Rush Limbaugh

Right Wing Response: Obama’s “Change” Sounds Like Bush, Carter Repeats

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009
toon012009

Michael Ramirez cartoon for Jan. 20, 2009 at Investor's Business Daily

Obama’s in and he’s all about change and…copying Bush? John Hinderaker at Power Line blog notes that President Barack Obama’s inauguration speech, along with his national security appointments, smacks of predecessor W. and notes that even comedians are commenting on the similarities. It doesn’t speak well of liberals, he writes, that they actually seem to be hoping that he’s lying, that his actions will somehow contradict all the rhetoric. Below, even Jon Stewart of The Daily Show jabs at the incoming president through an eerie montage of speech snippets comparing the two presidents, though the left-leaning TV news-satire host waxes apologetic.

Clinton did, Kennedy didn’t, and Geithner shouldn’t. Hillary Clinton is the new Secretary of State, but a once-favored candidate to replace her as a Senator from New York, Caroline Kennedy, has bowed out. Jim Geraghty argues for National Review Online that her withdrawal is a good thing, and that the whole case in her favor seemed built upon her royal blood. Meanwhile, for the same outlet, Byron York tears into Timothy Geithner, Obama’s pick for treasury secretary whose confirmation has been stalled somewhat ironically over a failure to properly file and pay taxes, because the man wouldn’t ‘fess up in the Senate hearing. Regardless, York predicts Geithner will prevail because his Democratic allies, who lead the Finance Committee, are rushing the vote.

Obama spells setbacks for the pro-life movement. The new President has said he would sign into law the Freedom of Choice Act if it lands on his desk, and some analysts suggest the latest iterations of the bill would roll back many of the pro-life movement’s hard-fought gains—forty states restricting late-term abortions for instance. Michael J. New, writing for NRO suggests conservatives have been in this position before, under the Clinton Administration, and that the movement to ban or restrict abortions wasn’t stamped out then, so there is cause for hope. G. Tracy Mehan, III takes a slightly more practical view for The American Spectator: Obama would be well-advised not to risk losing his immense political capital when his main task is to deal with the economy.

Don’t you get it? Hamas doesn’t just want a separate Palestine, but wants the annihilation of Israel, writes former New York Times foreign correspondent Clifford D. May for NRO. Israel likely timed its recent attack on Gaza, where Hamas fighters have been in control since last year, to beat the inauguration of Barack Obama, May argues. That’s because Obama likely would have made ending the battle one of his top priorities. But Israel had to fight, May argues, and the war is far from over—just to keep things in perspective.

If Obama brings back Carterism, it won’t be good. Many commentators have compared President Obama’s foreign policy prescription to that of former President Jimmy Carter. Arthur Herman lays out a thorough explanation in Commentary magazine of how and why Carter’s policies didn’t work nearly as well as Reagan’s, Clinton’s, or even W’s. Then he worries in writing that Obama’s pledge for “aggressive diplomacy” is meaningless and that this new Carterism almost belittles America’s record for tough peacekeeping. Are we shying away from rather than donning our mantle as leader of the free world?

“I hope he fails,” Rush Limbaugh says of Obama, but don’t take it out of context. The conservative talk show host defended his statement here, noting that he would be proud to earn the headline “Limbaugh: I Hope Obama Fails” from the “Drive-By Media.” But it’s about liberal economic policies that have failed and will continue to fail, he notes, and haven’t the liberals, after all, been out to secure the failure of Bush’s policies? R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. over at The American Spectator, comes to his defense after multiple stories (and even a senator) have focused on the sensationalism of the comment rather than the content of the argument.

Colin Powell’s Endorsement: What It Means to a Young Black Repub

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

While former Secretary of State Colin Powell endorsed Barack Obama last week in a fairly straightforward (and diplomatic) manner, the reactions from the media and blogosphere have been not so subtle.

From Rush Limbaugh’s radio rant saying that Powell’s support was based on race, to political experts suggesting that his decision will undoubtedly sway the independent voters, it seems like the Republican’s mavericky endorsement means different things for different people.

For Charles Claudio Simpkins, a 23-year-old black Republican who supports John McCain, Powell’s support for Obama was a “very calculated move.” To the Harvard law student, it wasn’t just about the decision itself, it was about where and when he made it. Here’s what he had to say.

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How Fast the Tide Can Turn …

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

What a difference 72 hours can make. After The McCain campaign released a statement on Monday saying Sarah Palin’s daughter Bristol was five months pregnant, the press jumped, providing details on a story the public was hungry to read about. Even Labor Day couldn’t keep a story this big away. But now McCain staffers, conservative media outlets and other Republicans are turning against the press, claiming the “liberal media” are out to destroy Palin’s candidacy.

Democrats may have been more united behind their candidate than Republicans, despite the Clinton/Obama in-fighting, but Republicans can join together and start striking the media punching bag.

In tonight’s speeches, former presidential candidate Mike Huckabee thanked the “liberal media” for going after Palin and uniting the Republican base. Giuliani and Romney took their shots as well, stirring up the antiquated Conservative Napoleonic complex that the media is utterly dominated by people out to bring ruin to the Republican Party.

Yesterday, the McCain camp canceled a scheduled interview their candidate had on CNN’s Larry King Live after Campbell Brown pushed McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds to elaborate on some of Gov. Palin’s executive experience in an interview earlier in the day.

Former senator and presidential candidate Fred Thompson hammered home the notion during his speech in the Xcel Center. He said, “Some Washington pundits and media big shots are in a frenzy over the selection of a woman who has actually governed rather than just talked a good game on the Sunday talk shows and hit the Washington cocktail circuit.”

Conservative talk-show hosts like Rush Limbaugh followed. On his Wednesday-morning show, he accused the media – and the entire “Washington government machine” – of attacking Palin. “I sense a shift here, ladies and gentlemen, in the Drive-By Media and the way they’re going after Sarah Palin,” Limbaugh said. “I think they’re going to drop this business that she’s not experienced enough. I think they’re going to go after the fact she’s trailer trash.”

Senior McCain strategist Steve Schmidt released statements and gave interviews all day Wednesday, arguing that the press’s treatment of Sarah Palin needed to change. In an interview with the Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz, he claimed news outlets were “on a mission to destroy” Palin, and said the McCain camp was “under siege” from reporters.

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