Will GOP Leaders repudiate the voters’ November 2014 messages
By
Oscar Y. Harward
When
will Capitol Hill Republican Party’s leaders see and/or hear the November 2014 election
messages. The first message in the 2014 election season and ignored by the GOP
leadership was the defeat by Virginian Republicans to retire one of the top GOP
leaders on Capitol Hill.
A
few other wins with Conservative TEA Party Republican Party defeats followed;
however, many other mainstream Republicans may have been defeated and Conservative
TEA Party Republican Party candidates elected had Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell and Speaker John Boehner stayed out of the local GOP ‘Primary’
Elections with their own Political Action Committee (PAC) money.
Local
Republicans must be allowed to make their own preference selections in
‘primaries’. Capitol Hill leaders may
endorse their choices; however, national leaders should not, otherwise, get
involved unless there is a reason involving a candidate embarrassment.
Conservative
TEA Party Republican candidates were in full support of ‘repeal ObamaCare, get
government out of our lives allowing entrepreneurs to create jobs in the private
sector, stop-the-spending, and stop illegal immigration’; issues all supported
by a majority of Republicans and Conservative TEA party Republican candidates.
Prior
to the November Election, President Obama said, "I am not on the ballot
this fall…. But make no mistake: these policies are on the ballot, every single
one of them."
GOP
‘wins’ in the November General Elections results were based more on ‘defeating’
President Obama, his political policies, and his out-of-the-stream radicalism
rather than based on Capitol Hill mainstream Republicans leadership proposals.
Will
Republicans’ leadership listen now or
will they take their own course? The
true message in the General Election is clear; ‘Repeal ObamaCare, get
governments out of our lives allowing entrepreneurs to create jobs in the
private sector, stop-the-spending, and stop illegal immigration’; issues all supported
by a
majority of Republicans and Conservative TEA party Republican candidates.
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