They say that if you aren’t a liberal when you’re young, you don’t have a heart. And if you aren’t a conservative when you’re older, you don’t have a brain.
Well, if Republicans want to hold onto that distinction, they’d better get a little smarter.
It seems like we can no longer perform basic math. Instead of multiplying voters we prefer instead to divide them.
Exhibit A? Rand Paul and Marco Rubio will give dueling opposition responses to the president’s State of the Union Address , Paul speaking for the Tea Party and Rubio for the GOP.
The impulse to compete in a marketplace of ideas is actually a good one. I love that the conservative movement encompasses libertarians, moderates, fiscal hawks and values voters. And I love that we have different ideas about how to fix the nation’s problems. But not when it has the appearance of confusion and division. If Paul and Rubio were speaking from the same studio, with nuanced and distinct arguments but as one united voice in opposition to the Democrats, I’d like this idea a whole lot more. But instead of taking this rare opportunity to show our unity, we’re choosing to highlight our disagreements.
Exhibit B? Karl Rove wanting to use his new Super PAC to weed out strident conservatives, the announcement of which immediately had the deleterious effect of, well, angering strident conservatives. Republicans will never win elections and attract new voters if we’re constantly trying to marginalize each other, and the voters we already have.
And exhibit C. Former Rep. Steve LaTourette, a Republican from Ohio, thinks Republicans should soften their stance on gun issues and relax their support of the NRA–to win over more women voters.
Never mind that there is a strong case to make to women for greater gun rights, not fewer. Or that participation in the NRA’s Women on Target program shot up 26% in 2012.









