Viguerie's Blog
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Aug 07 2008: Obama and McCain proposals would jeopardize future Social Security payments

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Jul 29 2008: Stevens Indictment Symptomatic of Culture of Corruption in Politics (Manassas, VA)  The indictment of Senator Ted Stevens, the senior
Republican in the U.S. Senate, is “just a symptom of the corruption that has infected Republicans and Democrats alike,” Richard A. Viguerie, Chairman of ConservativeHQ.com, said.  “That infection is spreading rapidly through Washington and all of American politics, from the houses of Congress to the courthouses.”

“Sometimes, as in the ethanol subsidy program, or the bailout of the crooked mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the level of corruption is so large that it’s hard for the mind to grasp.  It’s like an Enron a day,” he said.

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Jul 29 2008: Bush White House Hides True Scope of Federal Deficit (Manassas, Virginia)  The following is a statement by Richard A. Viguerie, Chairman of ConservativeHQ.com, regarding the White House projection of a $482 Billion deficit for Fiscal Year 2009:

“The White House has issued figures indicating that President Bush and his enablers in Congress will leave his successor with a budget deficit of $482 Billion for Fiscal Year 2009, which is a record.  How’s that for a legacy?

“As shocking as this deficit figure is, that’s still not the true scope of our budget woes because it excludes $80 Billion in war costs and $227 Billion borrowed from the Social Security Trust Fund.

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Jun 25 2008: $4.00 Gas is a Teaching Moment for Conservatives Americans are justifiably upset with the high cost of gasoline and everything that depends on fuel—electricity, heating oil, food, truck transportation, airline tickets, and more. Higher energy costs sets off a chain reaction that makes everything more expensive. This public anger and alarm spells a major opportunity for conservatives because liberal policies and nonsensical regulations are directly responsible for higher energy prices. Energy prices provide a prime example to show how liberal policies are actually harmful to the poor, working families and the elderly – those whom liberal Democrats claim to be their “base.”

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May 16 2008: Run Cole Run Run, Cole, Run

By Richard A. Viguerie


Rep. Tom Cole (R-OK) is chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC)—the core GOP committee responsible for getting Republicans elected to the House, with majority control always as the ultimate goal.

Well, Cole and his NRCC haven’t been doing so well lately, as you know if you’ve been watching the news at all.  The Republicans have lost three straight special House elections this year—in Illinois, Louisiana, and most recently Mississippi—in three of the most conservative House districts in the nation.

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May 15 2008: Conservatives Continue Their Boycott of GOP... Richard A. Viguerie:
Conservatives Continue Their Boycott of GOP


For over two years, Richard A. Viguerie and others have been calling for conservatives to cease supporting the Republican Party and its leaders. (See his 2006 book, Conservatives Betrayed, pp. 199-216, and the October 2006 Washington Monthly feature, “Time for Us to Go: Conservatives on why the GOP should lose in November,” by Christopher Buckley, Bruce Bartlett, Joe Scarborough, William A. Niskanen, Bruce Fein, Jeffrey Hart, and Richard Viguerie.)

“Conservatives are in open rebellion against the GOP,” says Viguerie in a statement released today, “and have been since 2006. That’s why prospects for the Republican Party are so bleak this year, just as they were in 2006.”

Viguerie adds:

“It should be abundantly clear to all that conservatives no longer give blind loyalty to the Republican Party. We have other options, and we are using them. Some will vote for the Constitution Party candidate, some for the Libertarian Party candidate, and many others will decide that November 4 is a fine day for going fishing or playing golf.

“Conservatives—the base of the Republican Party—are sitting on the sidelines, discouraged and angry. They are not getting out the vote or making any efforts to rescue the party that has deserted them.

“That’s why the big news on Tuesday was not Hillary Clinton’s win in West Virginia. The big news was the third straight loss of a ‘safe’ Republican House seat, this time in Mississippi.

“The conservative boycott is why the Republicans have lost three special elections this year—in Illinois, Louisiana, and now Mississippi—in three of the most conservative House districts in the nation. The Democrats didn’t win because those districts had suddenly turned liberal. The Republicans lost because the base of the GOP—conservatives—is so discouraged and angry over the Big Government policies of the national party.


“In my book Conservatives Betrayed (p. 215) and for the past two years, I have also urged conservatives to support only conservative causes, and to stop their financial support of the Republican National Committee and the GOP campaign committees until the Republican Party returns to conservative principles.

“Conservatives are doing exactly that, too. That’s why the fundraising efforts of the Republican candidates and committees are being eclipsed by the Democrats. And that’s why John McCain, with his lack of any conservative vision or principles and his pandering to the liberal mainstream media, is raising only a small fraction of what either Obama or Clinton is raising.

“Conservatives will not return to the Republican Party until the GOP has a thorough housecleaning of its current leadership, and returns to principled conservative stands on the issues.”

