Davie County Republican Party

 Official website of the Davie County Republican Party

                                                                                      

Davie County Republican Party
P.O. Box 1032
Mocksville, NC 27028

 

 

click here for DCRP calendar 

Coming Soon!

Davie GOP Hotdog Cookout

Saturday, July 18th

4:00pm-8:00pm

Masonic Picnic Grounds, Mocksville

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Davie GOP Men's Club Fish Fry

September 26th

details coming soon

              

'Don’t Tell Me It Can't Be Done'

by Newt Gingrich

Posted 06/17/2009 ET

 

Last week, I had the pleasure of addressing the Senate-House Annual Republican Dinner. The MC for the evening was actor Jon Voight. Before he spoke, a video tribute for Voight was shown, including clips of him playing Franklin Delano Roosevelt in a movie.

In one scene, Roosevelt is being told by his generals and advisors all the reasons why achieving victory in World War II was too hard.

In response, Voight -- playing Roosevelt, who, remember, was confined to a wheelchair due to polio -- dramatically lifts himself up using the table and stabilizes himself on his non-functioning legs. He then stares down every shocked person in the room and says:

“Don’t tell me it can’t be done.”

It occurred to me, sitting in the audience preparing to speak, that those seven words -- “Don’t tell me it can’t be done” -- should be the rallying cry for all Republicans (not to mention all Independents and Democrats who want a better future for
America -- more on this idea later).

I decided to make it the theme of my speech that night. Why? Because history shows us that it can be done.
America has been here before.

1964, 1977 and 1993 -- in each of these years Republicans were gleefully pronounced dead by the news media. But in each case, they came back.

On Inauguration Day 1977, Carter’s Popularity Was Higher Than Obama’s

1964 was followed by 1965, in which Ronald Reagan was elected governor of
California. Two years later we began a 40-year period in which no overt liberal won the presidency.

In 1977, Jimmy Carter’s popularity on inauguration day was higher than Barack Obama’s. But in 1980, Ronald Reagan won a decisive victory and changed the course of
America.

In 1993, they said Bill Clinton was creating a new, stronger Democratic Party.

In 1994, the Democratic Party suffered its worst defeat in 40 years.

So don’t tell me it can’t be done.

“My Fellow Republicans… and Independents and Democrats Looking for a Better Future”

History also shows us this:

Ronald Reagan won the presidency in 1980 and 1984 by appealing, not just to Republicans, but to independents and unhappy Democrats as well. In fact, it’s hard to find a Reagan speech in which he doesn’t speak to “my fellow Republicans, and those independents and Democrats who are looking for a better future.”

Like Reagan, we have to be inclusive, not exclusive. I’m happy Dick Cheney is a Republican. And I’m happy Colin Powell is a Republican

But here’s the key: Being inclusive doesn’t mean going wobbly. It doesn’t mean abandoning our principles.

Key to Winning the Majority? Returning to First Principles Reagan called them “first principles.” They are our bedrock beliefs. And in a center-right nation, they are the touchstones that will guide us back into the majority.

Today I’m going to discuss some of these first principles and how they should guide us in the years ahead.

We Must Strengthen Our Unique American Civilization. If you go to the National Archives, you will find the words that are fundamental to
America written in the Declaration of Independence:

“We are endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

These words make us unique. We are the only country in history that says, “your personal rights come from God directly to you, the individual, and you loan the government sovereignty.”

That means if we truly believe that each of us is endowed by our creator with rights, then we have a deep moral obligation to save the unborn. It also means we have a deep moral obligation to care for them after they have been born.

That means that when judges like Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor judge Americans by their ethnicity or their gender, it’s wrong.

It also means that rationing health care is wrong. No government bureaucrat has the right to take from you the rights that God gave you. Rationing health care is inevitably limiting your life at the whim of a bureaucrat and at the manipulation of a politician.

Individual Rights and Individual Responsibilities Are At the Heart of the American System

This commitment to the principle of the sovereignty of the individual can guide us in profound ways in the coming months and years.

It means that we must have judges who understand that an
America that has driven God from the public square will no longer be the America that has extended freedom and prosperity for 400 years.

It means understanding that individual rights and responsibilities are at the heart of our system, that there are no quotas and no group identities in the American system.

And it means understanding that at
Jamestown, our first permanent settlement, they established the principle “if you will not work you will not eat” -- not for the poor but for the aristocrats who thought they could buy their way out of work. The work ethic was at the heart of our welfare reform in 1996. It is the most successful conservative reform in modern times.

We Must Defend America Against Our Enemies

More than any other of its responsibilities, government’s highest priority must be to defend
America against those who would do us harm.

Tragically, under the Obama Administration, we have fallen back into the utopian fantasies and self deception of the 1977 Carter Administration and the 1993 Clinton Administration. Again and again the legalisms and self deceptions of treating enemies as criminals under these administrations led to more and more disastrous results.

Today, many of the same civil libertarians who believe terrorists deserve Miranda warnings and civilian trials are in the Obama Justice Department. It’s amazing how many of them come from law firms which were eagerly giving pro bono representation to alleged terrorists at
Guantanamo Bay.

By 3-to-1, Americans Believe We Are Safer with Terrorists at
Guantanamo Bay

But Americans know better than to accept utopianism and self-deception in our national security policy. Nowhere was this more clear than in the contrast between President Obama’s and former Vice President Cheney’s back-to-back speeches on Guantanamo Bay a few weeks ago.

Vice President Cheney had a fairly simple message: The reason we have
Guantanamo Bay is that we have people there who want to kill us. They are called terrorists. It’s good not to have terrorists anywhere near us because it makes it harder for them to kill us.

