15 May
Tenneseans guard your southeastern border. Georgia needs the water.
The border legislation claims the Georgia-Tennessee state line was incorrectly marked 1.1 miles south of the intended border, the 35th parallel, when a Georgia survey crew plotted the line 190 years ago. The legislation states Georgia has repeatedly tried to correct the error for more than 100 years.
Authors of the legislation made no secret of the fact that this latest attempt to move the border north was to capture a bend in the Tennessee River and rights to the water as Georgia endures historic drought.
15 May
Georgians are leading the way in holding up 2nd Amendment rights.
Georgians with carry licenses can tote their concealed guns on public transportation, in restaurants that serve alcohol and in state parks under legislation signed by Gov. Sonny Perdue Wednesday.
This issue is definitely heading to the courts. The anti-gun nuts can’t resist.
14 May
The loss has already shaken establishment Republicans in Washington. After losing special elections in Illinois and Louisiana, the House GOP conference already expects a bad year for their party. But those two districts voted for President Bush by eleven and nineteen points, respectively, not by a whopping twenety five points. “People are going to want change,” said a top aide to a leading House Republican. “The excuses, that [Davis] didn’t have the resources or that he wasn’t from the right part of the district, that’s just not going to hold up.”RealClearPolitics
The problem isn’t that we lost Hastert’s old seat, or the Louisiana seat, or the seat in Mississippi last night. The problem is that the Republican establishment is actually shocked about it. You can’t fix a problem you don’t acknowledge. Talk radio, conservative pundits, the blogosphere, we have all been warning the GOP in Washington what is coming and they’ve plugged their ears with their fingers.
No one, though, is likely to try to force leadership changes before November.
And that’s the other problem. Conservatives don’t take the party seriously anymore and there is no reason to. Their actions haven’t done anything to signal a lesson learned from 2006. They have made no effort whatsoever to renew their contract with America. The party is in dire need of new leadership immediately and a complete break from the big government, big spending, neo-conservatism that the Bush administration has wrought on us all. Until they do we are going to lose and keep losing. 2008 will be 2006 the Sequel.
14 May
10 May

“I got a call from the NRCC (National Republican Congressional Committee) earlier today,” Mumpower said Thursday afternoon. “And I told them we were not interested in their money. I believe that organization has passively supported our leadership in abandoning their principles, and I have no interest in aligning myself with a self-serving organization.”
Mumpower said the caller was “a little stunned.”
“But I’m not interested in the tail wagging the dog,” he said. “I’m going to run an authentic maverick campaign.”
Wow, that is awesome! Tell me hearing that doesn’t make you feel warm all over.
Carl Mumpower is the Republican nominee for North Carolina’s 11th Congressional District. This is a seat we lost in 2006. The former representative, Charles Taylor, was defeated by former NFL Quarterback Heath Shuler. Shuler is not going to be an easy opponent to beat. There are more Democrats in this district than Republicans, but it’s very socially conservative and Shuler is a good fit being a socially conservative Democrat, pro-life and pro-gun. However, it sounds like Mumpower is going to run a 1994 style campaign which might put him over the edge.
9 May
The drunk driving arrest wasn’t enough so I guess he felt the need to one up it with the ole “Who’s Your Daddy” play. You can chalk this one up to be another lost Congressional seat in November. Honestly, I’m amazed there are still Republicans left in this country after the past few years.

WASHINGTON - Representative Vito Fossella of New York ran a red light and wrecked his life. A drunken driving arrest last week led to talk of an extramarital affair, and then finally yesterday, an admission of a child from that affair.
“My personal failings and imperfections have caused enormous pain to the people I love and I am truly sorry,” said Fossella, a Republican, who lives in his Staten Island, N.Y., district with his wife and their three children.
Fossella is the only Republican member of Congress from New York City and the paternity revelation could lead to the loss of a seat in Congress at a time when the House GOP faces the possibility of a second grim November of election setbacks.
The House minority leader, John Boehner, said he expected Fossella to make decisions about his future in a matter of days, not months.
8 May
The Senate
“The Democratic Party loves to recruit losers.” So says Dekalb County CEO and Democratic Candidate for Senate Vernon Jones. Jones also claimed he voted for President Bush… twice. I doubt that. He knows he has little or no chance to unseat Senator Saxby Chambliss. Another “Pass the Popcorn” Democratic Primary race as Jones dukes it out against Jim Martin and former TV Reporter Dale Cardwell.
