish the goal, I'm not wedded to any particular terminology or approach," said Bopp. "We wanted to, with the resolution you refer to as the socialist resolution, we wanted to make the public aware that Obama's agenda is a socialist agenda, and to begin that discussion and debate, and we did. And by adopting that resolution that explained that their agenda is a socialist agenda, it's helped to educate the people, and now everybody agrees with it, really. We accomplished the goal there, so I'm always open to changes, or even fresh approaches, if they can get us to where I think we need to go."
I asked Bopp whether he has been approach by anyone about potential compromises -- he has not.
The resolution has been criticized by some on the right, such as Erick Erickson, for allegedly making it too easy for a moderate to get a clean bill of health as a conservative Republican.
"Well, we tried to be mainstream. We're trying to move the party and our candidate into a position of accountability in RNC spending," said Bopp. "But we recognize that it would be unreasonable and foolish to require every candidate to agree with every issue that the Republican party has taken a position on. I mean, that would be ridiculous. So we adopted Reagan's 80-percent rule. If you agree with us 80 percent of the time, you're our friend. As to the specific items, what we picked were items that we expected to be voted on in Congress, and be the most important bills voted on. There's cap and trade, the stimulus bill, ObamaCare, government funding of abortion."
And Bopp also explained that, because these tests are specific to the needs of today, they will be changing in the future. "This is not, and people should not look at this, 'these are the principles, the universal principles of the party,'" said Bopp "This is a practical application in this election cycle, to what are the pressing issues that we are facing, and what we would do is every two years have a new list. And of course when the Republicans take over Congress in 2010, in 2011 the list would be much different. We'd be looking at tax cuts and all sorts of good things like that. They will change as the dangers or the opportunities present themselves."
mames, syr
January 26, 2010 10:53 AM
Guess what, Mike? A GOP purity test means you're out!
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dem4life
January 26, 2010 10:55 AM
Why the uck do they need a test.
Check out the rallies.....PWT
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dem4life
January 26, 2010 10:56 AM
This black boy should be asahme of himself that he represents such a disaster party.
SHAME ON HIM WE ALL KNOW THE KLAN PARTY HAS NO SHAME
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ohyeathatsright
January 26, 2010 11:14 AM in reply to dem4life
Wow, your comment almost makes me think, "takes one to know one". "Black boy" is an extremely insensitive and demeaning thing to say to anyone. How about holding yourself to a higher standard?
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jeffgee
January 26, 2010 11:01 AM
What a hoot. Michael Steele, the court jester as kingmaker, deciding who gets funded based on what he thinks is sufficient allegiance to their latest list of conservative bullet points. A recipe for victory. Keep distilling that bitter brew.
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dem4life
January 26, 2010 11:04 AM
indiana committee member James Bopp Jr., is whether the party's candidates will be conservative enough -- and what steps the party can take to enforce it.
SOLUTION: JUST SAY MORE RACIST THINGS
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timbale
January 26, 2010 11:04 AM
Hawaii?
Why are they holding this meeting in a foreign country?
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dem4life
January 26, 2010 11:05 AM in reply to timbale
ASK RUSH LIMBO...THE CLOWN
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alfredo
January 26, 2010 4:53 PM in reply to timbale
They think the hookers are cheaper there.
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The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve
January 26, 2010 11:07 AM
Why are they meeting in a foreign country? And such an exotic one, at that? Why can't they meet in ''Merica? Preferably somewhere in Real 'Merica like Philedelphia, Mississippi or Bentonville, Arkansas?
Plum disgustin,' that's what it is. They can't need the whole crowd to uncover the truth about Obama's birth certificate.
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loria
January 26, 2010 11:07 AM
Will their be a ceremony, and will Michael Steele give each of those who make the pledge a ring? Oh wait, that's another type of purity pledge.
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jeffgee
January 26, 2010 12:06 PM in reply to loria
Most kids who take the Purity Pledge don't keep it anyway. How would the GOP be any different?
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Schmed
January 26, 2010 1:12 PM in reply to jeffgee
'Cuz they're all Promise Keepers? Like Sanford an' Ensign an' Vitter an'....an'....?
...n'ver mind....
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loria
January 26, 2010 4:12 PM in reply to jeffgee
There's probably a better chance of the GOP keeping their purity pledge than there is of the kids keeping it. After all, the Tea Partiers have scared the crap out of the GOP and they will keep in line or face a primary.
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Sailormarlowe
January 26, 2010 11:15 AM
"They hold their public meetings where
Our most renowned patriots stand,
One among the birds of the air,
A stumpier on either hand;
And all the popular statesmen say
That purity built up the state
And after kept it from decay;
Admonish us to cling to that
And let all base ambition be,
For intellect would make us proud
And pride bring in impurity:
The three old rascals laugh aloud."--William Butler Yeats.
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jim43
January 26, 2010 11:18 AM
Hawaii? Isn't it un-American for the Republicans to hold such an important event in a foreign country?
http://www.political-buzz.com/
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Schmed
January 26, 2010 11:20 AM
If you agree with us 80 percent of the time, you're our friend.
