Time to ask: What happened to the "Red Wave" | Eastern North Carolina Now

Joe Cunningham, writing at Red State, begins to breakdown the reasons the “Red Wave” failed.  He writes:

There are a lot of reasons to go over why the GOP underperformed in 2022, and after last night’s loss in Georgia and the election cycle being over, we can really do a deep dive into it.

We can talk about candidate quality. We can talk Mitch McConnell. We can talk Kevin McCarthy. We can talk Donald Trump. But there’s one problem that the GOP refuses to discuss and that is the grifter class within its ranks.

See, Democrat politicians and Democrat campaigns are in it to win it. But, more often than not, it seems like Republican politicians and campaigns are in it to make sure the consultants get paid first. There was a huge cash-on-hand disparity when it came to candidates in 2022. Raphael Warnock was at a two-to-one advantage over Herschel Walker, if not more.

In Arizona, Mark Kelly had more cash on hand than Blake Masters. Catherine Cortez-Masto in Nevada had more cash on hand than Adam Laxalt.

The Republican money in 2022 came largely from PACs and super PACs, and candidates were not able to get their hands on a whole lot of money because it was being sucked up by these Republican groups sending out dishonest fundraising messaging. But it isn’t just a phenomenon unique to 2022.

Let’s go back 10 years to the 2012 election. The Republican Party had this secret weapon called “Project ORCA,” and it was going to be a massive day-of GOTV effort… And it crashed on startup.

It likely cost the GOP the presidential election in 2012 (that and, of course, candidate quality). If the Republican Party had spent as much time, effort, and money on the candidates and helping candidates directly, then Mitt Romney would have been more successful in 2012, because in that election, Republicans made gains elsewhere. They just couldn’t beat Barack Obama.

Fast forward now to 2022. Take the NRSC under Rick Scott’s leadership. It raised a lot of money but had to give a lot of it back because people felt they were lied to in the fundraising messages they were getting. Take Donald Trump, whose own super PAC raised $100 million and spent very little of it until the end, and mostly on rallies that featured himself more than the candidates.

Take the fact that, by law, media companies have to charge politicians’ campaigns the lowest ad rates possible, but PACs pay an insane amount of money to get their ads on the air. Candidates can make the dollar stretch further than PACs, but they go in and suck up all the money.

That’s what happened with Project ORCA. The consultants and the vendors made sure they got paid for a system that didn’t even work and screwed the Republicans out of an election. Vendors, consultants, and strategists? All of these people make sure they get theirs before the candidate can be absolutely sure that they’ve got the best strategy.

Look at the Lincoln Project, which is made up of former Republican consultants who were mad they didn’t get a seat at the table with Donald Trump, so they’ve done everything they can to raise money and make a buck for themselves at the expense of people who dislike Donald Trump. We’ve seen time and again that the Lincoln Project had a negligible effect on any election. They raised a ton of money and they made sure to get their paychecks first.

If you can’t make money with Donald Trump, you make money against Donald Trump.

The Republican Party is filled with grifter consultants, who make sure that they get their checks cleared before they’re worried about whether or not somebody wins. The GOP will not have any meaningful success until they can get rid of a consultant class that is more focused on the paycheck than victory.

The Democrats are in it to win it. The Republicans are in it to get paid.

So you could have a big victory, like in 2016, and it is lost in four years because no one has actually fought to make sure that the party and the ideology come first. They’re all focused on the money and the power in the access to all those things.

 


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Comments

( December 10th, 2022 @ 10:29 am )
 
The comment below and the article above this are on target. It is all about individuals keeping holding on to power in the federal House nd Senate as well as at the state level. Most of these bone heads cannot spell grass roots. Conservative grass roots are powerful today. We have to start ignoring the various leaderships. They have become too powerful and self perpetuating..
( December 9th, 2022 @ 7:54 pm )
 
The big problem is poor Republican leadership, in the Senate, the House, and at RNC, specifically Mitch McConnell, Kevin McCarthy, and Ronna Romney McDaniel.

Mitch McConnell withdrew funding from conservative GOP candidates who were in close Senate races to divert it to the campaign of RINO Lisa Murkowski, whose opponent was not a Democrat but conservative Republican Kelly Tshibaka. He also finished the campaign with $40 million in the bank unspent. McConnell was never interested in a GOP majority, only power for himself. McConnell's extreme unpopularity with voters also made him a lead anchor for GOP candidates. Polls show McConnell is viewed favorably by only 8% of voters and unfavorably by 71%. A competent and charasmatic leader would have won the Senate for the GOP, but McConnell was just not up to that task.

McCarthy is not quite as bad as McConnell but his ineptitude showed when he bungled the attempt to follow Newt Gingrich's Contract with America. McCarthy also wasted a lot of House Republican campaign money fighting conservatives in primaries instead of Democrats in the general election. $4 million of that waste was in the neighboring 1st district of North Carolina primary and McCarthy's RINO candidate, Sandy Roberson, lost the primary anyway.

Ronna McDaniel was incredibly inept at leading the RNC as well, but after three failed terms, she is seeking a fourth.



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