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Liberty University spurns Democratic club
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<blockquote data-quote="Taure" data-source="post: 51769275" data-attributes="member: 111811"><p>Yes, it is.</p><p></p><p>It's the same as after the 1997 elections in the UK. There was a landslide election which represented a massive turn away from the Conservatives in the public opinion. It has taken them over 10 years to recover.</p><p></p><p>Even your own party recognises this. There are massive divisions in the party's base between the moderates, the more libertarian camp and the religious right which has dominated the party for the last several elections. The reason why McCain lost the election by such a wide margin was that he had been in the libertarian/moderate camp for most of his political career, but had to sacrifice that to please the more hard-line religious right wingers (see: Sarah Palin). In doing so he lost that about him which was why he was chosen in the first place: the fact that he was a moderate Republican.</p><p></p><p>The GOP is undergoing the same internal debate that the Conservatives here did 1997-2007: what is the party about? What is going to be the party's new direction, given that the public has turned against the old paradigm?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Taure, post: 51769275, member: 111811"] Yes, it is. It's the same as after the 1997 elections in the UK. There was a landslide election which represented a massive turn away from the Conservatives in the public opinion. It has taken them over 10 years to recover. Even your own party recognises this. There are massive divisions in the party's base between the moderates, the more libertarian camp and the religious right which has dominated the party for the last several elections. The reason why McCain lost the election by such a wide margin was that he had been in the libertarian/moderate camp for most of his political career, but had to sacrifice that to please the more hard-line religious right wingers (see: Sarah Palin). In doing so he lost that about him which was why he was chosen in the first place: the fact that he was a moderate Republican. The GOP is undergoing the same internal debate that the Conservatives here did 1997-2007: what is the party about? What is going to be the party's new direction, given that the public has turned against the old paradigm? [/QUOTE]
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Liberty University spurns Democratic club
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