The Republican National Committee provided another piece of evidence this week that winning is more important to the major parties than anything else. Their lust for power outweighs any impulse they might have to tell people what they really need to know.
Republicans are supposedly the ones who understand that government can’t create jobs, yet the RNC is pandering this week to jobless Americans almost as badly as Democrats might under similar circumstances. It’s all about winning, not about explaining principles or sound policy.
With Barack Obama on his campaign swing through Virginia and North Carolina — which we’re told is not campaigning — Republicans responded with a television ad. If they had wanted an honest ad that reflected the principles they say they believe in, the ad would have attacked Obama for trying to spend money to allegedly create jobs and it would have pointed out the government’s real task is to get out of the way and let the market do the work.
Instead, the GOP’s TV spot is pandering to people who are worried about jobs — by implying that it’s a president’s job to “do something” about creating jobs. It closes by ominously asking, “What about your job?” It’s an ad that’s designed to play to people’s fears and to their emotional reasons for disliking a politician. The cheap shots about fundraising are ironic at best, since every modern president spends time doing the same thing, no matter the party. (There’s a PDF “press corps briefing book” to go along with the ad.)
Love & Hope — Episode 8:
Can I talk myself into not wanting great things I fear I’ll never have?
Sorry, Hillary: Research shows it doesn’t take a village to raise a kid
Even when folks praise my work, my secret fear is I may be a fraud
Here’s the jobs growth Obama promised—in federal workers
Lousy personal choices are at root of most of our problems
Once the dream of millions, is U.S. citizenship becoming a burden?
Does Ron Paul lead in Iowa? Does it matter for the long term if he does?