House Republicans Elect Mike Johnson Speaker, Ending Weeks of Uncertainty

45,210 Views | 628 Replies | Last: 3 mo ago by Assassin
Osodecentx
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
Everyone knowsTrump won in 2020

I can't say that anyone can know that for certain....but its an open question given how close the vote was and how corrupt Philly, Atlanta, Detroit and other Democratic run cities can be.

Biden pulled out a very narrow win by 80k votes in Penn, 12k votes in Georgia, 155k in Michigan, 11k votes in Arizona, 20k votes in Wisconsin

The fact that these margins were so small, the urban Democratic run cities so corrupt, and the fact that they literally stopped the voting count (while Trump as winning) only to see his leads evaporate later....does cast a pale over the election.

Mark Twain asked if there had ever been a free and fair election in Philadelphia...and that was 100+ years ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election


You don't believe Trump won?
You're a RINO
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
Everyone knowsTrump won in 2020

I can't say that anyone can know that for certain....but its an open question given how close the vote was and how corrupt Philly, Atlanta, Detroit and other Democratic run cities can be.

Biden pulled out a very narrow win by 80k votes in Penn, 12k votes in Georgia, 155k in Michigan, 11k votes in Arizona, 20k votes in Wisconsin

The fact that these margins were so small, the urban Democratic run cities so corrupt, and the fact that they literally stopped the voting count (while Trump as winning) only to see his leads evaporate later....does cast a pale over the election.

Mark Twain asked if there had ever been a free and fair election in Philadelphia...and that was 100+ years ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election


You don't believe Trump won?
You're a RINO
I actually do think he won.

I just can't prove how they cheated him out of it. (I assume it had something to do with mass mail in balloting)

But at the end of the day you don't care if he was cheated or not by the powers that be...you are just glad he lost.
Osodecentx
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
Everyone knowsTrump won in 2020

I can't say that anyone can know that for certain....but its an open question given how close the vote was and how corrupt Philly, Atlanta, Detroit and other Democratic run cities can be.

Biden pulled out a very narrow win by 80k votes in Penn, 12k votes in Georgia, 155k in Michigan, 11k votes in Arizona, 20k votes in Wisconsin

The fact that these margins were so small, the urban Democratic run cities so corrupt, and the fact that they literally stopped the voting count (while Trump as winning) only to see his leads evaporate later....does cast a pale over the election.

Mark Twain asked if there had ever been a free and fair election in Philadelphia...and that was 100+ years ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election


You don't believe Trump won?
You're a RINO
I actually do think he won.

I just can't prove how they cheated him out of it. (I assume it had something to do with mass mail in balloting)

But at the end of the day you don't care if he was cheated or not by the powers that be...you are just glad he lost.


I voted for him in 2020. He lost

I care about the rule of law, not the rule of what you think
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
Everyone knowsTrump won in 2020

I can't say that anyone can know that for certain....but its an open question given how close the vote was and how corrupt Philly, Atlanta, Detroit and other Democratic run cities can be.

Biden pulled out a very narrow win by 80k votes in Penn, 12k votes in Georgia, 155k in Michigan, 11k votes in Arizona, 20k votes in Wisconsin

The fact that these margins were so small, the urban Democratic run cities so corrupt, and the fact that they literally stopped the voting count (while Trump as winning) only to see his leads evaporate later....does cast a pale over the election.

Mark Twain asked if there had ever been a free and fair election in Philadelphia...and that was 100+ years ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election


You don't believe Trump won?
You're a RINO
I actually do think he won.

I just can't prove how they cheated him out of it. (I assume it had something to do with mass mail in balloting)

But at the end of the day you don't care if he was cheated or not by the powers that be...you are just glad he lost.


I care about the rule of law...

If you did you would be madder about the 6 months of BLM riots instead of a few hour minor dust up at the Capitol.

You would also have been advocating for SCOTUS to take up the election case and do a through investigation into our "sacred democracy" to make sure ballot stuffing in certain 90% liberal dominated cities are not making a mockery of our elections.

As it is there will always be a big question mark on the 2020 election.

[Justice Clarence Thomas called the cases an "ideal opportunity" to address an important question whether state lawmakers or state courts get the last word about the manner in which federal elections are carried out. And he called it "befuddling" and "inexplicable" that his colleagues were declining to weigh in.
"We failed to settle this dispute before the election, and thus provide clear rules. Now we again fail to provide clear rules for future elections. The decision to leave election law hidden beneath a shroud of doubt is baffling. By doing nothing, we invite further confusion and erosion of voter confidence," he wrote.

Thomas cited the expansion of mail-in voting as another reason to take the case and said "fraud is more prevalent with mail-in ballot]
Osodecentx
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
Everyone knowsTrump won in 2020

I can't say that anyone can know that for certain....but its an open question given how close the vote was and how corrupt Philly, Atlanta, Detroit and other Democratic run cities can be.

Biden pulled out a very narrow win by 80k votes in Penn, 12k votes in Georgia, 155k in Michigan, 11k votes in Arizona, 20k votes in Wisconsin

The fact that these margins were so small, the urban Democratic run cities so corrupt, and the fact that they literally stopped the voting count (while Trump as winning) only to see his leads evaporate later....does cast a pale over the election.

Mark Twain asked if there had ever been a free and fair election in Philadelphia...and that was 100+ years ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election


You don't believe Trump won?
You're a RINO
I actually do think he won.

I just can't prove how they cheated him out of it. (I assume it had something to do with mass mail in balloting)

But at the end of the day you don't care if he was cheated or not by the powers that be...you are just glad he lost.


I care about the rule of law...

