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by John Nichols
Here's the latest from the not-exactly-sure-whether-it-wants-to-be-loyal
opposition:
Rush Limbaugh, the nation's most verbose Republican, delivered a
chest-thumping, eyes-popping denunciation of President Obama's efforts to
renew the economy:
"What possibly is in this that any of us want to succeed?" the radio ranter
told the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, leaving no
doubt about where his patriotism begins and ends.
Yikes, thought Michael Steele, the defeated US Senate candidate who, after a
lengthy job search recently found work as chairman of the Republican
National Committee.
Appearing later Saturday on CNN's D.L. Hughley Breaks the News -- a program
that the media-savvy RNC chair presumed Limbaugh would not be viewing --
Steele sought to place a little distance between an already out there party
and Limbaugh's apocalyptic advocacy.
When Hughley suggested that Limbaugh was the "de facto leader of the
Republican party," Steele shot back: "No, he's not. I'm the de facto leader
of the Republican party."
"Let's put it into context here," the chairman continued. "Rush Limbaugh is
an entertainer. Rush Limbaugh, his whole thing is entertainment. Yes it's
incendiary, yes it's ugly."
All true and, arguably, the most honorable statement of Steele's long and
disappointing career.
Unfortunately, Limbaugh got wind of the chairman's heresy.
Then things really got incendiary and, yes, ugly.
Mr. Steele, if you want to lead the Republican Party, as you say you do,
then you need to run for and win the presidency. You are chairman of the
Republican National Committee. That is your job. To run the Republican
establishment bureaucracy and prove you can defeat Democrats and elect
Republicans, to come up with a new primary system that eliminates Democrats
participating in ours and choosing our candidates and getting the grassroots
revved up again. This is how you're going to be measured, not by how
entertaining or cute you are on talk shows," growled Limbaugh, as part of a
twenty-minute long rant on his program Monday. "By the same token, I'm not
in charge of the Republican Party, and I don't want to be. I would be
embarrassed to say that I'm in charge of the Republican Party in the
sad-sack state that it's in. If I were chairman of the Republican Party,
given the state that it's in, I would quit. I might get out the hari-kari
knife because I would have presided over a failure that is embarrassing to
the Republicans and conservatives who have supported it and invested in it
all these years. I certainly couldn't say I am proud of the Republican
Party, as I am leading the Republican Party. Right now the Republican Party
needs to be led, and it will be. The next Republican president is going to
be the head of the party. Last time I checked, I don't think Mr. Steele is
running.
Limbaugh wasn't done.
Mr. Steele, we do like to entertain people here. The audience is very smart,
sir," the millionaire radio host explained to the minion. "They know the
difference between entertainment, and they know the difference between
deadly serious issues that affect their country. Don't underestimate the
intelligence of this audience or Republicans and conservatives generally.
The biggest problem with all of you who live inside the Beltway is you look
out over America and you think you see idiocy and unsophisticated people,
ignorant people, and when you're looking at liberal Democrats, largely
you're correct, but your own voters are every bit as informed, involved,
engaged, and caring, if not more so than you are. We don't care, first and
foremost, about the success of the Republican Party. We care about the
United States of America and its future, because we cherish it and love it,
and we know what it is that made it the greatest nation on earth, and we
don't hear you articulating that you understand that, not just you, Mr.
Steele, but hardly anybody else in Washington, DC. So send those fundraising
requests out, and, by the way, when you send those fundraising requests out,
Mr. Steele, make sure you say, "We want Obama to succeed." So people
understand your compassion. Republicans, conservatives, are sick and tired
of being talked down to, sick and tired of being lectured to, and until you
show some understanding and respect for who they are, you're going to have a
tough time rebuilding your party.
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