GA 8th
Republican candidate Rick Goddard has landed the endorsement of congressman Jack Kingston (R - GA1). This is no surprise at all but Kingston is well liked across Georgia, especially in south Georgia. Lets not forget Kingston was the lone Member of Congress to oppose the resolution honoring the the 2006 National championship by the Florida Gators. I am a Tech fan but I must admit that was pretty funny. I would love to jump in and fully support Goddard, but I am cautious about Republican candidates with such strong NRCC backing.
GA 5th
It appears Rep. John Lewis (D - GA5) is none too happy to have opponents for the July primary.
“I’m going to give them a non-violent kick,” promised Lewis, still a proper follower of Martin Luther King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi.
A “non-violent kick”? Is that possible? I guess he meant a love tap. Lewis said he was
“somewhat surprised that someone would challenge me and talk about change. That’s what I’ve been about all my life. I am change.”
Like most Washington Politicians, Lewis feels entitled to his job. “Change” in the 5th is definitely in order.
!UPDATE!
GA 12
Herodotus in the comments asked for an update on GA 12. The GA GOP has failed to find a great candidate for the 12th. Despite the fact former Congressman Max Burns gave incumbent Democrat John Barrow a close race in 2006, losing by less than 1,000 votes. There are 3 candidates facing off in the primary:
Ray McKinney, a mechanical engineer from Savannah
Ben Crystal, a talk show host from Savannah
John Stone, former aide for Rep. Burns and Rep. Norwood from Augusta
Of the three I would put my money on Stone. He has the connections, but some questionable policy decisions. This time last year McKinney was running for President. I do not know much about Crystal.
4 May
State Representative Don Cazayoux defeated a former state legislator in Louisiana’s Sixth Congressional District last night, marking the second time in two months that Democrats have won a special election seat previously held by Republicans. Cazayoux took 49% of the vote to newspaper publisher and longtime political hand Woody Jenkins’ 46%.Cazayoux won Baton Rouge, the southern and western suburbs and most of West Feliciana and St. Helena Parishes, as well as the precincts surrounding Lake Pontchartrain. Jenkins took more traditionally Republican territory south and east of the city, as well as most of Livingston Parish. The two candidates split East Feliciana Parish, north of Baton Rouge along the Mississippi border.The special election win marks the first time in three decades since 1975 that a Democrat will represent the district, based around Baton Rouge and east to Livingston Parish, near the northwest shores of Lake Pontchartrain. More importantly, Cazayoux’s win offers further evidence that Republicans may face another Congressional landscape as difficult as the 2006 election, when the GOP lost thirty seats and the majority. A CBS News/New York Times poll out this week suggested 50% of Americans prefered a generic Democratic candidate for Congress, while just 32% prefered the Republican contender.
Another seat that should not have been lost. I wonder how many more seats have to be lost before the party will get its act straight.
1 Apr

This is Goddard’s first campaign so we will see how this race pans out. On paper he appears to be conservative but you never can tell. Mac Collins is rumored to run again but without NRCC support I think he will stay retired. State Senators Cecil Staton and Ross Tolleson have both spoken publicly about running as well, but Goddard is the presumptive Republican nominee.
24 Mar
In Arkansas, where Republicans lost the governorship in 2006 and are outnumbered in the state House and Senate by 3-1 margins, state GOP Chairman Dennis Milligan said he is facing defections and malaise.“Independent conservative individuals just said they were fed up and they said there is no difference [between the two parties],” Milligan said. “We have sent out the message that we are now different. We know it did not fall down in one day and it won’t be rebuilt in one day.”
Even in some of the reddest states in the nation, Republicans have faced dispiriting news. As if Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius’ easy 2006 re-election victory wasn’t insult enough in heavily Republican Kansas, she won with a running mate who was more than a little familiar to the state GOP—Mark Parkinson, the former state Republican chairman, who switched parties to run as her lieutenant governor.
Just four years earlier, Parkinson had exclaimed that “any Republican who supports Kathleen Sebelius for governor is either insincere or uninformed.” Sebelius is now frequently mentioned as a prospective vice presidential nominee.
Most recently it was the Alaska Republican party airing its dirty laundry.
