What the Moderate Republican Stands For

Republicans came to power as the party of big ideas, and without returning to that model they could be looking at a long winter. Additionally, those big ideas need to focus on Middle America. Three issues that could work are conservation, reform and localism.

Conservation- a return to the Teddy Roosevelt model of conservation. One doesn’t necessarily have to buy into global warming to appreciate the need to protect the natural resources we have.

Reform- the federal government is bigger than ever, and won’t be getting any smaller over the next four years. Republicans need to fashion themselves as national reformers. Much of Middle America wants the government as safety net, but bloated bureaucracies breed corruption that needs to be dealt with.

Localism- this is the lynchpin that brings it all together. If we bought our food locally, shopped locally, governed locally, many of the issue we now have to deal with would go away, or at the least become manageable.

Below is a collection of writers who speak about the things that matter. Some are Right, some Left and some Center, but all intelligent and rational voices.

The American Conservative » Rod Dreher

Via Meadia

Front Porch Republic

David Brooks

The Soap Box

Protectionism and GM

Now that the tax payers own 60% of GM we have to ask the question. Is the Obama's bail out and now take over of GM a form of protectionism? Stephen Spruiell thinks so, and he may have a point.
The greater concern is the, as the Journal put it, "raw trade protectionism" at the heart of the GM restructuring. The Treasury has made the sale of GM's German Opel unit conditional on the buyer's agreement not to export small cars to the U.S. Our tariffs on imported trucks and SUVs remain a sticking point in the stalled negotiations over a trade deal with South Korea (which is going nowhere under this administration). And the government rescue of GM and Chrysler is itself a form of protectionism — the foreign transplants that employ thousands of Americans at factories in the Midwest and the South did not ask for or receive a bailout. When the government picks winners in the market, the loser is almost always the consumer, who ends up paying higher prices to subsidize inefficient producers. And if the consumer is a taxpayer, he usually ends up paying twice.

0 comments: