Contrition Begets Wisdom

Last Saturday the Maine Republican Party convened its first State Committee meeting since their disastrous election this past November.  The Committee elected Richard Cebra and Beth O’Conner as State Chair and Vice-Chair respectively.  Charles Maharelis was reelected Secretary, while Ben Lombard was voted Treasurer.  This rather benign announcement belies the monumental step the Maine Republican Party has taken this past weekend.

This columnist has tried to avoid writing about the Republican Committee. First, as much of their deliberations are tactic oriented and meant to be confidential to the committee, I have made a promise to keep them as such, and I take my promises seriously. Second, the Committee for the past year and half has been in such disarray, filled with so much mudslinging, backbiting, paranoia and narcissism that not much orientation of tactics had been accomplished, which was evident in the polls.  Quite frankly, the Maine Republican State Committee was too embarrassing to write about.

The grand wizards of punditry have pontificated ad nauseum to the whys and the wherefores regarding the failures of the Maine Republican Party and its expected demise.  There is a straightforward, clear and honest explanation to the GOP failure and it is reflective of the straightforward, clear and honest Maine people that voted them out of power.  The Maine Republican Party humiliated the people of their State and the people punished them in the polls.

The Maine Conservative Voice has long held the opinion that Maine residents hold Republicans on a much shorter leash than the Democrats.  They know full well the dishonesty and deceit of Democrats and have come to expect no more and no less.  But they expect more of Republicans because we stand for more, and then… never deliver.

While Maine Republicans had great accomplishments in these past two years, it was lost in the unbridled zealotry and bickering, which exploded onto the public at the Maine Republican Convention in Augusta.  Maine residents prefer to be left to themselves, away from public scrutiny.  In short, they don’t like the national spotlight, especially when it comes wrapped in the scorn and ridicule of the nation from the public spectacle, which was the Maine Republican Party.

So now the Republicans emerge painfully from the woodshed, with, hopefully, a new perspective.  It seems perhaps they are learning at least one lesson.  Maine people prefer to see a tight and tidy ship.  A good team presents a better picture of trustworthiness, than a thousand loud and strident voices, all vying for attention.

In the race for State Chair, the campaign seemed bound for more dissent and disaster as threats and insults whirled throughout the Internet.  There was even enough deceit and deception to make the Democrats proud.  But one leader stepped forward to make a difference.  Beth O’Conner stood before the State Committee body this past Saturday, and withdrew her name from contention, imploring her fellow Republicans to be unified for the sake of our beloved State.  Then Richard Cebra, in another strong act of leadership, stepped forward to embrace his opponent and continue his own call for unity.

So the question now remains, will the Republicans follow the example of their new leaders?  Will they heed the painful reminders in the woodshed on their backsides and give the people what they want?  Will they start to become that strong cohesive team that fights for the State of Maine and is not distracted by anything else?  Time will tell and we don’t have much of it.  So let’s get back to work, as a team, and Set Maine Free!

Maine’s New Horizon

Maine’s unemployment rate continues to drop as Maine’s leadership continues to focus on pro-jobs and business policies.  Of course,  Angus King may want to take the credit for it again, let the truth “get by him” again and let lies work for him…again.

What Emily hates

What Emily hates

 

The tender shoots of young job growth are beginning to break through the volcanic ash, which is the residue of the 40-year liberal scorching of the business landscape of Maine.  Democrats are now faced with the stark realization that the first steps the LePage administration have made towards making Maine palatable to business again are working.  Despite the work of Emily Cain’s “Party of No” and their obstructionist moderate allies in the Republican Party, the effects of a pro-jobs Governor on Maine’s business climate has been quickly evident as we discussed last week.  This did not sit well with the minority party.  This was no more evident than through the words of the Democrat leader Emily Cain.

After the legislature had passed an admittedly imperfect budget (it was much too large for a conservative), Ms. Cain told the media emphatically that she and her Caucus “just hated these tax cuts, just hated them!” This after moderates had helped to grant the Democrats concessions beyond the Governor’s liking.  This is just a reminder that a Democrat’s 40-year definition of bi-partisan is “do everything our way”.  It seems those tax cuts Emily hates are sending a message, both to entrepreneurs within the state and without, that Maine is truly open for business.

But why does Emily hate them so? Could it be that the advent of job growth, prosperity and the independence it brings signals the end to the strangle hold the Democrat party has held upon the futures of the people of Maine?  With more of their own money left in their pockets to spend and save for their own future, residents will begin to feel that heady sense of accomplishment that comes from providing ones own needs from the fruit of ones own labor.   Instead, Ms. Cain seems to prefer we remain in the Democrat’s pattern of choice that has the people being herded into entitlement systems like so many cattle. Back, she wails, to the dependence on big Democrat government to get us through the endless meager years under the grey drab famine of socialism.

Is this why she hates tax cuts so?  Perhaps, by extension, she hates the inevitable fiscal independence prosperity will bring to Mainers?  The people will begin to realize this truth.  They don’t need government.  Government needs them.  Maybe it is the great sense of satisfaction a young businessperson can feel by growing a business that they can pass on to their young ones that she hates so much?  Or maybe its that sense of calm that comes to a family when they know there is enough work to pay the bills and even get ahead that she takes exception to?  One thing we know for sure, Emily Cain hates tax cuts.   She “just hates them”.

Simply put, tax cuts give the people’s money back to the people.  Tax cuts show businesses we are serious about bringing them back to Maine.  Tax cuts are the tried and proven way to fix an economy.  Now Emily Cain, how could you hate a thing like that?  We the people don’t.