Ditch the GOP Congressional Leadership?

John Hawkins makes a strong argument in favor of removing Senator Mitch McConnell from his Senate Minority Leader post, and that is part of a larger debate in the conservative movement about what moves we should make early on in our rebuilding process. My view? All Congressional GOP leaders should voluntarily step aside and allow new people to compete for their posts.

When you are the leaders of the losing team, propriety dictates a humble recognition that the failure, ultimately, rests in the leadership. Yeah, the cards were stacked against the GOP. Certainly, McCain didn’t run the ideal campaign. The MSM was in the tank for the Democratic party. On and on – there are plenty of mitigating circumstances. And they all amount to nothing – the GOP lost.

I didn’t hear a clarion call from the GOP as to just why we should elect GOPers to the House and Senate. I know we were low on money in a lot of respects, but I saw huge numbers of GOP ads attacking Congressional liberals…which is a fine thing to do, but you can’t beat something with nothing. You can’t just be against Congressional liberals (wise as that position is) you also have to be for something…and the GOP had a host of things to be for which a good, national campaign could have highlighted:

1. Oil and energy – the GOP made some good moves in this, but I never saw a comprehensive, national campaign to highlight just how bad the Democrats are on this issue and the common-sense solutions the GOP had in hand.

2. Taxation – no talk at all about how a variety of tax cuts could be used to stem the financial crisis and restore economic growth.

3. Corruption – Stevens should have been stripped of all his GOP privileges the moment he was convicted and every GOPer in America should have loudly called for his immediate resignation. Couple this with the Democrats continued coddling of people like William “Cold Cash” Jefferson and the GOP could have made fighting corruption an issue for the GOP.

4. Spending – Why didn’t we pledge ourselves to fiscal responsibility? A “we learned our lesson” campaign could have at least started returning GOP favorability in matters of spending.

Others can probably thing of many more things we could have used to go on offense – but all I perceive from the GOP in 2008, as in 2006, is a determination to limit losses…in other words, to not lose as badly as we could. Douglas MacArthur was asked what his formula was for defensive warfare – his one word answer, “defeat”. You can’t win unless you attack – and we didn’t lunge after Democratic vulnerabilities.

It might have been that the ultimate course for 2008 was GOP defeat – perhaps the anti-GOP headwinds really were too strong to overcome by even the best candidate and the best campaign. So be it – but you go into any battle with the absolute conviction of total victory and fight like heck from start to finish. We didn’t do that – our leadership didn’t do that; and it is time for them to go.