Friday, December 13, 2013

Radical Right Wing Groups in the Spotlight

Radical Right Wing Groups in the Spotlight

Spat puts conservative groups in the spotlight

Club for Growth, Heritage Action for America, and Americans for Prosperity. They’re three leading conservative advocacy groups that are involved in a rare public war of words with House Speaker John Boehner over a bipartisan budget deal.
Boehner on Thursday escalated his criticism of the organizations, which are vehemently opposed to the compromise struck by Republican House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan and his Democratic Senate counterpart Patty Murray.
He told reporters the groups had lost credibility by slamming the deal even before it was announced on Tuesday night.
“Listen, I take my fair share of criticism from the right and from the left.  You know, I came here to fight for a smaller, less costly, more accountable federal government and this budget agreement takes giant steps in the right direction. It is not everything I wanted. But when groups come out and criticize an agreement they have never seen you begin to wonder just how credible those actions are,” Boehner said in responding to a question from CNN Chief Congressional Correspondent Dana Bash.
(The Club for Growth did not announce its opposition to the deal until after it was released)
“There should be room within the Republican party for honest disagreements on policy, without it devolving into name calling and accusations about people’s motives,” Heritage Action for America CEO Michael Needham told Bash, in response to the Speaker’s comments. (editor’s note: say what?)
While they are far from household names for most Americans, these groups are very influential among many Republican primary voters, and among GOP lawmakers in Congress.
“These groups have tremendous ability to sway the Republican conference towards their policy priorities,” said Republican strategist Ron Bonjean, who served as communications director for House Speaker Dennis Hastert and press secretary for Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott.
“They have an amazing access to GOP primary voters across the country who are paying attention to what’s going on. Most Republican members are very concerned about the opinions of these groups, because they highlight how those lawmakers vote on key issues, and let the voters back home know how their members of Congress are voting,” added Bonjean.
The groups, which have been effectively arguing against compromise in the budget battles on Capitol Hill the past three years, were also strong advocates in September of the hardline stance over defunding the national health care law that resulted in the first partial federal government shutdown in nearly two decades.
Besides taking stances on key congressional legislation, two of the groups – Club for Growth, and Americans for Prosperity – also endorse and support fiscal conservative candidates in Republican primaries and general elections. And with many House Republicans more fearful of a primary challenge from the right than a Democratic opponent in the general election, these groups wield even more influence.
“The primary election to many of them is the general election,” Bonjean said.
So who are these groups.
Club for Growth was formed in 1999. The non-profit fiscally conservative Club for Growthgroup focuses on cutting taxes and spurring economic growth. The group has two political arms, a traditional political action committee and Club for Growth Action, a super PAC.
americans for prosperityAmericans for Prosperity is a conservative advocacy group formed in 2004. It’s a major player and spends big bucks in backing conservative candidates and causes. The group was founded and is supported by Charles and David Koch, the billionaire industrialists.
Heritage Action for America is the new player on the block. The political Heritage Action advocacy group was formed in 2010 and is a sister organization of the Heritage Foundation, one of the oldest and most important conservative think tanks. While Heritage Action takes sides on legislative issues, it does not back candidates. The group has become more active in the year since former Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina took over as head of Heritage.

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Boehner Finally Gets the Memo

House Majority Leader John Boehner has finally told anti-government groups John Boehner - Speaking Out(ed. note: extreme right wing) FreedomWatch, Club for Growth, Heritage Foundation, and Koch Brothers’ Americans for Prosperity to take a hike.
That putdown followed the their knee-jerk rejection of the Paul Ryan and Patty Murray budget deal.
Fortified by yesterday’s Gallup Poll that found Tea Party favorability ratings at its all-time low, Boehner now doesn’t care what the right-wing thinks about the agreement. He’s now in line with the majority of Americans who are upset with the political sinkhole in Washington.
That’s a far cry from Boehner’s past total capitulation to the ideologues who besmirched federal Washington, demonized President Obama and drove the super-partisanship that put the country on the brink.
Heritage boss and former South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint today predictability blistered Ryan/Murray with his broken record whine that it’s a Congressional betrayal and a “essentially a tax-and-spend plan.”
He blogged of Boehner’s leadership: “Country singer Aaron Tippin’s old hit song ‘You’ve Got to Stand for Something (or You’ll Fall For Anything)’ could be the new theme song for the Republican leadership in the U.S. House.”
Undoubtedly, Heritage will attempt to capitalize on the deal by using it as a fund-raising centerpiece. Ka-ching.
Gallup’s good news shows 51 percent of Americans with an unfavorable rating of the Tea Party, while 30 percent like it. Twenty-two percent of the population view themselves as Tea Partiers, down from the 30 percent high in 2010.
Boehner’s new spine is a welcome development. Had he found it two years ago, he could have saved America and the Republican party a lot of grief.

 

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