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Will Michael Steele ever come out of the basement? UPDATED

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[Cross-posted at the LA Times Top of the Ticket blog, with a big thanks to Andrew Malcolm.]

This past week, Michael Steele took a break from speaking to the media by sending himself to the basement to focus on filling some vacant positions and begin the Herculean task of rebuilding the Republican Party (or was that the Augean Stables?). That seemed like a wise move, because as soon as Steele took over the RNC after a long, drawn-out election process that took six ballots, he immediately promised to go "off the hook," baby, and bring a little more "hip hop" to the GOP.
Newly elected Republican National Committee Chairman Michael S. Steele plans an "off the hook" public relations offensive to attract younger voters, especially blacks and Hispanics, by applying the party's principles to "urban-suburban hip-hop settings."
That's what conservatives need. Just a dash of pop culture and a jigger of rap to liven it up. Now, telling a national audience that government doesn't create jobs wasn't exactly a confidence-builder, but then he also said that the Republican Party just can't be trusted these days, bada bing!:
You have absolutely no reason -- none -- to trust our word or our actions at this point.
I don’t think that’s what the RNC had in mind when he was selected to head the RNC, but it was just a signal of what was to come. In less time than it takes to grow a five o’clock shadow, Steele was quickly implicated in a possible 2006 election scandal involving cash being paid to his sister's defunct company that never performed any services. Nate Silver writes:
Perhaps most significantly in the long run, Steele has had several bad stories emerge regarding his 2006 Maryland Senate campaign financial operations. In early February, this Washington Post investigative report disclosed that the finance director of Steele's failed 2006 Senate bid has told federal prosecutors that the campaign had funneled cash to a company run by Steele's sister. Steele strongly denied wrongdoing.
He embarrassed himself further by saying that the GOP needed to go into rehab, baby, and work those 12 steps of recovery. But that didn't come close to the colossal blunder he made by attacking Rush Limbaugh on CNN.

As we all know, Limbaugh had drawn the fire of the Democratic Party and the liberal blogosphere when he said that he hoped President Obama would fail almost as soon as the 44th president had been sworn in. When Steele was asked to comment on Limbaugh’s inapt hatefulness, he said this on the now-defunct D.L. Hughley show:
STEELE: So let’s put it into context here. Let’s put it into context here. Rush Limbaugh is an entertainer. Rush Limbaugh, his whole thing is entertainment. Yes, it’s incendiary. Yes, it’s ugly.
That was an accurate statement, but Rush Limbaugh immediately retaliated and in less than two shakes Michael Steele apologized to Limbaugh for his own words.
My intent was not to go after Rush – I have enormous respect for Rush Limbaugh,” Steele said in a telephone interview. “I was maybe a little bit inarticulate. … There was no attempt on my part to diminish his voice or his leadership.”

"I went back at that tape and I realized words that I said weren’t what I was thinking,” Steele said. "It was one of those things where I thinking I was saying one thing, and it came out differently. What I was trying to say was a lot of people … want to make Rush the scapegoat, the bogeyman, and he’s not."

"I wasn’t trying to slam him or anything.”
Steele is the head of the RNC and as close to an official chief political figurehead as the GOP has right now. Apologizing to Limbaugh made him look weak and ineffectual, but it also angered many in the base because he fed right into the Limbaugh controversy that had been boiling over. Insiders have said they are also afraid that donations from Limbaugh listeners could go down because of his actions.
The incident, said another prominent RNC member, would cost the party a significant amount of money from small-dollar contributors who listen to Limbaugh’s show. The RNC has counted on money from Limbaugh’s fans for decades. Republican strategists fret that fundraising will slow significantly under Steele.
That’s not the type of thing a leader does. Michael Steele has never won so much as an election on his own before, and it shows. After he was defeated in his bid to become a Senator in 2006, he found a home as a talking head pundit on Fox News. That is a huge problem for him, because saying outrageous and incendiary things is part of the job at Fox, and frankly, that's what Limbaugh gets paid to do.