If you did you would be madder about the 6 months of BLM riots instead of a few hour minor dust up at the Capitol. I was

You would also have been advocating for SCOTUS to take up the election case and do a through investigation into our "sacred democracy" to make sure ballot stuffing in certain 90% liberal dominated cities are not making a mockery of our elections. No case deserved to be taken up.

As it is there will always be a big question mark on the 2020 election. No, there isn't

[Justice Clarence Thomas called the cases an "ideal opportunity" to address an important question whether state lawmakers or state courts get the last word about the manner in which federal elections are carried out. And he called it "befuddling" and "inexplicable" that his colleagues were declining to weigh in.
"We failed to settle this dispute before the election, and thus provide clear rules. Now we again fail to provide clear rules for future elections. The decision to leave election law hidden beneath a shroud of doubt is baffling. By doing nothing, we invite further confusion and erosion of voter confidence," he wrote.

Thomas cited the expansion of mail-in voting as another reason to take the case and said "fraud is more prevalent with mail-in ballot]

I respect Thomas
Try again
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
Everyone knowsTrump won in 2020

I can't say that anyone can know that for certain....but its an open question given how close the vote was and how corrupt Philly, Atlanta, Detroit and other Democratic run cities can be.

Biden pulled out a very narrow win by 80k votes in Penn, 12k votes in Georgia, 155k in Michigan, 11k votes in Arizona, 20k votes in Wisconsin

The fact that these margins were so small, the urban Democratic run cities so corrupt, and the fact that they literally stopped the voting count (while Trump as winning) only to see his leads evaporate later....does cast a pale over the election.

Mark Twain asked if there had ever been a free and fair election in Philadelphia...and that was 100+ years ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election


You don't believe Trump won?
You're a RINO
I actually do think he won.

I just can't prove how they cheated him out of it. (I assume it had something to do with mass mail in balloting)

But at the end of the day you don't care if he was cheated or not by the powers that be...you are just glad he lost.


I care about the rule of law...

If you did you would be madder about the 6 months of BLM riots instead of a few hour minor dust up at the Capitol. I was

You would also have been advocating for SCOTUS to take up the election case and do a through investigation into our "sacred democracy" to make sure ballot stuffing in certain 90% liberal dominated cities are not making a mockery of our elections. No case deserved to be taken up.

As it is there will always be a big question mark on the 2020 election. No, there isn't

[Justice Clarence Thomas called the cases an "ideal opportunity" to address an important question whether state lawmakers or state courts get the last word about the manner in which federal elections are carried out. And he called it "befuddling" and "inexplicable" that his colleagues were declining to weigh in.
"We failed to settle this dispute before the election, and thus provide clear rules. Now we again fail to provide clear rules for future elections. The decision to leave election law hidden beneath a shroud of doubt is baffling. By doing nothing, we invite further confusion and erosion of voter confidence," he wrote.

Thomas cited the expansion of mail-in voting as another reason to take the case and said "fraud is more prevalent with mail-in ballot]

I respect Thomas
Try again



Osodecentx
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
Everyone knowsTrump won in 2020

I can't say that anyone can know that for certain....but its an open question given how close the vote was and how corrupt Philly, Atlanta, Detroit and other Democratic run cities can be.

Biden pulled out a very narrow win by 80k votes in Penn, 12k votes in Georgia, 155k in Michigan, 11k votes in Arizona, 20k votes in Wisconsin

The fact that these margins were so small, the urban Democratic run cities so corrupt, and the fact that they literally stopped the voting count (while Trump as winning) only to see his leads evaporate later....does cast a pale over the election.

Mark Twain asked if there had ever been a free and fair election in Philadelphia...and that was 100+ years ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election


You don't believe Trump won?
You're a RINO
I actually do think he won.

I just can't prove how they cheated him out of it. (I assume it had something to do with mass mail in balloting)

But at the end of the day you don't care if he was cheated or not by the powers that be...you are just glad he lost.


I care about the rule of law...

If you did you would be madder about the 6 months of BLM riots instead of a few hour minor dust up at the Capitol. I was

You would also have been advocating for SCOTUS to take up the election case and do a through investigation into our "sacred democracy" to make sure ballot stuffing in certain 90% liberal dominated cities are not making a mockery of our elections. No case deserved to be taken up.

As it is there will always be a big question mark on the 2020 election. No, there isn't

[Justice Clarence Thomas called the cases an "ideal opportunity" to address an important question whether state lawmakers or state courts get the last word about the manner in which federal elections are carried out. And he called it "befuddling" and "inexplicable" that his colleagues were declining to weigh in.
"We failed to settle this dispute before the election, and thus provide clear rules. Now we again fail to provide clear rules for future elections. The decision to leave election law hidden beneath a shroud of doubt is baffling. By doing nothing, we invite further confusion and erosion of voter confidence," he wrote.

Thomas cited the expansion of mail-in voting as another reason to take the case and said "fraud is more prevalent with mail-in ballot]

I respect Thomas
Try again






Oh, therefore Trump won in 2020?
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
Everyone knowsTrump won in 2020

I can't say that anyone can know that for certain....but its an open question given how close the vote was and how corrupt Philly, Atlanta, Detroit and other Democratic run cities can be.

Biden pulled out a very narrow win by 80k votes in Penn, 12k votes in Georgia, 155k in Michigan, 11k votes in Arizona, 20k votes in Wisconsin

The fact that these margins were so small, the urban Democratic run cities so corrupt, and the fact that they literally stopped the voting count (while Trump as winning) only to see his leads evaporate later....does cast a pale over the election.

Mark Twain asked if there had ever been a free and fair election in Philadelphia...and that was 100+ years ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election


You don't believe Trump won?
You're a RINO
I actually do think he won.