Just over a week ago, at the state Republican convention, the lieutenant governor shocked his party colleagues by announcing a primary challenge to veteran Congressman Don Young, who is under federal investigation. The state’s senior senator, Republican Ted Stevens, is also under federal investigation.
At the same event, GOP Gov. Sarah Palin, who is at odds with the state party, called for changes in leadership in the wake of a series of scandals that have tainted the party. An attempt to oust GOP Chairman Randy Ruedrich fell just short.
“We are not a unified group as we once were,” said Republican John Harris, the Speaker of the Alaska House. “Between Congressman Young and Senator Stevens, and our governor seems to throw out comments periodically about the ethical operation of the state … internally, that fuels the fire constantly.”
“Democrats don’t have to do that much to keep it alive. We keep it alive ourselves,” he added. “That breaks down morale.”
While Alaska Republicans were battling among themselves at their convention, roughly a dozen Republican state chairmen met in Las Vegas –the first gathering of its kind in recent memory, according to one of the chairmen who attended.
Formally, the purpose was to exchange ideas on “improving each state party’s performance,” said Sean McCaffrey, the executive director of the Arizona Republican party. But there was widespread concern expressed over the direction of the party as a whole.
I think some of these people running the party are so incompetent that if they shot a gun at the air they would miss. These guys are sitting around scratching their heads trying to figure out what is wrong as if it isn’t staring them straight in the face. Evidently someone needs to send in Captain Obvious because it isn’t sinking in.
When Reagan ran on small government policies he won two landslide elections. When the Republican Party orchestrated a nation wide push for conservative policies in 1994 they won in a huge landslide and even won in areas where Republicans were heavily outnumbered by Democrats. This is not rocket science.
I wish I could have gone to this Las Vegas meeting because it wouldn’t have taken long to point out the problems. Stop protecting corrupt incumbents! Stop putting up big spending, big government RINOs! Hold their feet to the fire! If they don’t deliver on the party principles then get rid of them and put up someone who will. Stop backing spineless wimps who won’t stand up to the destructive policies of the Democrats and neocons like Bush. Stop debt spending! Stop expanding government! Stop the Federal bailouts! Get a set of cahoneys and tackle the ballooning entitlements that are eating up 40% of Federal spending and make the American people understand that it has to be done! If you aren’t willing to do these things then don’t come looking for my support.
Enough is enough already.
16 Mar
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JUNEAU — Some top Republican legislators, including the speaker of the House, say Sean Parnell should resign as lieutenant governor to campaign for Congress, but Parnell says he has no intention of quitting.
Republican Parnell dropped a major surprise Friday at the state GOP convention in Anchorage when he announced he would challenge U.S. Rep. Don Young. Young, also a Republican, has held his congressional seat since 1973.
As was pointed out to us by newred, Alaska’s Lieutenant Governor, Sean Parnell, has thrown his hat in the ring to try and take down Congressman Don Young in the Republican Primary. This is good news for conservatives. In my opinion, the Alaskan delegation to Washington is the most disappointing of them all. Alaska is a solid Republican state. Democrats can certainly win under the right circumstances and may very well prevail this year if Parnell does not, but it is solid enough for the GOP that anything less than two Reagan conservatives in the Senate and one in the House is unacceptable. For years we’ve been zero for three on that front.
Young, Stevens, and the Murkowskis have represented everything that is wrong with today’s Republican party. They have no principle to stand on. They are corrupt, engage in political favoritism, and care of nothing more than enriching themselves at the taxpayer’s expense. There have been past challenges against some of them that have not succeeded, but Governor Sarah Palin gave us hope in 2006 when she knocked off former Governor Frank Murkowski in the primary election. Murkowski’s approval ratings were in the toilet and had Palin not mounted a winning campaign the Democrats would have likely taken the governorship from us, similar to Fletcher’s demise in Kentucky this past year.
With Palin’s approval ratings in the 80 percentile, which is just unbelievable, I think Parnell has a better than average chance at beating Young. My only concern is that he is not the only Republican challenger so there is fear of the anti-Young vote being diluted between him and the other challenger, State Senator Gabrielle LeDoux (R-Kodiak). If Young eeks through then this race moves from likely Republican to toss up in November as Young’s disapproval rating is over 50%. Same goes with his porker-in-crime, Ted Stevens, who is also up for reelection in the U.S. Senate and facing an investigation by the FBI.
