The Republican National Committee is admitting it’s in need of an extreme makeover following the GOP’s big losses in 2012. Too bad others in the party don’t necessarily feel the same way.
The RNC’s study, released Monday, concludes that the party has a major messaging problem. Among the gripes: many view the GOP as a group of “stuffy old men,” an entity at which “young voters are increasingly rolling their eyes,” and minorities “wrongly think Republicans do not like them.”
“Our message was weak, our ground game was insufficient, we weren’t inclusive, we were behind in both data and digital, and our primary and debate process needed improvement. So there’s not one solution. There’s a long list of them,” RNC Chairman Reince Priebus said.
But judging from the speeches at the Conservative Political Action Conference last week, it seems many in the party don’t feel the same way.
Failed vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin declared, “Let’s be clear. We’re not here to rebrand a party, we’re here to rebuild a country.” And Tea Party favorite Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas insisted that for the past three weeks conservatives have been winning the political debate. “Something is happening that hasn’t happened in a long time: We’re winning right now. We’re winning because of you,” he told the crowd.
Then there’s Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who insisted, “We don’t need a new idea. The idea is America and it still works.”
Hardball host Chris Matthews weighed in on Monday, noting “conservative speaker after speaker [at CPAC] told activists there’s nothing wrong with the conservative message.”