I just can't prove how they cheated him out of it. (I assume it had something to do with mass mail in balloting)

But at the end of the day you don't care if he was cheated or not by the powers that be...you are just glad he lost.


I care about the rule of law...

If you did you would be madder about the 6 months of BLM riots instead of a few hour minor dust up at the Capitol. I was

You would also have been advocating for SCOTUS to take up the election case and do a through investigation into our "sacred democracy" to make sure ballot stuffing in certain 90% liberal dominated cities are not making a mockery of our elections. No case deserved to be taken up.

As it is there will always be a big question mark on the 2020 election. No, there isn't

[Justice Clarence Thomas called the cases an "ideal opportunity" to address an important question whether state lawmakers or state courts get the last word about the manner in which federal elections are carried out. And he called it "befuddling" and "inexplicable" that his colleagues were declining to weigh in.
"We failed to settle this dispute before the election, and thus provide clear rules. Now we again fail to provide clear rules for future elections. The decision to leave election law hidden beneath a shroud of doubt is baffling. By doing nothing, we invite further confusion and erosion of voter confidence," he wrote.

Thomas cited the expansion of mail-in voting as another reason to take the case and said "fraud is more prevalent with mail-in ballot]

I respect Thomas
Try again






Oh, therefore Trump won in 2020?


He certainly might have!

We will never really know because of how corrupt our system has become
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
FIFY
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?

FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.






Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives.

Bingo

Its always the Populist Conservatives who are the problem for wanting the GOP to do something for their voters.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives.

Bingo

Its always the Populist Conservatives who are the problem for wanting the GOP to do something for their voters.
It truly is amazing to see the entitlement of the GOP moderates at play, isn't it. The base is not anything to be taken seriously, only for granted.
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker.

But Johnson was the more MAGA candidate

He was put in because McCarthy refused to follow up on his promises (swampy guy)

The populist conservatives have a right to be upset that Johnson is now doing the same thing.

And that is not even getting into all the Republicans who run as "MAGA conservatives" and then vote like Mitt Romney or Liz Cheney
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives.

Bingo

Its always the Populist Conservatives who are the problem for wanting the GOP to do something for their voters.
It truly is amazing to see the entitlement of the GOP moderates at play, isn't it. The base is not anything to be taken seriously, only for granted.

Just a group of plebs to be milked for their votes
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker.

But Johnson was the more MAGA candidate

He was put in because McCarthy refused to follow up on his promises (swampy guy)

The populist conservatives have a right to be upset that Johnson is now doing the same thing.

And that is not even getting into all the Republicans who run as "MAGA conservatives" and then vote like Mitt Romney or Liz Cheney
Why do you think you guys keep getting so pissed at Johnson? Yes, he comes from a MAGA background, but was allowed to hold Speaker because he is a smart politician and will not go against the Base. Look at the votes and legislation getting through the House, moderate stuff that is infuriating you and the MTG Contingent.

If MTG, MAGA and the "you's" of the world were the Base, would Johnson be able to get those 4 bills through? Of course not. He got them through because he is playng to the Base and not the MTG contingent.

The far right is mistaking voting for Trump against Biden as signing on to MAGA's/MTG's platform. The two are not connected. Trump is better than Biden, but MTG's platform is not better than the Moderate one you are seeing play out. Johnson is smart, he has now moved from MAGA to centrist and increased his support, to even include Dems. Watch out for Johnson in 28, he will have a bi-Party following...
Osodecentx
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives.

Bingo

Its always the Populist Conservatives who are the problem for wanting the GOP to do something for their voters.
I think the RWNJ think the lie will become true if they repeat often enough.
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives.

Bingo

Its always the Populist Conservatives who are the problem for wanting the GOP to do something for their voters.
I think the RWNJ think the lie will become true if they repeat often enough.
If they were the Base like they think, Johnson would not be moving center and passing legislation that is infuriating the RW. As Whiterock said, NEVER go against your Base. You think Johnson doesn't know that.

Based on what I am seeing playout, GOP will elect Trump and box him in like they did last time. It will be very similar to 2016-19, which I am good. It worked. Economy was up, no wars, prision reform, low taxes, Supreme Court. Trump if he is smart will follow similar model and not let the Nut Jobs Bannon, Flynn, and the others anywhere near power. Johnson and hopefully a McConnell clone will ride shot gun on Trump's Presidency.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives.

Bingo

Its always the Populist Conservatives who are the problem for wanting the GOP to do something for their voters.
I think the RWNJ think the lie will become true if they repeat often enough.
If they were the Base like they think, Johnson would not be moving center and passing legislation that is infuriating the RW. As Whiterock said, NEVER go against your Base. You think Johnson doesn't know that.

Based on what I am seeing playout, GOP will elect Trump and box him in like they did last time. It will be very similar to 2016-19, which I am good. It worked. Economy was up, no wars, prision reform, low taxes, Supreme Court. Trump if he is smart will follow similar model and not let the Nut Jobs Bannon, Flynn, and the others anywhere near power. Johnson and hopefully a McConnell clone will ride shot gun on Trump's Presidency.

I agree with your assessment of another possible Trump term

Better than Biden...the GOP leadership will let him put in some good judges..but won't let him move against the millions of 3rd worlders or do much on the cultural issues.

But I disagree that MAGA types are not the base...they are of course a big part of the base if we are being honest.

