Today, after two national defeats and some recent weeks of stumbles -- some his, some others' -- Michael Steele, the new chairman of the Republican National Committee, tried to relaunch his committee presidency.
With no one else having risen to help the bruised conservative coalition get its bearings -- despite Rahm Emanuel's wishful thinking about Rush Limbaugh -- Steele told a Maryland gathering of party members that as far as he's concerned, the honeymoon with popular President Obama is over and the Grand Old Party needs to get back to the Grand part as well as the Old part of being a party.
His words will be chewed over by partisan pundits one way or the other. But his real audience was inside that banquet room and the millions of worried would-be party members watching quietly from home and work.
We have the entire text here for context. But Steele begins by retracing his personal steps through the party in tough places and times.
The Republicans appear to be in a deep hole, continued successful fundraising aside. Unpopular in polls, a minority in both houses of Congress, confronting just the opposite in the well-spoken and crafty White House, it must somehow publicly sort through and test-drive an array of potential leaders.
Most likely they'll come from the ranks of its do-something governors, which have usually produced the most successful Republican presidential candidates (along with generals and vice presidents). Four of the last six presidents have been state chief executives and a fifth was a VP. Obama is only the third sitting senator to enter the White House.
According to Steele's words here, the party will get back to its roots of fiscal responsibility, the GOP having "lost its way" under the spending of a certain recent unnamed Republican president.
It'll be an interesting 42 months. Republicans rebuilt after the 1964 Goldwater trouncing and Democrats recovered from 12 years of Reagan-Bush I. One of the enduring lessons throughout the ongoing American democratic experiment has been that a two-party system severely unbalanced in one direction for too long produces over time nothing but complacency, corruption and the certainty of an eventual crushing defeat.
And the start of yet another often awkward cleansing cycle like this one.
-- Andrew Malcolm
Remarks of Chairman Michael Steele at a Republican National Committee Lunch, May 19, 2009
Once again, welcome to Maryland. Welcome to Prince George’s County, Maryland. This is my birthplace, the place where I raised my family and the place of my first leadership position in the Republican Party.
It was a tough job – and the pay wasn’t very good. Most of my time was spent walking neighborhoods, licking envelopes, and making phone calls for the County Republican Party.
You don’t know lonely until you announce: “Hi, I’m from the Prince George’s County Republican Party.”
But, I learned a great deal; and it served as a foundation on my journey to becoming....