The problem with career politicians like Young and Stevens is that they don’t know when it’s time to quit. It’s not about the good of the country or the good of the Republican Party; it’s all about them. The Republican establishment cannot be counted on to remedy the situation either. The GOP powers that be seem to prefer shooting themselves in the foot and losing seats than sending ripples through the old boys club, as we saw two weeks ago in Illinois. It’s up to us on the ground to force the changes.
On a related note, a bid to oust the Alaskan Republican Chairman narrowly failed last night by a vote of 167 to 133. The reform movement is definitely present, but last night’s vote shows there are still obstacles in our way.
13 Mar
House Republicans got a rare bit of encouraging news today when Rep. Bud Cramer (D-Ala.) announced he would be stepping down after nine terms in Congress, opening up a conservative-minded seat in northern Alabama.“I have been truly blessed to be able to serve this district in Washington,” Cramer said in a statement. “While I am closing my career as a member of Congress I will continue to be active in the life, growth and development of the community that I, my parents and my grandchildren will always call home.”A founder of the conservative-leaning Blue Dog Democrats, Cramer has maintained a centrist voting record during his 18 years in Congress. He has been a leading advocate for the district’s sizable aerospace industry, concentrated at the Marshall Space Flight Center.The district, centered in Huntsville, has leaned Republican in federal races, but has a history of supporting Democrats as well. It gave President Bush 60 percent of the vote in 2004, and 54 percent in 2000.
This should be a lean Republican race now. As long as the Alabama GOP doesn’t screw it up like they did in Illinois last week by nominating a candidate who has lost every election he has ever ran in or someone who is a complete RINO, we should end up with this seat and produce a strong Reagan conservative. We still have a few of these districts lingering around the south, occupied by old school Democrat incumbents who are keeping us from flipping these seats red: GA-12, GA-8, and SC-5 come to mind immediately.
11 Mar
Well, Jon Elrod gave it a good shot and he was a great candidate, but it looks like he is going to come up short tonight. With 325 of 445 precincts reporting, Democrat Andre Carson is leading with 53% of the vote to Elrod’s 44%. It got close for a little bit when the two were almost neck and neck at 49-47, but it’s widening out again. Overall, not a bad showing for an inner city district.
9 Mar
8 Mar
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Today is the special election for Hastert’s former House seat in Illinois and the race has been polling neck and neck. This should be an easy GOP hold, but the Democrat, Bill Foster, has campaigned hard and I have heard grumblings from Republicans on other Web sites of some dissatisfaction with our candidate, Jim Oberweis, over an alleged incident of him employing illegal immigrants at his dairy farm and paying wages slightly over $3 an hour. Oberweis denied the allegations and claimed it was a smear job. I don’t know that it was ever proven one way or another.
Update: With 74% of precincts reporting, Frost is leading Oberweis 53% to 47%. We’re going to lose this seat. The Illinois GOP will once again prove to be incompetent.

8 Mar
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee (R) reiterated Friday that he will not run against Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.).The filing period began March 3, the day before Huckabee withdrew from the presidential race, and ends Monday.
In an interview with The Hill, Huckabee said he is still “decompressing” from his presidential campaign, and reaffirmed past statements that indicated he had no interest in challenging Pryor or serving in the Senate.
In a mid-February breakfast with reporters, Huckabee joked, “There’s a greater chance that I would dye my hair green, cover my body with tattoos and go on a rock tour with Amy Winehouse.”
Huckabee repeated that joke Friday, adding: “That was a pretty apt description of my total lack of interest in running for the Senate.”
I guess we can write off any possibility of picking off Pryor this year. The Arkansas GOP is pretty much dysfunctional. Huckabee is really the only big Republican name in the state that I am aware of.
6 Mar

Rep. Ron Paul, the 72-year-old libertarian-like, 10-term Texas congressman who’s also running for the Republican presidential nomination, easily won his 14th District primary Tuesday and is set for easy re-election in November.
With about half the precincts counted (what’s the rush — it’s Texas) Paul was thumping Friendswood City Councilman Chris Peden by two-to-one.
