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Voinovich Blames GOP's Troubles on "Southerners"
[Cross-posted at The Electoral Map]
In an interview with the Columbus Dispatch this afternoon, Sen. George Voinovich (R-OH) blamed the recent struggles of the GOP squarely on "southerners." When asked about the "GOP's biggest problem," he replied:
"We got too many Jim DeMints (R-S.C.) and Tom Coburns (R-Ok.). It’s the southerners. They get on TV and go 'errrr, errrrr.' People hear them and say, ‘These people, they’re southerners. The party’s being taken over by southerners. What they hell they got to do with Ohio?’"
A more accurate description probably wouldn't have been that the GOP has too many southerners, but that it doesn't have enough non-Southerners. As Ron Brownstein noted in the National Journal in May:
The Republican Party today is more electorally dependent on the South than at any point in its past. Today the GOP holds a smaller share of non-Southern seats in the House and Senate than at any other point in its history except the apex of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's popularity during the early days of the New Deal.
It may be a vicious cycle where the loss of moderate northern Republicans opens the doors for the rise of the Tom DeLay's of the party, who in turn pave the way for the defeat of more moderate northerners. The same cycle played out in the 1980's and '90s when the loss of Dixiecrats enabled liberals to take power of the Democratic Party, and thus prompted the death of more southern Democrats.
Even Voinovich's Ohio, once the bedrock of the Republican Party, has shifted to the Democratic Party in recent years despite having little gain in minority and/or suburban voters that have turned other regions (mid-Atlantic, Mountain West) blue.
Voinovich is retiring in January 2010 and probably doesn't care about popularity points in his caucus, so he's not going to win any friends south of the Ohio River for that comment. But he is correct that his party increasingly speak with a southern accent:
[Chart credit: National Journal]



Comments
My word, we went as far north as possible for a VP candidate...
and I don;t recall the likes of Voinovich being very impressed.
My favorite unreliable senate vote.
And he's being critical?
Who cares?
Really tragic that this idiot...
...can't keep his arrogant mouth shut. This really displays the dysfunctionality of the GOP. A house divided.
Of course this is why Obama can screw up as much as he wants and continue to boldly & successfully push his anti-Constitution agenda. He can see the broken GOP as the entire nation sees it.
Sadly the GOP can't see it! They don't even know they have a problem! Which is why we shouldn't hold out much hope for 2010. Unless these lost GOP'rs snap out of the spell they're under. Darvin Dowdy
Voinovich speaks a truth conservatives refuse to hear
Voinovich is simply saying the party is controlled by far right southern conservatives, who demand people up north throw away their right to vote according to their own state's concerns in order to adhere to far right conservative orthodoxy.
States rights being one of the many so-called principles conservatives throw overboard according to the issue- (e.g. free-markets, limited government) in order to march in lockstep.
Your comment doesn't make sense.
There are many different people with many different ways of looking at things in the north and in the south. Conservatives have a right to judge whether each individual candidate has ideas they agree with why are we branding people from a whole section of the country as unworthy of consideration. Sounds suspiciously like the MSM's efforts to segment, label and disqualify conservatives out of political contention in the future.
Exactly, the south is dominant because they have a deep bench.
Meanwhile northeast Republicans are getting skunked at the local level. They have become the Party of No. They position themselves as "not racist" or "not theocrats". Supposedly this distinguishes them from their southern counterparts. Voters need more than that.
I want a big tent. But the moderates want to preside over the national party before they win over their local constituents. That's completely backwards.
They are "no" party because no one covers their plans
MSM spends it's time doing Obama love-fests and trying to define the Repub.'s as crazy, racist, bible thumpers, etc. No way to get the affirmative message out.
Where are you Michael Steele? We need some press conferences with Repub. plans with charts a la Ross Perot. Surely people could come up with a way to get some airtime w/ things such as the amendment to make Congress use whatever public health option is passed. Anyone... Anyone.....
Being from Ohio...
Old George's comments pretty much define the state of the Republican party here. It wasn't that long ago we had Republicans in all statewide offices, both senators, and a majority in both statehouses. Now, the Gov, Lt. Gov, and all but the Treasurer are Democrats, the state House is in the hands of the Democrats, and one of the senators is a Democrat. Goerge will probably be replaced by a Democrat next year.
The issue is not that the party needs to move to the left. Instead the party needs to limit what it means to be a conservative. Limited government, tree trade, and freedom from government regulations work pretty well up here.
But we are uncomfortable with things like "Barak the magic Negro" and people like Jim DeMint of South Carolina saying that gays and unmarried pregnant women should be barred from teaching in the public schools. That's not the kind of accent that's going to turn things around in this state.