It seems that Steele doesn't understand he's not talking to only right-wing ideologue viewers on cable TV anymore, but he's representing the future of the entire Republican Party to America. And in this capacity he is failing miserably.

RNC members are calling for him to resign already, and that's never a good sign. The latest word on the street is that if he fails to deliver NY-20, a Republican district, he will be ousted, but Tedisco has a solid lead in the polls.
According to multiple former high-level RNC staffers familiar with the dynamics involved, Steele is unlikely to survive in the post if favored Republican Jim Tedisco loses his open-seat race to Democrat Scott Murphy. The special election, scheduled for March 31, is to fill a vacancy left when Kirsten Gillibrand took Hillary Clinton’s Senate seat. If Tedisco loses, the ex-staffers said, “Steele is done.” Completely, definitively?
In all likelihood, NY-20 will turn Republican no matter who had won the RNC job, but that won't give Steele a reprieve for very long. The GOP has suffered serious blows to the credibility of two of the most prominent Conservative leaders who would challenge for the presidency in 2012. Sarah Palin has turned into a major disaster for their party except to the fringes of the party, and Governor Bobby Jindal's reputation took a serious hit after he gave a zombie-like performance in his response speech to President Obama's national talk to the nation about the state of the economy.

So what's a Steele to do? Take a quick trip to the basement, I guess. But while he's been there, it looks like there will be more sparks flying his way after an GQ interview was just published in which his views on abortion were somewhat astray from strict conservative dogma.
Less than 24 hours after beating back rumors of a no-confidence vote in his leadership, Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele is on defense again over an interview he gave with GQ's Lisa DePaulo. The piece, which hit last night, features Steele giving something less than an unequivocal endorsement of the pro-life stance that is at the center of what it means to be a Republican for many of the people who elected the former Maryland lieutenant governor as chairman in January.
He hasn't faced the media or his own peeps yet over this interview, and that will likely upset the already very nervous RNCers who want him out already. Others in the media don't believe that Steele will be replaced just yet, but I'm not too sure of that myself. Either way, it will be very interesting to see how Michael Steele performs after he comes out of the basement and faces the music again. Breakdancing anyone?

UPDATE: This is bad news for Steele too. Tedisco shakes up campaign after drop in Siena poll
It’s time to separate "the real Jim Tedisco" from the partisan negativity his own national party has portrayed in the campaign so far, Republican and Conservative congressional candidate James Tedisco said. Reacting to his Democratic opponent’s surge in the polls, Tedisco said Thursday he’s taking control of the content of his advertising from the National Republican Congressional Committee. "I’m taking over and we’re going to run a campaign that relates to the people of the 20th Congressional District," he said. The first depiction of "the real Jim" will air in a new television commercial set to debut this evening, he said.
[Cross-posted at the LA Times Top of the Ticket blog, with a big thanks to Andrew Malcolm.]


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21 comments

and just be a Democrat.
He'd probably be a lot happier.

by conservatives...It should be an interesting week. How long will he last?

Taking a pro-choice stance, even for only a moment, is cause for potential banishment from the RNC. Steele is currently on the rack as we speak. Besides Steele has already confessed to what his problem is: “…words that I said weren’t what I was thinking,” And my personal favorite: “…I [was] thinking I was saying one thing, and it came out differently.” [Oopsie]

I'll never again underestimate how hopelessly ignorant the GOP is.

You just know that the Republican power brokers are all sitting in conference muttering about how this is the last time they let one of "those people" get "uppity."

Check out Intrade. 60-65% that Steele is gone by June 9. Be sure to check the chart by clicking the link at Intrade.

My sweetie gave Steele's official declaration of needing to spend more time with his family as today. I originally thought next Friday. Now, I give Steele until the end of April. Then they can say it is because fundraising is down (which is it bound to be since there are less and less Goopers and the economy is sitting in the shitter.)

I wonder if they will then go the affirmative action/quota route and "elect" Ken Blackwell.

Uh, no.

He prefers it on the "down low."

Do thy worst to Steele thyself away.