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May 15 2008: Conservatives Continue Their Boycott of GOP Richard A. Viguerie:
Conservatives Continue Their Boycott of GOP


For over two years, Richard A. Viguerie and others have been calling for conservatives to cease supporting the Republican Party and its leaders. (See his 2006 book, Conservatives Betrayed, pp. 199-216, and the October 2006 Washington Monthly feature, “Time for Us to Go: Conservatives on why the GOP should lose in November,” by Christopher Buckley, Bruce Bartlett, Joe Scarborough, William A. Niskanen, Bruce Fein, Jeffrey Hart, and Richard Viguerie.)

“Conservatives are in open rebellion against the GOP,” says Viguerie in a statement released today, “and have been since 2006. That’s why prospects for the Republican Party are so bleak this year, just as they were in 2006.”

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May 14 2008: Viguerie: All Republican leaders must resign Viguerie: All Republican leaders must resign

Republicans are doomed to wander in the political wilderness until this generation of weak-kneed, no-vision, inarticulate, afraid-of-the-liberal-media politicians are replaced mostly with principled conservatives in the mold of Bill Buckley, Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan.

The result is that the party’s “brand” has become a negative, to an extent greater than in the Watergate era, perhaps worse than in the days of Herbert Hoover.

The number of new Republican voters is flat while Democratic voter registration is skyrocketing.

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May 13 2008: McCain is trying to get conservative support on the cheap. It’s been over three months since Senator John McCain has had the Republican Presidential nomination wrapped up and he’s done very little to reach out to the base of the Republican Party – the conservatives.
 
Conservatives’ worst fears about John McCain are being reconfirmed daily.  He is a moderate Republican with no conservative philosophy to guide him.
 
It’s clear that McCain and his top advisors (none of whom are active “movement conservatives”) have made a concerted decision to take conservative support for granted and reach out to so-called moderates.

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Apr 16 2008: The Conservatives Problem with John McCain Elsewhere on this website, you will find an article that I wrote regarding conservatives’ problems with John McCain.

If you haven’t read the article yet, please look it over at
http://conservativehq.com/news-from-the-front/ravonmccain080416
and let me know what you think.
 
Do you think the article is fair and accurate?  Does it go too hard on Senator McCain or let him off too easy?

What other problems does John McCain have that the article does not mention?  What strengths does he have that should be taken into consideration?

Please let me know your thoughts, pro or con, in the blog below. 

Every comment will be published.  Your thoughts will then be read by many others throughout the nation.

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Mar 11 2008: Loss of Hastert Seat is Proof Conservatives Are Prepared to Sit Out This Year …It’s a wakeup call for John McCain…

By Richard A. Viguerie

Republicans’ loss of the House seat held for two decades by former Speaker Dennis Hastert is proof that conservatives are prepared to sit out the 2008 elections. 

Instead of contributing and volunteering, conservatives are closing their checkbooks and staying home.  Liberals and Democrats are enthusiastic to a degree not seen in decades, and grassroots conservatives are sitting on their hands.

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Feb 29 2008: William Buckley gave birth to the conservative movement and changed the course of history By Richard A. Viguerie

This past Wednesday, my hero and role model died. Across the world, many, many others are thinking the same – not just among members of the conservative movement.

William F. Buckley Jr. was the man who gave birth to the conservative movement, who nurtured and guided it as it grew into a major political force. Now, he has gone to his reward, and he belongs to the ages.

All those who cherish freedom are forever in Bill Buckley’s debt. Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan were the political fathers of today’s conservative movement, but Buckley was the movement’s intellectual father.

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Feb 25 2008: MEMO TO CONSERVATIVES: THE FIGHT IS JUST BEGINNING by Richard A. Viguerie

The time has come for conservatives to move on, to shift priorities, and to work to elect conservatives at all levels now and in the years to come.

For too long, conservatives have done most of the work necessary to elect Republican candidates, but, once elected, most of those Republicans have ignored conservatives’ concerns or have opposed conservatives outright.

These Republicans have taunted us: “What are you going to do? Vote for the liberal Democrats? Calm down and grow up, and keep supporting us even while we trash you and people like you and much of what you believe in.”

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Feb 21 2008: Bush41 criticism shows McCain campaign is out of touch By Richard A. Viguerie

This was my reaction the other day to the remarks by former President George H.W. Bush at his endorsement of John McCain:

In its efforts to deal with John McCain's "conservative problem," the McCain campaign is showing how bad that problem is. 

The latest evidence of that is bringing out George H.W. Bush to criticize conservatives who have problems with the Senator.  Believe it or not, this was touted by some in the McCain camp as something that would establish the Senator's conservative bona fides and improve his standing with conservatives!

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Feb 06 2008: IT'S TIME TO OPEN UP THE GOP RACE
...time for someone to jump in who can unify conservatives and the GOP


by Richard A. Viguerie

The discombobulated state of the Republican presidential campaign means that it is still possible for someone to jump into the race.  Such a candidate could serve as a kingmaker at the Republican convention in September, or even – yes, it’s possible – could become the party’s nominee.

Currently, Republicans are split among the various candidates; most conservatives are undecided, or ambivalent, or support one candidate or another because the alternatives are worse.  Having been betrayed by a Republican establishment – by a president and members of Congress who pretended to be conservatives in order to get elected – grassroots conservatives are justifiably wary of the present contenders for leadership.  All the remaining GOP presidential candidates have good qualities; all are flawed.

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