Almost half the party falls into the MAGA category

[The most deeply conservative group in the political typology Faith and Flag Conservatives make up 23% of Republicans..Conservative across the board, they are one of the most politically engaged typology groups. Fully 88% of Faith and Flag Conservatives say their political views are conservative, including 35% who describe themselves as "very conservative." They are overwhelmingly White and Christian and stand out for their views on the role of religion in public life. They are among Donald Trump's strongest supporters both while he was in office and today

Populist Right 23% of Republicans and Republican leaners are one of the two largest groups in the GOP coalition, along with Faith and Flag Conservatives. They also are deeply conservative and reliably vote Republican. Yet they differ from Committed Conservative on two key dimensions: They hold hard-line immigration views and are highly critical of the economic system]

https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/11/09/the-republican-coalition/

The more establishment side of the party (15%) has an outsized impact on the direction the party takes in Congress. This is the pro-war, pro-immigration, pro-tax cut side of the party.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate.

Extremely interesting.

I remember how Stefanik has been floating more support for LGBTQ stuff in the GOP and she keeps moving up the leadership ladder.

While the average GOP voter is sick to death of the LGBTQ nonsense and radicalism.

"Stefanik voted yes on the Equality Act in 2019...U.S. Rep. Elise Stefanik was one of a handful of Republicans to vote in favor of an gay, lesbian and transgender rights bill in 2019, and as recently as Tuesday she told the media she was for the measure again...Stefanik was one of eight Republicans who voted yes on the bill in 2019, including Katko, Reed, Fitzpatrick as well as Susan Brooks of Indiana, Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida, Will Hurd of Texas, and Greg Walden of Oregon"

The "Equality Act" was an especially radical and horrible piece of legislation
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.


They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes. )

whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Oh. If your theory is correct, about moderation being the sine qua non for effective leadership, then we should see Democrat leaders with considerably more conservative voting records than their "base." Jeffries should be a mirror image of Johnson's score… say 40-ish. Right?

Well, here's reality.




FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes.




This is a great example. Look at what DeSantis did as Gov and the bills he introduced, how he voted, compared to MTG.

MTG made tv splash bills with no further action. DeSantis was involved in real legislation (probably because he actually understood it). Look at his leadership score to go with his conservative ranking. MTG is a conservative AOC.

You tell me RDS represents the base, I look at his record and say "yeah, I get it.". MTG? I am not sure she knows what it means, she like Broebert seem more interested in hype, not a platform. Just look at her legislation, it is mostly bringing up censure vs the squad. Reality TV *****
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes.




This is a great example. Look at what DeSantis did as Gov and the bills he introduced, how he voted, compared to MTG.

MTG made tv splash bills with no further action. DeSantis was involved in real legislation (probably because he actually understood it). Look at his leadership score to go with his conservative ranking. MTG is a conservative AOC.



Many of DeSantis bills were culture war fodder (stripping Disney of its plush tax status and rolling back DEI and LGTBQ in the Florida Schools)...and they were of course great.

The difference is that DeSantis had an overwhelming GOP majority in the Florida legislature...and a real Populist-Conservative and Flag & Faith conservatives GOP at that...not Mitt Romney/Liz Cheney types

Why do you think the establishment GOP and Corporate Liberal Media were freaking about about "Fascist Florida" under DeSantis?

https://floridaphoenix.com/2022/11/22/fl-legislatures-gop-supermajority-to-set-the-stage-for-next-two-years-of-lawmaking/

[The Florida Legislature convenes Tuesday to reorganize itself following elections that produced supermajorities for the Republican Party in both chambers.]
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes.




This is a great example. Look at what DeSantis did as Gov and the bills he introduced, how he voted, compared to MTG.

MTG made tv splash bills with no further action. DeSantis was involved in real legislation (probably because he actually understood it). Look at his leadership score to go with his conservative ranking. MTG is a conservative AOC.



Many of DeSantis bills were culture war fodder (stripping Disney of its plush tax status and rolling back DEI and LGTBQ in the Florida Schools)...and they were of course great.

The difference is that DeSantis had an overwhelming GOP majority in the Florida legislature...and a real Populist-Conservative and Flag & Faith conservatives GOP at that...not Mitt Romney/Liz Cheney types

Why do you think the establishment GOP and Corporate Liberal Media were freaking about about "Fascist Florida" under DeSantis?

https://floridaphoenix.com/2022/11/22/fl-legislatures-gop-supermajority-to-set-the-stage-for-next-two-years-of-lawmaking/

[The Florida Legislature convenes Tuesday to reorganize itself following elections that produced supermajorities for the Republican Party in both chambers.]


A lot of that is just the way Florida is as always been. Read our State Constitution, Florida is among the most property rights, gun owning and conservative states. We had some Dem Govs, but FL has always been hard core property rights.

DeSantis was not even supposed to have a chance when Scott left. He was a complete Dark Horse to win.

The Disney issue has been brewing for decades. Disney was its own Govt through Reedy Creek. Under Walt and the Disney family that was not an issue. Once they went full out Corporate. It changed. Remember Disney is in entertainment, they get their talent from NY, CA and dance programs. They have a labor pipeline that they have to keep open. If you noticed it has gone quiet, DeSantis will win on the law. Disney made their stand, now time to play nice. Both will come to resolution quietly for the good of the State.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes.




This is a great example. Look at what DeSantis did as Gov and the bills he introduced, how he voted, compared to MTG.

MTG made tv splash bills with no further action. DeSantis was involved in real legislation (probably because he actually understood it). Look at his leadership score to go with his conservative ranking. MTG is a conservative AOC.



Many of DeSantis bills were culture war fodder (stripping Disney of its plush tax status and rolling back DEI and LGTBQ in the Florida Schools)...and they were of course great.

