We saw--and laughed at--Schneider's "Never Trump, Dammit!!" bleating in the local rag. His outburst was occasioned by the electoral loss of a not-too-good (R) candidate to a (D) who picked up Trumpian themes and won with them.
Got that? The (D) ran on anti-Madison (read: anti-Establishment) and "good jobs" themes while the (R) voted against FoxConn and mumbled about regulatory obscurities.
So it's Trump's fault that the (R) lost. Uh-huh.
There's another way to look at this, of course.
...Establishment
Republicans insist that our president is poisonous to discourse, yet
they offer nothing more than spittle-flecked denunciations of the man
personally while failing to recognize the invaluable work he is doing to
thwart the steady degeneration of our form of government.
Mind
you, this work has been long avoided by those same Republicans who now
strike at the president's knees as he takes up the cause of national
restoration, harassing him for putting bold action behind the very
principles these neglectful Republicans have themselves espoused in
countless campaigns but apparently never actually believed.
Conservatives
and other constitutionally respectful constituencies have spent the
better part of a century following the advice of such Republicans and
have achieved nothing beyond bare survival.
Under
their leadership, we now have a world where our children know precious
little about the form of government intended for them by our framers and
are consequently eager to trade their inherent liberty for trinkets of
socialist Utopiana.
Our
Republican leaders talk of conservative principles yet govern from an
agenda essentially homogenous to that of the Democrats – only slower, at
lower cost.
Let me help you understand this, Chris. Trump was right then, and although he won partially due to the utter reprehensibility of the opponent, he has done damn near everything right since election.
Pubbies who--like Schneider, Jeb, and Romney--still don't get it, will continue to lose. Walker is right: the wake-up call has been sounded. Republicans with no cojones, and their camp-follower pundits, are going to lose. That's why Flake and Hatch are quitting.
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