More on Kansas GOPers jumping ship
Following up this post about Kansas's GOP defectors, it seems that the national media has picked up on the cracks in the Kansas Republican Party.
USA Today has the details.
Meanwhile, Kansas still, believe it or not, has some level-headed Republicans, who've let themselves be drowned out by the Brownbacks long enough. There's a group called the Kansas Traditional Republican Majority who are trying to take back their party.
So who are these guys and what do they believe in? The Kansas City Star explains: "Think Ike. Think fiscal conservatives. Think Bob Dole or Nancy Kassebaum or Bill Graves, pols who stood for personal freedom and limited government..."
This was bound to happen sooner or later. The fundies overplayed their hand and the normal, level-headed Republicans got fed up. That's what happened with Mark Parkinson, the GOP chair turned Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor. And while Parkinson has left the party, other Republicans have decided to stick it out.
Back in 2004, I predicted that the Republicans would eventually come to rue their election victories. Instead of laying the groundwork for a permanent majority, the party is splintering, abandoning the ideals that Republicans once cherished. It only took two years for the party to start unraveling.
Man, am I glad I'm not a Republican right now.
USA Today has the details.
Meanwhile, Kansas still, believe it or not, has some level-headed Republicans, who've let themselves be drowned out by the Brownbacks long enough. There's a group called the Kansas Traditional Republican Majority who are trying to take back their party.
So who are these guys and what do they believe in? The Kansas City Star explains: "Think Ike. Think fiscal conservatives. Think Bob Dole or Nancy Kassebaum or Bill Graves, pols who stood for personal freedom and limited government..."
This was bound to happen sooner or later. The fundies overplayed their hand and the normal, level-headed Republicans got fed up. That's what happened with Mark Parkinson, the GOP chair turned Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor. And while Parkinson has left the party, other Republicans have decided to stick it out.
Back in 2004, I predicted that the Republicans would eventually come to rue their election victories. Instead of laying the groundwork for a permanent majority, the party is splintering, abandoning the ideals that Republicans once cherished. It only took two years for the party to start unraveling.
Man, am I glad I'm not a Republican right now.
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