The difference is that DeSantis had an overwhelming GOP majority in the Florida legislature...and a real Populist-Conservative and Flag & Faith conservatives GOP at that...not Mitt Romney/Liz Cheney types

Why do you think the establishment GOP and Corporate Liberal Media were freaking about about "Fascist Florida" under DeSantis?

https://floridaphoenix.com/2022/11/22/fl-legislatures-gop-supermajority-to-set-the-stage-for-next-two-years-of-lawmaking/

[The Florida Legislature convenes Tuesday to reorganize itself following elections that produced supermajorities for the Republican Party in both chambers.]


A lot of that is just the way Florida is as always been. Read our State Constitution, Florida is among the most property rights, gun owning and conservative states. We had some Dem Govs, but FL has always been hard core property rights.

DeSantis was not even supposed to have a chance when Scott left. He was a complete Dark Horse to win.

The Disney issue has been brewing for decades. Disney was its own Govt through Reedy Creek. Under Walt and the Disney family that was not an issue. Once they went full out Corporate. It changed. Remember Disney is in entertainment, they get their talent from NY, CA and dance programs. They have a labor pipeline that they have to keep open. If you noticed it has gone quiet, DeSantis will win on the law. Disney made their stand, now time to play nice. Both will come to resolution quietly for the good of the State.

So we have established that Florida is more conservative and that DeSantis was able to do more there given the local politics.

How does that make MTG bad for trying to push DC in a more conservative direction?
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

FLBear5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes.




This is a great example. Look at what DeSantis did as Gov and the bills he introduced, how he voted, compared to MTG.

MTG made tv splash bills with no further action. DeSantis was involved in real legislation (probably because he actually understood it). Look at his leadership score to go with his conservative ranking. MTG is a conservative AOC.



Many of DeSantis bills were culture war fodder (stripping Disney of its plush tax status and rolling back DEI and LGTBQ in the Florida Schools)...and they were of course great.

The difference is that DeSantis had an overwhelming GOP majority in the Florida legislature...and a real Populist-Conservative and Flag & Faith conservatives GOP at that...not Mitt Romney/Liz Cheney types

Why do you think the establishment GOP and Corporate Liberal Media were freaking about about "Fascist Florida" under DeSantis?

https://floridaphoenix.com/2022/11/22/fl-legislatures-gop-supermajority-to-set-the-stage-for-next-two-years-of-lawmaking/

[The Florida Legislature convenes Tuesday to reorganize itself following elections that produced supermajorities for the Republican Party in both chambers.]


A lot of that is just the way Florida is as always been. Read our State Constitution, Florida is among the most property rights, gun owning and conservative states. We had some Dem Govs, but FL has always been hard core property rights.

DeSantis was not even supposed to have a chance when Scott left. He was a complete Dark Horse to win.

The Disney issue has been brewing for decades. Disney was its own Govt through Reedy Creek. Under Walt and the Disney family that was not an issue. Once they went full out Corporate. It changed. Remember Disney is in entertainment, they get their talent from NY, CA and dance programs. They have a labor pipeline that they have to keep open. If you noticed it has gone quiet, DeSantis will win on the law. Disney made their stand, now time to play nice. Both will come to resolution quietly for the good of the State.

So we have established that Florida is more conservative and that DeSantis was able to do more there given the local politics.

How does that make MTG bad for trying to push DC in a more conservative direction?


Because she isn't trying to accomplish any agenda, especially not the GOP, Johnson's or Trump's. Look at what she brings forward:

Remove Johnson - against Trump's wishes
Fake eye lashes
Censures against the squad
Impeach Biden
Rittenhower act
Abolish ATF act
Fire Fauci

Geez, it is a list of whatever is on Fox Acts.
She had two on protecting mothers, I give her credit for those. They looked like real legislation when she first got there. Now, she is a clown. No more effective than AOC, Talib, Broebert, Vance. The more I look into it, the more I think Gaetz is using her. Destroying her rep, while he plays in the shadows.

It is a shame it looked like her first two Pieces were legit, real work. Not reality TV.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes.




This is a great example. Look at what DeSantis did as Gov and the bills he introduced, how he voted, compared to MTG.

MTG made tv splash bills with no further action. DeSantis was involved in real legislation (probably because he actually understood it). Look at his leadership score to go with his conservative ranking. MTG is a conservative AOC.

You tell me RDS represents the base, I look at his record and say "yeah, I get it.". MTG? I am not sure she knows what it means, she like Broebert seem more interested in hype, not a platform. Just look at her legislation, it is mostly bringing up censure vs the squad. Reality TV *****
apples & oranges. Governors don't introduce or pass bills. They sign them. But when we look apples & apples, what each of them did in Congress, we see comparable records.

Number of bills introduced by RDS in his first Congress? 11
Number of bills introduced by MTG in her first Congress? 27
Number of bills passed by RDS in his first Congress? 0
Number of bills passed by MTG in her first Congress? 0

You continue to conflate substance and style. Substantively - policy, voting records, legislative accomplishments, policy positions - RS and MTG are two peas in a pod. Both of them members of the Freedom Caucus. Stylistically, she was far less polished. Notably, MTG was kicked out of the FC for supporting fmr speaker McCarthy (and, specifically, spats with FC members over that issue).

You can knock yourself out researching, but you won't find a ton of difference between the two in Congress on anything other than working with fellow Freedom Caucus members.
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members

Again, the record is clear - MTG is well within the Republican mainstream on policy matters. She is also well within the Republican mainstream on frustration with Republican Congressional leadership. The only area where she's remarkable is in style....HOW she chooses to fight for what she believes in. And a large percentage of Republicans LIKE the way she fights. I find it amusing but not infuriating. Good leadership will find a way to exploit what she does for advantage.

But for some Republicans, the style is all that matters, and none moreso than the Moderates.......

FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes.




This is a great example. Look at what DeSantis did as Gov and the bills he introduced, how he voted, compared to MTG.

MTG made tv splash bills with no further action. DeSantis was involved in real legislation (probably because he actually understood it). Look at his leadership score to go with his conservative ranking. MTG is a conservative AOC.

You tell me RDS represents the base, I look at his record and say "yeah, I get it.". MTG? I am not sure she knows what it means, she like Broebert seem more interested in hype, not a platform. Just look at her legislation, it is mostly bringing up censure vs the squad. Reality TV *****
apples & oranges. Governors don't introduce or pass bills. They sign them. But when we look apples & apples, what each of them did in Congress, we see comparable records.

Number of bills introduced by RDS in his first Congress? 11
Number of bills introduced by MTG in her first Congress? 27
Number of bills passed by RDS in his first Congress? 0
Number of bills passed by MTG in her first Congress? 0

You continue to conflate substance and style. Substantively - policy, voting records, legislative accomplishments, policy positions - RS and MTG are two peas in a pod. Both of them members of the Freedom Caucus. Stylistically, she was far less polished. Notably, MTG was kicked out of the FC for supporting fmr speaker McCarthy (and, specifically, spats with FC members over that issue).

You can knock yourself out researching, but you won't find a ton of difference between the two in Congress on anything other than working with fellow Freedom Caucus members.
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members

Again, the record is clear - MTG is well within the Republican mainstream on policy matters. She is also well within the Republican mainstream on frustration with Republican Congressional leadership. The only area where she's remarkable is in style....HOW she chooses to fight for what she believes in. And a large percentage of Republicans LIKE the way she fights. I find it amusing but not infuriating. Good leadership will find a way to exploit what she does for advantage.

But for some Republicans, the style is all that matters, and none moreso than the Moderates.......




We don't agree here. I think if you polled Republicans you would not get MTG as the poster child for the base. Just one persons opinion.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes.




This is a great example. Look at what DeSantis did as Gov and the bills he introduced, how he voted, compared to MTG.

MTG made tv splash bills with no further action. DeSantis was involved in real legislation (probably because he actually understood it). Look at his leadership score to go with his conservative ranking. MTG is a conservative AOC.

You tell me RDS represents the base, I look at his record and say "yeah, I get it.". MTG? I am not sure she knows what it means, she like Broebert seem more interested in hype, not a platform. Just look at her legislation, it is mostly bringing up censure vs the squad. Reality TV *****
apples & oranges. Governors don't introduce or pass bills. They sign them. But when we look apples & apples, what each of them did in Congress, we see comparable records.

Number of bills introduced by RDS in his first Congress? 11
Number of bills introduced by MTG in her first Congress? 27
Number of bills passed by RDS in his first Congress? 0
Number of bills passed by MTG in her first Congress? 0

You continue to conflate substance and style. Substantively - policy, voting records, legislative accomplishments, policy positions - RS and MTG are two peas in a pod. Both of them members of the Freedom Caucus. Stylistically, she was far less polished. Notably, MTG was kicked out of the FC for supporting fmr speaker McCarthy (and, specifically, spats with FC members over that issue).

You can knock yourself out researching, but you won't find a ton of difference between the two in Congress on anything other than working with fellow Freedom Caucus members.
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members

Again, the record is clear - MTG is well within the Republican mainstream on policy matters. She is also well within the Republican mainstream on frustration with Republican Congressional leadership. The only area where she's remarkable is in style....HOW she chooses to fight for what she believes in. And a large percentage of Republicans LIKE the way she fights. I find it amusing but not infuriating. Good leadership will find a way to exploit what she does for advantage.

But for some Republicans, the style is all that matters, and none moreso than the Moderates.......




We don't agree here. I think if you polled Republicans you would not get MTG as the poster child for the base. Just one persons opinion.
LOL. I think you are implicitly agreeing with me here. Her STYLE is one that appeals to some and not others. But her voting record is one that a vast majority of Republicans would be proud of, exactly halfway between a perfect grade and a failing grade from the most mainstream part of the Conservative movement - The Heritage Foundation.

What's so amusing, though, is that moderates can only see the style. The style is all that matters. Over and over and over again I've documented that her policy positions are indistinguishable from a conservative you admire. But you simply cannot get past the bombast. I mean, its not like there isn't a time and place for some bombast in politics. Bombast does shape and move opinion in one's direction from time to time. In some ways, her bombast has made her arguably more effective than RDS was - alerting the conservative base to bills moving thru congress, organizing popular opposition to them, etc..... She does not care what you or anyone else thinks about her. She is totally focused on the mission. Too much so sometimes, yep. But there's a lot of conventional wisdoms along the lines of "if you don't lose a few lures, you aren't casting to the right spots....."

A clear-headed conservative leader would appreciate that he/she has a few members willing to break eggs, and know how/when to employ them to good effect. Breaking eggs, of course, is necessary to make omelets.
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Osodecentx said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

That's a lot of fallacies to pack into a single post.

Do you think some of those bills were popular with the base of the party? That maybe they got drowned in swampishness, like the effort to tie border funding to funding for Israel and Ukraine?

The caucus and the base are not synonymous......

You just don't like her style. But an enormous swathe of the base does, because they are highly unhappy with the way business is being conducted. As long as a third or more of the GOP base is unhappy with the way a GOP congress operates, there will be loud voices pandering to it. That's politics. You either do what your base wants you to do, or you will hear about it. You are so tolerant of dissonance on other dynamics. Why is this one so hard for you to accept.

