Loyalists in Kentucky's Tea Party movement who helped propel Republican Rand Paul to the U.S. Senate last year say they share no blame for the GOP's poor showing in Tuesday's state elections, especially in the race for governor.
Instead, they point to the Republican Party establishment, which they say too often backs and fields candidates who don't adhere to their call for limited government and fiscal responsibility.
"I'm a registered Republican, but my reasoning for Tuesday's loss is that we saw an establishment candidate, Republican David Williams, get rejected by the Tea Party," said Lexington conservative radio talk show host Leland Conway. "The establishment part of the Republican Party of Kentucky needs to learn that its candidates have to be true conservatives for the Tea Party to line up behind them and to win."
If all printers were determined not to print anything till they were sure it would offend nobody, there would be very little printed. -- Benjamin Franklin
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Doubling Down On Red InThe Bluegrass State
After Republicans here in Kentucky spent quite a bit of time and money trying to convince everyone that all Democrats here personally worked for Barack Obama's army of Thug Life baby-eating New Black Panthers and failed miserably, it looks like they've discovered the keys to their defeat: One, their Tea Party candidates in a state that produced Rand Paul for them last year are simply not insane enough, and two, Democrats are still allowed to vote. Both oversights apparently must be fixed.
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