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How Team Obama Hijacked "Change" And How We Can Take It Back
Political Potluck Blog
7/8/09 It all started in the summer of 2007 when part
of one of my speeches was posted on YouTube. It was a short,
three-minute clip in which I explained the difference between
two Americas, one that works and one that fails, by contrasting
UPS and FedEx with the federal bureaucracy.
You can
see it yourself here. The gist of the video is that UPS and
FedEx are so capable and efficient they can track millions of
packages in real time. The bureaucracy, on the other hand, can't
locate the 10-20 million people who are in this country
illegally. Perhaps, I suggested, we should send them all a
package.
Real Change Means "the Special Interests, the
Bureaucracies, and
the Force of the Past Will Not Determine the Course of the
Future"
Here's how I described what I wanted to accomplish with Real
Change at the time:
Real change must begin at the individual level, with each
person deciding that the special interests, the
bureaucracies, and the forces of the past will not determine
the course of the future. Real change has to start with
families who don't want to see their quality of life decline
even as they work harder to maintain it. Real change has to
start with citizens who say to their families, friends, and
neighbors that the time has come to insist that their
politicians change or they will change their politicians.
We must have been on to something because the presidential
campaign that was waged since I wrote Real Change was
full of talk about change and promised to end business as usual
in Washington; to take the nation beyond the bitter deadlock of
partisan politics.
President Obama Promised to End the Influence of Special
Interests in Washington, Then He Gave 55% of Chrysler to His
Union Supporters
The American people clearly voted for change last November. But
equally clear is that what we've gotten is more business as
usual.
Barack Obama campaigned as a new kind of centrist who could
bring people together. But as president he's been a radical
liberal, passing his stimulus bill without a single Republican
vote in the House.
He campaigned to end the influence of special interests in the
nation's capital. But as president he's rewarded his political
supporters at the expense of economic recovery in the stimulus
bill and paid back his union allies at the expense of the rule
of law in the Chrysler and GM
bankruptcies.
Barack Obama campaigned as a leader who would bring a new kind
of politics to Washington. Then he used Chicago-style politics -
twisting arms and offering payoffs - to pass one of the largest
tax increases in American history in the cap and trade bill.
President Obama promised change and failed to deliver. Where do
we go from here?
Real Change, Expanded and Updated for the Obama Era
It has all the innovative ideas and practical solutions of the
first Real Change, and much more.
The new forward begins with how American taxpayers were
exploited with the taxpayer bailouts that began at the end of
the Bush Administration. Then it describes how things got worse
with the big government, big spending bacchanal that has been
the first six months of the Obama Administration.
It describes how our national security has deteriorated faster
than I thought it would since the last months of the Bush
Administration, despite the spectacular success of the surge in
Iraq.
The section culminates in a powerful critique of the Obama
domestic and national security policy:
"The Obama-Pelosi-Reid team is the most radical group ever to
hold the reigns of American power. Their vision of a high tax,
big bureaucracy Washington-centered system dominated by
politicians and leading to a secular-socialist future will
fundamentally challenge America's role as a beacon of hope,
opportunity and freedom."
Real Change Is More Than a List of Complaints About the
Obama Administration. It's a Plan of Solutions for America
But Real Change: The Fight For America's
Future is more than a list of grievances against the
current administration.
It is a guide, a set of talking points, and a blueprint for how
conservative and center-right Americans can reclaim the mantle
of "change" in our political debate; how we can, in fact,
transcend "change" to bring about real change.
Using Ronald Reagan and the current Tea Party movement as
guides, the new Real Change describes how we can't
argue within the current framework of the left and the elites if
we want to bring about real change.
If we accept their terms and their premises, the book explains,
we "will end up being with the less destructive, less expensive,
slower decay wing of a lot of really bad ideas."
When the Left Takes for Granted the Superiority of Big
Government,
We Must Argue Forcefully for Free Enterprise
Instead, we have to establish our own terms of debate and argue
for bold solutions to the challenges we face.
When the left takes for granted the superiority of big
government, we must argue boldly and forcefully for free
enterprise.
When they play to their union base with calls for an even bigger
bureaucracy, we must remind Americans that the world that works
is the world of entrepreneurs.
And when they assert the lowest-common-denominator fairness of
government redistribution, we must counter with the moral
superiority of individual initiative and success.
America is Still Waiting For Change in Washington
Real Change: The Fight for America's Future is about
these ideas and much, much more. I encourage you to
pick up a copy for yourself or someone you care about.
America is still waiting for real change in Washington. It's
time for more than change. It's time for real change. Let the
battle of ideas and solutions for America's future begin.
Your friend,
Newt Gingrich
Newt's Quick Links:
Energy has been central to American Solutions' efforts
recently, and we will be holding a free Tele-Townhall this
Thursday night from 7-8pm EDT to discuss the Energy Tax
fight in the Senate, and re-launching the Drill Here, Drill
Now campaign. To join me for this special Tele-Townhall and
invite your friends
click here.
David Kralik - our Director of Internet Strategy at
American Solutions and point man in Silicon Valley - spoke
at Google's Mountain View, Calif., headquarters last month
about bringing Silicon Valley entrepreneurial culture to
Washington, D.C. You can
watch it here.