Man, I'm in disagreement with her on Ukraine funding. But I can see that my views are losing the argument and that I'm in a minority within the party, that HER views are more reflective of party opinion than mine.


She is not an effective lawmaker, she has done nothing but throw moltovs since being there. She has no legislation and just got smacked down by both the Congress and Trump for her Johnson debacle. She may represent an extreme portion of the GOP but. she has not forwarded anything accept win a few extremist fans like yourself and some others. Don't tell me she represents the Base because you like her, similarly don't tell me she is the Whip. She isnt. If she represented the base, she would be in a leadership role and have support. Not just the gang of 8.
Bad argument. Most members of House and Senate are not lawmakers. Just do the math. In any given session, there are 600-1200 bills passed. That works out to about 1-2 bills per session, per member. In reality, two thirds of reps get no legislation passed. Lots of factors in that beyond ability (interests, constituency, seniority, committee chairmanship power, affiliated with party in/out of power, etc.....). Data from the 117th:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/report-cards/2022/house/bills-enacted-ti
(note disclaimer in orange box).

152 reps = 0 bills
115 reps = 1 bill
83 reps = 2 bills
42 = 3
17 = 4
10 = 5
7 = 6
3 = 7
2 = 8
3 = 9
1 = 11
1 = 13

Debate on the bills is as important as the drafting of them, and on that score, she is quite effective. She focuses attention on legislation of interest to most Republicans. And on that score, her views on most issues are squarely in the mainstream of the GOP, majoritarian stuff. It's her style you don't like. But an awful lot of other people do. Cheerleading for/against legislation is an important part of the job, and she's very good at it for her constituencies.

That part in bold is really silly. The fundamental dynamic we're talking about is that GOP leadership has traditionally NOT represented well the views of the base.....that the reason we have the Freedom Caucus in the first place- to hold moderate leadership accountable for not pushing hard enough on the platform agenda. And then there's just your lack of understanding of how the House works. Leadership traditionally goes to reps who raise the most money. There are big chalkboards up 24/7, real-time standings on fundraising leaders. Relatively few districts have enough fundraising base to support it's own congressional election. So that fundraising inevitably comes from places like mega-donors, industry lobbyists, interest PACs across the spectrum, etc.... Very hard to make leadership with small donors from the base. You have to take your campaign nationwide and make news breaking glass. To make it to leadership, you have to take the swampy route....raising from all the special interest PACs, most of which are not part of the conservative movement.

Dude, if we had conservative legislation actually getting passed, there'd be no oxygen for a Freedom Caucus.

Tell you what, you are right. MTG is the Base. She is a stellar Congresswoman. Her positions will save the Nation. She is the Whip and her job is not to move Legislation or create laws. Ok? You are right. You convinced me. Long Live MTG...
Undoubtedly the leader of the GOP congressional delegation and she represents the majority of the Republican Party under Trump.
We are good. You only want to hear how right you are. So, you are right. If you are going to defend MTG as a good, responsible and sane Legislature than you are no better than the Dems pushing the Squad. There is no need to talk. That says it all. You are MAGA through and through and really don't want to discuss positions or the total Congress.
I don't know, Dems are pretty effective in getting their agenda passed into law despite having a lot more and crazier MTG types. They have a 1-seat majority in the Senate and get everything they want enacted into law. No theatrics. We have a 4 seat majority in the House and, well.......

Dems know how to triangulate. The GOP can't get there because they are offended by the very people they should be using for triangulation.

Has it occurred to you that a pretty conservative speaker with a razor thin majority might appreciate the fact that someone else is bringing heat on the moderates?




If they were working on tandem to get an agenda delivered? Yes, I agree would be good. But MTG is attacking Johnson and made a move for removal, requiring Dems to step in. Weakening the Speaker, not the move of a organized move. I actually would be thankful for SOME type of coordinated strategy, even if it failed. It would show some forethought to accomplishing an agenda. Right now, too splintered to get anything done.

Hell, have a retreat and create a strategy on how all fractions can work to deliver something. Pick, I don't care, border, budget, energy, Ukraine, Israel, taxes... I want to see some organized, coordinated, thought process.
That's what a caucus is....a retreat to discuss stuff.

REPEATEDLY, you absolve the moderates from any responsibility for the division. It is the moderates who always balk at voting for the platform agenda. That forces the Speaker to move to center and then start whipping the conservatives. Then, predictably, the conservatives start to squawk. You should not have to whip your base. You should have to whip your center. If you're always whipping your base, you're not pushing the platform agenda - which is the whole reason parties have primary elections = to elect representatives who will enact the platform into law.

Every time MTG threatens to remove him, she strengthens his hand with the moderates. It allows him to say to them "hey guys, I need some room here,....remember how it went last time? You could end up with a speaker more conservative than me." And this speaker appears to be doing exactly that. The previous one sure didn't.

GOP has a long tradition of electing leadership from blue/swing districts/states, the theory being that moderate leadership would extend appeal in swing districts. All it did, though, was give leadership positions to people whose worldview was that the GOP should always hide its conservatism in order to survive. Dems do not do that. Dems elect leadership from hard blue states/districts. Pelosi? San Francisco liberal. Jeffries? Member of the Democrat Progressive Caucus (the functional equivalent of the GOP Freedom Caucus).

Fact - MTG is no further right than Jeffries is left.
Yet you only want to beat up on MTG and don't have syllable of complaint about anybody on their side.







There you go again. MTG IS NOT THE BASE, she is the fringe Right. Both her a Gaetz's actions of the last 6 months have shown they are not the base. If they were the Base, Johnson would not be Speaker. Gaetz would not have needed a "morphed" rule to remove McCarthy (which he struggled to get done).

