WHY YOU SHOULD LOBBY CONGRESS
Citizens may feel it is a waste of time to contact elected leaders, because their minds are made up already. But on most issues, legislators try hard to determine the desires and leanings of their constituency before they vote. Politicians worry about being re-elected, and know that the happier their constituency, the more likely their own re-election.
Contact Your Members Of Congress On This Issue!
Tell your members Of Congress That Its Time To End The Illegal Actions Of The Obama Admin & Other Government Agencies!
WHY TRUE CONSERVATIVES SHOULD SUPPORT THE TEAPARTY!
“The term ‘RINO’ is used by conservatives and tea-party members against moderates in the GOP. “The term ‘RINO’ describes politicians who claim to be Republican but are, in fact, Progressively liberal,” Meaning that rather than fight for true conservative values, they will support the liberal socialist agenda of the democrats,they would rather appease the liberals in hopes of gaining their vote in elections! Selling out the conservative cause for votes ! We must work to defeat these RINO'S By supporting true conservatives who will fight to save our country & our freedoms!
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For several years, the most-hurled epithet in Republican Party politics has been an acronym: RINO, or Republican In Name Only.
It almost always is used by conservatives and tea-party members against moderates in the GOP. “The term ‘RINO’ describes politicians who claim to be Republican but are, in fact, liberal,” says an entry on a website called Conservapedia.
In 2014, though, the most interesting and important political battle will center on which wing of the Republican Party gets to decide who really is a RINO, and who isn’t.
Last week, for example, conservatives labeled House Speaker John Boehner and U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan RINOs for their efforts to pass a federal budget compromise that included slightly higher spending.
But here’s the thing: 169 Republicans in the House voted yes. Only 62 Republicans opposed the budget deal. So who are the real RINOs? The GOP majority that bought into the budget agreement, or the minority that rejected it?
Some local Republicans are quietly asking that question. They are increasingly worried voters blame their party for ongoing government dysfunction, endangering the party’s chance to gain seats in Congress next year and the White House in 2016.
And there’s an intriguing possibility the GOP moderates will make their concerns public in 2014. In the suburbs, there is some chatter that well-known middle-of-the-road Republicans will support Democrat Paul Davis in the Kansas governor’s race against conservative Republican Sam Brownback.
The Republicans can’t bring themselves tobecome Democrats, it turns out, but they believe they can pull their party back to the center by backing Davis in November.
Conservatives almost certainly will call them Republicans In Name Only. The moderates, though, will argue that tea-party hard-liners are the real RINOs.
There’s a slim chance the strategy might work. Conservatives can make the RINO label stick in a GOP primary, where their influence is significant. In a general election, though, it may be easier to suggest no-compromise conservatives are the real outliers, not the deal-makers.
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