Hmmm. 80% of the time. That's going to be hard to compute. I doubt that Steele has the capacity for higher mathematical concepts like percentages. And then watching him trying to compute them on the fly (what's the time frame of the "of the time" rule?) is going to be as much fun as watching a dog read hubcap lettering while chasing a moving car.
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georgecs
January 26, 2010 11:26 AM
The Republican Party is sounding more and more like a frat with every passing day.
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USgreentech
January 26, 2010 11:37 AM
They made Al Qaeda strong and Obama made them weak. Obama is strong versus Al Qaeda.
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texscubarat
January 26, 2010 11:38 AM
"maintaining the party's credibility." - ???
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brianm0122
January 26, 2010 1:30 PM in reply to texscubarat
Hmmm, don't you have to HAVE credibility before it can be maintained?
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For Want of a Nail
January 26, 2010 12:11 PM
Given the ability to twist almost any legislator's vote into something else, as we see in every election cycle, how does this do any good. A candidate looking to make a power grab can say his/her opponent voted against something unrelated to a purity pledge bullet-point by twisting any of a myriad of previous votes.
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plan69
January 26, 2010 12:21 PM
Your paperz pleeze....hmmmm....your paperz are not in order.....you must come mit us....Sieg Heil! Sieg Heil!
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wbgonne
January 26, 2010 12:24 PM
I'm very worried that Landrieu, Bayh, Lincoln and Nelson may get ejected from the GOP.
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dem4life
January 26, 2010 12:46 PM in reply to wbgonne
Hoping
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ericf
January 26, 2010 12:27 PM
How did conservatives turn against cap and trade? It was their idea. Doing that instead of pursuing other ideas was a liberal offer to compromise. So fine, screw cap and trade, let's do whatever reduces greenhouse gas emissions, and whether conservatives like it or not is beside the point.
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wbgonne
January 26, 2010 12:34 PM in reply to ericf
You are making the error of assuming the GOP is operating in good faith or the best interest on the country. BIG mistake.
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Matt Jones
January 26, 2010 12:40 PM
The GOP: standing for timeless conservative principles. That change every two years.
Yeah, that about sums up how we got into this mess...
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Redwood Rhiadra
January 26, 2010 12:58 PM
James Bopp Jr. - the *same* guy who brought us the recent Citizen's United decision, and who intends to destroy all campaign finance regulations:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/25/us/politics/25bopp.html
This is a very dangerous man.
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Silence
January 26, 2010 1:11 PM
Only fiscal conservatives need apply.
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brianm0122
January 26, 2010 2:53 PM in reply to Silence
Correction:
Only people who say they are fiscal conservatives need apply. Whatever you do once you are elected is a different matter.
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gharlane
January 26, 2010 9:44 PM in reply to Silence
Only fiscal conservatives need apply.
Well, that pretty much leaves out the entire Republican Party since at least Reagan. Should be an interesting conference.
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roon1980
January 26, 2010 1:16 PM
This sounds like a good plan for the RNC, the 80% rule is a good method for testing the ideology of the canidates. I hope good things happen for the GOP in November.
http://www.ubrownrepublican.blogspot.com
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sean
January 26, 2010 2:02 PM
Now, now, girls, yer all purty...
Wha?
"Purity" not "purty"?
Oh.
Nevermind.
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dem4life
January 26, 2010 3:10 PM
In a comparison likely to offend both parties, Fox News host Bill O'Reilly compared the South Side of Chicago to Haiti during a January 23rd stop on his "Bold Fresh Tour," accompanied by Glenn Beck.
President Obama is constantly pushing government as the solution to every problem, O'Reilly argued, despite there being no evidence to support this idea:
And I'm going, I don't know how that's possible. If you've ever been to the South Side of Chicago, I mean, it's a disaster. Alright? It's like Haiti. it's like -- I've been to Haiti a couple times, and I support some charities there, but Haiti just never gets better no matter how much money you put in there because they don't have a system.
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hologram5
January 26, 2010 6:00 PM
RNC To Take Up 'Purity' Resolutions This Week
----------------------------------------------
Sounds like a high school abstinence program. Or, OMG, NO MORE PORN? How are they going to survive? Watch out for your daughters and wives...
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mrut
January 26, 2010 7:13 PM
Now they're meeting in Kenya? This really is the new GOP.
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sweetpb307
January 26, 2010 9:46 PM
GOP Sends Letter Appearing To Be Census Form...And where does this fall in thier Purity Test...why is he, and them not being charged! and why is off the front page of every page and news media
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ejg3
January 27, 2010 1:23 AM
Somehow the makeup of today's Republican party mixing deniability and maliciousness echoes Bob Dole's joke describing a picture of Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford and Ricard Nixon as see no evil, hear no evil and evil or perhaps the old line about the fight over whether GOP stands for God's Only Party (the religious right), Gold, Oil and Platinum (the Wall Street and Country Club set) or Greed Over People (I've got mine and to hell with everyone else that summarizes the phony populism of the angry white male so often baited by Pat Buchanan and others).
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