Now, Paul can set his sights on this other old-timer, 71-year-old Sen. John McCain, who claims to have won more than the 1,191 GOP delegates for the Republican presidential nomination this September at the National Convention in St. Paul (no relation to the congressman).
Ron Paul easily won reelection in the Republican Primary this past Tuesday, which I never doubted. The neocons thought they could take him down, but they clearly don’t know the people of the 14th Congressional District. Thankfully we can look forward to a few more years of him standing up and protecting our Constitution, one of the very few that do.
I do believe it is time for him to leave the Presidential race, though. I would rather him save up all of that money he raised and use it for a gubernatorial run in 2010.
1 Mar
Most conservatives are familiar with California State Senator Tom McClintock, the conservative voice of California. According to an email sent out, he will be announcing a run for the Fourth Congressional District this Tuesday morning.
Dear E-Team:
THANK YOU for your outpouring of support and encouragement in response to my consideration of a congressional candidacy. I am deeply grateful for the generosity and kind wishes that so many have expressed.
The polling from the 4th Congressional district has been overwhelming. As you may know, a conservative advocacy group commissioned a poll at the beginning of this month and it reported that I would begin the campaign with a 33-point lead over the nearest rival. I subsequently commissioned a full benchmark poll by a different firm that reported a margin of 38 points.
And so, I will be announcing my intentions at 10AM on Tuesday, March 4th at Auburn’s Historic Courthouse (101 Maple Street, Auburn). I would be honored to have you join me for this announcement.
Despite this very sizeable lead, I must first defeat a liberal millionaire to represent this solidly conservative district. He has already vowed in the press that he will immediately unleash a $500,000 advertising blitz if I dare to challenge him.
You have stood with me through many challenges and I need your help to start this campaign on a strong note. Will you make an urgently needed contribution so that we will have the resources necessary to counter his promised media buy? Federal law limits contributions to $2,300 per individual and corporate contributions are prohibited. You may contribute securely on our website or mail checks to:
McClintock for Congress
c/o Igor Birman
1029 K Street, Suite 44
Sacramento CA 95814Thank you again for your enthusiastic and early support. This campaign will determine whether a consistent conservative will represent this district in Congress, and I intend to fight vigorously for that goal. After all, we will not be able to take back the Congress until we first take back our party. I have been fortunate and honored to have supporters like you at my side in times like these and will do the very best I can to be worthy of your confidence.
Best wishes,
Tom McClintock
28 Feb
The most corrupt and longest-serving (what a coincidence!) Republican in the Senate, Ted Stevens, is in for the race of his life. Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich has formed an exploratory committee to take a look at a bid, and forming it this late strongly suggests that he simply wants two days of free media rather than one. He enters the race, according to one poll, with a lead on Stevens, who has all but been accused of accepting bribes by Veco Chairman Bill Allen, for whom he obtained earmkars.
Stevens is as corrupt as could be and his whole state knows it. It doesn’t exactly help that he’s campaigning, as always, on his ability to waste taxpayer dollars on special projects in his state. He has never been a friend of conservatives because of his pork barrel spending, and Democrats don’t like him thanks to their partisanship. He has always won by carrying the “I want free stuff” milddle. Well, that middle is likely to respond to the charges of corruption.
I don’t like advocating the defeat of Republicans in general elections, but if we don’t replace this guy in the primary, we deserve to lose the general. Ultimately his defeat, either in the primary or in the general, would be best for the Party because Stevens is the poster boy for what’s wrong with the GOP. He’s corrupt. He’s a porker. He’s a social liberal. He may even be indicted soon.
Come on, Alaska, you replaced the guy who gave his daughter a Senate seat. Can you come through again?
26 Feb

David Cappiello is a Republican State Senator in Connecticut who is looking to regain the seat held by Nancy Johnson until her defeat during the Democrat sweep in 2006. I really like this guy. He is a strong fiscal conservative which we direly need in Washington. The video below is from about a year ago when Connecticut Governor Jodi Rell proposed her very liberal budget last year with a 10% increase in the income tax for education (as if they need more money), despite the fact that the state already had over a billion dollars in its rainy day fund. Cappiello pretty much took her to task in this interview over her entire irresponsible budget. Eventually the budget was passed by the heavily Democrat controlled legislature without the income increase.
The first two minutes of the video is Rell BSing everyone as to why they need to raise taxes. After that the interview begins.