Republicans lacking in vision
Michael Reagan
Forget Republican comebacks in 2014 or 2016.
Unless it gets its head and its heart straight, the party might never win the popular vote or the White House again.
The GOP today is not my father’s party.
And until the hierarchy of the GOP stops talking about how great Ronald Reagan was and starts embracing what he really stood for, the party of conservatism is destined for the ash heap of history.
Ronald Reagan was somebody who believed in inclusion, not exclusion. He found a way to reach out to all voting groups, which is why he was the last Republican presidential candidate to win the Hispanic vote.
The GOP in 2012 reminds me of the state of disarray it was in during the mid-1960s.
It was so bad for Republicans in California then that they held a special convention and invited the state’s Democratic Speaker of the Assembly, Jesse Unruh, to come and tell them what was wrong with them.
Unruh came and was blunt: The GOP had no vision and no message for voters, because they didn’t know who they were or what they stood for.
Those pre-Ronald Reagan Republicans got the message. They left that convention, turned their fortunes around, and ended up with Ronald Reagan in the governor’s chair.
Today’s national GOP needs the same kind of turnaround, and the process starts with fixing the party’s inclusion problem with Hispanic, black and Asian voters.
Last week I spoke to a room of 400 conservatives. The only blacks in the room were serving us breakfast. There were only a couple Hispanics