SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: THE WATSONYOUTH who wrote (655235)5/18/2012 12:42:28 PM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1588212
 
Rift divides Nevada GOP, RNC



By: JON RALSTON - LAS VEGAS SUN
May 17, 2012 10:52 PM EDT
dyn.politico.com

Fed up with an inept and self-destructive GOP apparatus in Nevada, the Republican National Committee and the Mitt Romney campaign have decided to erect a “shadow state party” in this critical swing state, sources confirmed Wednesday.

“They are still bogged down in the minutiae of whether Romney will be the presumptive nominee,” scoffed a GOP strategist familiar with the details of the restructuring. “We don’t have time for that when the Obama campaign already is in full campaign mode. We have no use for them [the state GOP].”

The lack of faith in the Republican Party in Nevada intensified with the botched February caucus, metastasized after the Ron Paul takeover in Sparks, and reached its zenith with Tuesday’s call for RNC Chairman Reince Priebus to resign by a divided Clark County GOP.

Priebus was described as “disappointed with the censuring.” So Priebus, in concert with the Romney folks in Nevada, has decided to turn the so-called Team Nevada office into the de facto Republican Party.

“The goal is for us to be running get out the vote, running phone programs, voter ID, voter contact, everything through the Team Nevada headquarters,” the strategist said.

He continued: “The RNC has said it is willing to do everything possible as the state party appears not to be willing to work with us, so we will do it without them.”

The plan would be to transfer money directly to Team Nevada and/or funnel some through the Washoe Republican Party, run by Dave Buell, who is well-liked by the RNC and Romney folks.

The GOP insider said, “essentially we’re setting up a shadow state party.”

And it will surely cast a long shadow over a state GOP that is trying to oust Executive Director David Gallagher, while other staff departures seem likely as the Paul folks complete their coup. Even soon-to-be-former RNC Committeeman Bob List called the state GOP “dysfunctional” during an appearance Wednesday on NPR’s “Talk of the Nation,” although the former governor also blamed the Romney campaign for resting on its caucus win laurels and allowing the Paul revolution to occur.

But List is not likely to factor into these plans, which will feature full integration, as is occurring nationally, between the RNC and Romney. It’s also likely that after the June 12 primary clears the field, the campaigns of Rep. Joe Heck (R-Nev.) and Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.) will get on board.

This move has been inevitable and essential for some time for the RNC and Team Romney to combat a formidable Democratic machine. They won’t be able to do everything the Democrats can do, but separating themselves from the imploding and embarrassing party structure is a good first step.

Late Wednesday, Nevada GOP Chairman Michael McDonald, trying to slow down any move to make the party irrelevant, worked with the RNC and released a statement designed to undercut the Clark County Republican Party’s call for Priebus’s resignation and indicate to Washington that he is willing to play ball:

“The Chairman of the Republican National Committee Reince Priebus has the authority to take the necessary steps to support a candidate to ensure Republicans win the presidency in November. RNC Rule 11 applies to the RNC’s ability to make endorsements and spend resources in state races and may have been misinterpreted by some in Nevada in its application to the presidential election. Ron Paul’s campaign released a statement on May 5 providing Chairman Priebus and the RNC their ‘full consent’ to move forward with setting up Victory organizations. Certainly we do not need to wait for Tampa before assisting our presumptive nominee. I look forward to working with Chairman Priebus and Republicans across the state of Nevada as we build a top-notch ground game to beat Barack Obama and elect Mitt Romney to the White House.”

Said Sean Spicer, communications director of the RNC: “The RNC continues to work with the state party.”

To some extent this merely heads off the inevitable because nobody on the ground in Nevada — from the RNC, from the Romney campaign, from the Heller campaign, from the Heck campaign — is likely to trust the party with any real money. But can McDonald slow down the move to erect the outside entity for a bit? Perhaps. After all, if he can persuade Las Vegas City Council to give him $4 million for a project even though he’s not a developer, maybe he can sell the Washington and Boston folks that he really can run a viable state party.

Jon Ralston writes for the Las Vegas Sun, which is partnering with POLITICO to cover the 2012 presidential elections.



To: THE WATSONYOUTH who wrote (655235)5/18/2012 12:43:37 PM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1588212
 
Conservatives Pounce on Boehner's Health Plan

OUTSIDE GROUPS A CHALLENGE FOR HOUSE LEADERSHIP

By Kevin Spak, Newser Staff
newser.com
Posted May 18, 2012 9:59 AM CDT

(NEWSER) – John Boehner issued a statement yesterday insisting that he was dead-set on repealing the health care reform law "in its entirety," refuting a Politico report that he'd hatched a plan to keep the most popular parts of the law should the Supreme Court overturn ObamaCare. What prompted the statement? A wash of right-wing infighting. The leaked plan set off a firestorm among The Repeal Coalition, a Google email group loaded with top congressional staffers and think-tank figures, Politico reports, having obtained a transcript.

"Should we change the name of this to 'partialrepealcoalition' or 'someofobamacareisprettygood'?" asked one aide to Jim DeMint. The "House GOP is going to cave after winning an election on full repeal," complained one Heritage Action staffer. "Unreal." The email chain is a vivid look at House leadership's challenges with the party's far-right wing. Listservs like the Repeal Coalition can generate group-think leadership can't control. Before long, Boehner's staff sent an email to a separate group of leadership aides, promising he'd "knock … down" the report.