Just because you and two or three posters on here like MTG and the Fringe Right message doesn't make them the Base. Look at the recent votes, they are not the votes of a Matt Gaetz/MTG base. Johnson has a much better grasp of the Base than MTG.

Don't mistake a fluke of a messed up election versus the most progressive President ever, as determining the Base. Voting for Trump does not make MAGA the Base. Look at the votes, that is a better indication of the Base, much more Moderate GOP than the 8-15 MAGA squeeky wheel Reps.
nope. She's right in the middle bubble of the conservative base.
https://heritageaction.com/scorecard/members
She's not the most conservative. a 60% score is passing, on the Heritage Action scale. Half the caucus has a score of 75 or higher. She's at 87. For comparison, Jeff Van Drew is at 92 (he's the New Jersey Democrat congressman who switched parties). Jim Jordan is at 85. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is 79. Cathy McMorriss Rogers, former chair of the House GOP Conference who gave the rebuttal to one of Obama's SOTU speeches = 73. Elise Stefanik = 59 (failing grade). Steve Scalise = 54. Mike Johnson = 52. Michael McCaul 49.

Notice the trend.....as one moves up in seniority/leadership, one tends to get more moderate. Not always, but it is a trend. So it should be no surprise that the base is always fighting to drag the Speaker back into the mainstream of conservative thought.

You don't like her style, fine. But she's speaking for an awfully big slice of the base.


We disagree. She not the Freedom Caucus pulling her strings are the base of the GOP. Your slice of the GOP, yup. The fringe right. The media wand the electorate to believe they are the GOP base, which helps Biden.

They get more moderate because that is the only way to get anything done. All you listed just sold out and abandoned their believes. You are missing the reality of Congress, it is set up to create compromise.

Create compromise how? Dems do it with progressive leaders and help from moderate GOP leadership. GOP does it by just caving to Dem demands.

I put up MTG's Heritage Action score for a reason. Compare it to this one from a prior session of Congress. (Hint, she is squarely in the mainstream of the conservative movement. She's just not afraid to say what she believes.




This is a great example. Look at what DeSantis did as Gov and the bills he introduced, how he voted, compared to MTG.

MTG made tv splash bills with no further action. DeSantis was involved in real legislation (probably because he actually understood it). Look at his leadership score to go with his conservative ranking. MTG is a conservative AOC.

You tell me RDS represents the base, I look at his record and say "yeah, I get it.". MTG? I am not sure she knows what it means, she like Broebert seem more interested in hype, not a platform. Just look at her legislation, it is mostly bringing up censure vs the squad. Reality TV *****
apples & oranges. Governors don't introduce or pass bills. They sign them. But when we look apples & apples, what each of them did in Congress, we see comparable records.

Number of bills introduced by RDS in his first Congress? 11
Number of bills introduced by MTG in her first Congress? 27
Number of bills passed by RDS in his first Congress? 0
Number of bills passed by MTG in her first Congress? 0

You continue to conflate substance and style. Substantively - policy, voting records, legislative accomplishments, policy positions - RS and MTG are two peas in a pod. Both of them members of the Freedom Caucus. Stylistically, she was far less polished. Notably, MTG was kicked out of the FC for supporting fmr speaker McCarthy (and, specifically, spats with FC members over that issue).

You can knock yourself out researching, but you won't find a ton of difference between the two in Congress on anything other than working with fellow Freedom Caucus members.
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members

Again, the record is clear - MTG is well within the Republican mainstream on policy matters. She is also well within the Republican mainstream on frustration with Republican Congressional leadership. The only area where she's remarkable is in style....HOW she chooses to fight for what she believes in. And a large percentage of Republicans LIKE the way she fights. I find it amusing but not infuriating. Good leadership will find a way to exploit what she does for advantage.

But for some Republicans, the style is all that matters, and none moreso than the Moderates.......




We don't agree here. I think if you polled Republicans you would not get MTG as the poster child for the base. Just one persons opinion.
LOL. I think you are implicitly agreeing with me here. Her STYLE is one that appeals to some and not others. But her voting record is one that a vast majority of Republicans would be proud of, exactly halfway between a perfect grade and a failing grade from the most mainstream part of the Conservative movement - The Heritage Foundation.

What's so amusing, though, is that moderates can only see the style. The style is all that matters. Over and over and over again I've documented that her policy positions are indistinguishable from a conservative you admire. But you simply cannot get past the bombast. I mean, its not like there isn't a time and place for some bombast in politics. Bombast does shape and move opinion in one's direction from time to time. In some ways, her bombast has made her arguably more effective than RDS was - alerting the conservative base to bills moving thru congress, organizing popular opposition to them, etc..... She does not care what you or anyone else thinks about her. She is totally focused on the mission. Too much so sometimes, yep. But there's a lot of conventional wisdoms along the lines of "if you don't lose a few lures, you aren't casting to the right spots....."

A clear-headed conservative leader would appreciate that he/she has a few members willing to break eggs, and know how/when to employ them to good effect. Breaking eggs, of course, is necessary to make omelets.


She does not understand how to get things done and if she is happy being viewed as a whack job fringe right that accomplished little, she can do that in the House. (Not my analysis, Gingrich's). I agree with him.

Her going against Johnson and Trump was a bad move. The eye lash fight was a bad move. The PhD in recognizing BS was a bad move. All actions that undermine the GOP majority getting anything done. She now has GOP Congressmen and Senators saying she is hurting the brand. That is not good in an election year. She is toxic to all but the most furthest right MAGA.

As I said earlier, shame she had a few good bills early on and as you point out her voting record is in line with GOP. She needs to go positive a little (not all,) and be part of some solution, cross aisle would help her and GOP
 
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