It's over johnny

Republicans diddling around in the dark are downright funny. And grossly ineffectual since they've nothing of substance to offer America in these increasingly difficult times.

Hip-hop? Mild street talk? That will do it? About as relevant as telling people to go shopping to deal with a tragedy.

Hahaha! Very good, JA. I LOL'd; I choked on my glass of water.

when I see the Repuglican party in disarray!

Steele is so far down the rabbit hole in terms of being intelligent and relevant that he couldn't find his way out of the basement with one-way signs painted on the walls!

I'd say it may occur "when elephants (or more apropos: pigs!) fly.

Last week I gave Steele 2 weeks to last. One has elapsed and he's dug himself an even larger quagmire now. I'm sticking to my original prognostication of two weeks which means that by this time next week, he'll be gone.

The party of excess: The GOP had a heyday of 8 very long years of no regulation of our financial markets and unlimited corruption while Bush fiddled and the entire country burned.

Now this is coming home to roost. By the time Bush left office, the party was already well on it's way down the chute to oblivion.

Then they threw in Sarah Palin (the token bible-thumping, braindead hypocrite) with absolutely NO experience for the job. Coupled with medically challenged and archaic McCain, this was a total prescription for disaster....which occurred.

Then they decided to trump the fact that Obama was black and our new president by throwing in another token individual - which is now backfiring totally again. That's what occurs when you're playing a sad game of pretend.

There is nothing left to the Republican party at this juncture. They've split totally in two right now and, by the midterms, won't have enough steam to move any candidate for any office forward.

I expect huge losses in Congress and the House in 2010. Super candidates (Dems) are gearing up right now to challenge EVERY sick Republican in office. Their numbers will be reduced even more in 2010.

As for 2012, they're total toast. They don't have anyone who can even shine the shoes of Obama in terms of intelligence, presentation, ethics, class, and ability to work with everyone...They shouldn't even waste the party's money by trying to compete. They've totally lost our youth and their platform is a total "turn off" to most americans.

We're witnessing the "last vestiges" of what was once the Republican Party right now.

Just caught a short clip of little Baby Bonehead Boehner and he looked pie-eyed and sounded like he's been on a bender.

Is this guy for real? Bat those baby blues much at young boys, Johnny Boy?

Go for it RNC: Blow out Steele and put Flush, the failure, in there. He's your "dead man walking". Aside for sucking up money from the stupid, the guy is a total failure. That's perfect for the remaining old people left in that burned-out party.
Now that Marta Limbaugh is going public as to "why" she divorced Flush, let's just say the guy NEVER DID ANYTHING RIGHT.He's not even a real "right winger"! He fails at everything. Really! He just said he suceeded and the "stupid" bought in. Fire! Sink that ship!
John Paul Jones

is eating him alive. Mr. Steele should just go in front of all of the head Republicans, put his middle finger up and say, "Screw you guys. I'm gonna be a (Democrat/Independent/anything but a Republican)."

Seriously, Mike. Grow a spine and let the other ReThugs sink deeper into irrelevance.

...his sabotage is far too obvious. We don't have much time left until the entire Republican party realizes they've handed the reins to a double agent first planted years ago as part of a brilliant scheme to take advantage of the GOP's desperate need for a black friend. If Steele - whose real name is Lucas Strom - would be more patient in his dismantling of the GOP, he could inflict greater damage over the long-term.

On the plus side, it's going to be great political theater when Steele quits the GOP, declaring that it's now clear to him that there is no room for minorities in the Republican Party.

(Well, it would be nice, anyway.)

I actually think he's doing a reasonably good job.
He's trying to bring the GOP into the 21st century.
The more they tell him to back off and reword his statements, the more they divide the GOP.
As we all know, not all GOPers are assholes. Sure, they acted like it during boosh's time. But now that they can see all the damage that was done, they're realizing that they've been had. You can't fault Steele for trying. But you can fault him for not standing his ground.

A "jigger of rap?" Seriously, is that the analogy that you settled on John?

21 comments

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