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Josh Hawley is the FUTURE of the GOP

Posted on 12/3/19 at 8:55 am
Posted by Lsujacket66
Member since Dec 2010
4796 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 8:55 am
IMO Hawley more than any other politician seems to understand why voters elected Trump and is the person who can best lead a populist conservative movement after Trump. I dont agree with everything he thinks, but i like where his vision and mindset is.

"By Hawley’s own account, some conservatives on Capitol Hill have spent the past three years with their eyes tightly shut, waiting for the Trump era to pass and everything to return to normal. “That’s not going to happen,” he told me in an interview this week. If the Republican Party returns to its pre-Trump ideological defaults—standing up for big business over the middle class, prioritizing free-market principles over social issues—“we’re not going to be a majority party, ever,” he said. “That’s just not the future.”

Hawley, 39, became the youngest member of the Senate after a 2018 upset victory over a powerful Democratic incumbent, Claire McCaskill, and he has quickly vaulted himself to prominence in Washington’s elite conservative circles. Along with Senate Republicans such as Ted Cruz, and ex–Trump-administration officials such as Nikki Haley, his name is frequently floated as a potential lead architect of Trumpism after Trump. His speeches around town, including one he delivered on Tuesday evening while accepting an award at the annual gala of the American Principles Project Foundation, a socially conservative public-policy organization, are bracingly defiant of Republican orthodoxy: He rails against income inequality, condemns the policy deference afforded to corporations, and speaks warmly about the civic value of labor unions. He often talks about the “great American middle” being crushed by the decline of local communities, the winner-take-all concentration of wealth, and the inaccessibility of higher education. And he said that the modern Republican Party’s split over competing impulses toward free-market economics and social conservatism has led some conservatives to ignore the effects of their policies on the middle and working class. “It’s time to do away with that,” he told me."


Haley Atlantic article
Posted by SidewalkDawg
Chair
Member since Nov 2012
9820 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 8:56 am to
quote:

prioritizing free-market principles over social issues


Lost me right here.
Posted by SLafourche07
Member since Feb 2008
9930 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 8:57 am to
Same.
Posted by Nono
Member since Nov 2017
4820 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 8:57 am to
Hawley is swamp in my opinion.

They threw money at him .

I trust him about as far as i can have sex with Ivanka.
Posted by 93and99
Dayton , Oh / Allentown , Pa
Member since Dec 2018
14400 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 9:00 am to
quote:

He rails against income inequality, condemns the policy deference afforded to corporations, and speaks warmly about the civic value of labor unions. He often talks about the “great American middle” being crushed by the decline of local communities, the winner-take-all concentration of wealth, and the inaccessibility of higher education. And he said that the modern Republican Party’s split over competing impulses toward free-market economics and social conservatism has led some conservatives to ignore the effects of their policies on the middle and working class. “It’s time to do away with that,” he told me."


Sounds like a Liberal. No thanks !
Posted by Jake88
Member since Apr 2005
68429 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 9:03 am to
quote:

He rails against income inequality...and speaks warmly about the civic value of labor unions

quote:

 and the inaccessibility of higher education
What? Yeah, I'm out.
Posted by Ryne Sandberg
Team Am Mart
Member since Apr 2009
19383 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 9:06 am to
Did you not listen to Trump's campaign speeches? He never said that explicitly, but he sure did insinuate all of those things.
Posted by Gusoline
Jacksonville, NC
Member since Dec 2013
7669 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 9:10 am to
Who?
Posted by AggieHank86
Texas
Member since Sep 2013
42941 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 9:42 am to
quote:

If the Republican Party returns ... prioritizing free-market principles over social issues—“we’re not going to be a majority party, ever,” he said. “That’s just not the future.”
The new GOP ... the party of choosing social activism over economic development.
Posted by deltaland
Member since Mar 2011
90886 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 11:38 am to
quote:

prioritizing free-market principles over social issues


Trump avoids most social issues.

His strength is because he focuses on the economy, trade, and foreign policy. You know, like the constitution intended to be the focus of Fedgov
Posted by ProjectP2294
South St. Louis city
Member since May 2007
70568 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 11:43 am to
Josh Hawley is a fraud
Posted by keakar
Member since Jan 2017
30128 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 12:04 pm to
the moment someone says they understand the reasons why trump got elected you know they are clueless idiots who arent on trumps side

any comment other then "there was no other choice but trump to vote for" is someone who doesnt get it but only thinks that they do
Posted by CoachChappy
Member since May 2013
32595 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 12:09 pm to
quote:

"By Hawley’s own account, some conservatives on Capitol Hill have spent the past three years with their eyes tightly shut, waiting for the Trump era to pass and everything to return to normal.


So, back to NeoCons and Liberals in charge?

frick DEM!
Posted by Parmen
Member since Apr 2016
18317 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 12:14 pm to
quote:

The new GOP ... the party of choosing social activism over economic development.


quote:

I'm a 35 year GOP voter


Oh Aggie, how you've grown.
Posted by SeeeeK
some where
Member since Sep 2012
28114 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 12:44 pm to
quote:

Hawley is swamp in my opinion.


When he left Missouri, i fully expected him to jump off the 20ft high dive and into a huge pool of money on his first day.




Posted by volod
Leesville, LA
Member since Jun 2014
5392 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 12:59 pm to
quote:

Lost me right here.


Ignoring social issues is a bad strategy in the long term. As stated by both evangelicals and atheists (ironically), Christian values at the very least serve as a backbone to an effective society. I'm not saying government should be heavily involved, but enough to keep some semblance of order. Unchecked degeneracy is why we have many of the issues requiring government spending.

The elections lost by Republicans in both Virginia and Louisiana were at least moderately effected by social issues.

I'm not judging you or others, but I think the misconception lies in that you think everyone shares your perspective in how government should run. The truth is their perspective is forged by their experiences. And those differences translate in opposite political motives.
Posted by Smeg
Member since Aug 2018
9406 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 1:03 pm to
quote:

 the inaccessibility of higher education.

This is the opposite of reality. Higher education is too accessible. It's why you have tons of kids with college degrees which they can't pay the loans for. Less accessibility might lead to less unpaid loans.
Posted by makinskrilla
Lafayette, LA
Member since Jun 2009
9728 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 1:27 pm to
No, not really. The future is Matt Gaetz.
Posted by Lsujacket66
Member since Dec 2010
4796 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 1:53 pm to
Gaetz is a clown
Posted by Mid Iowa Tiger
Undisclosed Secure Location
Member since Feb 2008
18737 posts
Posted on 12/3/19 at 4:37 pm to
quote:

prioritizing free-market principles over social issues


Uh, wrong. Unless abortion is no longer a social issue. Trump has been the most pro-life president we have had and it is not even close.

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