President Obama, on the other hand, used his considerable oratorical gifts to hide from these fundamental facts. He spoke a lot of words that meant very little and managed to convey the impression that he didn’t understand the nature of the men being detained at
Guantanamo .

The average American listened to Vice President Cheney and President Obama and understood that one speaker got it and the other one didn’t. By 3-to-1, the American people believe that we are safer with prisoners in
Guantanamo Bay than in America.

Economic Freedom Leads to Jobs and Prosperity

Another first principle we must keep in mind while building a center-right majority is that economic freedom is necessary to building a productive
America with the best jobs and greatest prosperity in the world.

Here our first principles are particularly clear about the disastrous path our country is on:

We will not have new jobs when bureaucrats micromanage companies.

We will not have prosperity when politicians dominate the economy.

Barney Frank and Chris Dodd are not substitutes for a sound market economy. And Tim Geithner and Larry Summers are not replacements for Warren Buffet and Bill Gates

We Will Not Have Prosperity When Politicians Dominate the Economy

So how do we get back to economic growth? Here, as well, our first principles lead the way:

High taxes kill jobs and growth. Low taxes encourage jobs and growth

Instead of spending $787 billion to reward Democratic interest groups, an effective economic stimulus would get the money to the people that work and the businesses that hire them in the form of lower taxes.

• If we had a two-year, 50% reduction in the Social Security and Medicare tax for both the employee and the employer, we would have an extraordinary explosion of small business.

• If we want to compete with

China

for jobs, we should match the Chinese on capital gains. Their rate is zero.

• If we want to compete for profitable businesses creating good jobs, we should adopt the Irish tax rate of 12.5 percent for corporations.

• If we want to build up capital for investments permanently, we should abolish the death tax.

For American Jobs and Prosperity We Need an American Energy Policy

Beyond tax policy, for American jobs and prosperity we need an American energy policy.

We need a policy that emphasizes the energy we have in
America

-- from coal and natural gas to wind and solar -- and recognizes that the problem isn’t a lack of resources or innovation. The problem is government.

America is the Saudi Arabia of coal and the global leader in technical and scientific innovation. But both these advantages are weakened by government policies that favor imports over American energy.

If We Are Endowed by Our Creator with Rights, Then Every Child Deserves to Learn

We also need to educate our children in order to have future jobs and prosperity.

Now is a time to be bold. If we truly believe that we are endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights, then every child deserves to learn.

We should take President Obama up on his commitment to unlimited charter schools. And we should go much further.

Tennessee Senator Lamar Alexander supports giving low income kids the chance to go to a better school through a proposal called Pell Grants for Kids. We should welcome the debate about why Pell Grants are good for after 12, but not good for K-12.

“We Carry the Message They Are Waiting For”

At the 1976 Republican convention, having lost the nomination for president, Ronald Reagan was invited by President Ford to say a few words.

This is how he closed:

“Better than we have ever done before, we have got to quit talking to each other and about each other and go out and communicate to the world that we may be fewer in numbers than we have ever been, but we carry the message they are waiting for.”

Reagan’s advice is as good today as it was in 1976.

We believe in individual human freedom.

We believe in protecting American civilization.

We believe that the future of
America

is one of prosperity for our children and grandchildren.

Millions of Americans share these beliefs. They’re ready to hear our message.

Don’t tell me it can’t be done.

Your friend,

 

 

Congratulations to our own Dan Barrett being re-elected as NC GOP 5th Congressional District Chairman at the 5th Congressional District Convention on April 18, 2009.

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Wanted:

A fighting party

Posted: May 11, 2009
10:12 pm Eastern

By Patrick J. Buchanan

 

As was evident at the White House Correspondents Dinner, it is deja vu, 1961, all over again. We have a young, cool, witty, personable president – and an adoring press corps.
"I am Barack Obama," the president introduced himself. "Most of you covered me. All of you voted for me. (Laughter and applause.) Apologies to the Fox table. (Laughter.)"
What is also evident is that, without its new superstar in the lineup, the Democratic Party is a second-division ball club. Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi are not terribly formidable. Last fall, the Congress they ran had an approval rating below Vice President Cheney.
Why then is the Republican Party agonizing publicly over what it is supposed to do? If history is any guide, the pendulum will swing back in 2010.
After all, in 1952, Eisenhower was elected in a more impressive victory than Obama's, and ended the Korean War by June. And, in 1954, he lost both houses of Congress.
Lyndon Johnson crushed Goldwater by three times the margin of Obama's victory. He got Medicare, Medicaid, voting rights and a host of Great Society programs. And, in 1966, he lost 47 House seats.
Ronald Reagan won a 44-state landslide in 1980, cut tax rates – and proceeded to lose 26 sets in 1982.
Bill Clinton recaptured the presidency for his party in 1992 after 12 years of Republican rule. In 1994, he lost 52 seats and both houses of Congress.
Though, demographically, the nation is tilting toward the Party of Government, the GOP must remain the party of free enterprise, and should follow the counsel of Australia's Robert Menzies, long ago:
"(T)he duty of an opposition ... is to oppose selectively. No government is always wrong on everything. … The opposition must choose the ground on which it is to attack. To attack indiscriminately is to risk public opinion, which has a reserve of fairness not always understood."
Rather than debating what the national party position should be on foreign policy, health care, education, or social issues – which the party will decide when it chooses a nominee in 2012 – the GOP should focus now, and unite now, on what it will stand against.
Here the party has a good start. With the exception of Specter the Defector and the ladies from Maine, it united against the $800 billion stimulus bill. And as it is impossible to shovel out an added 6 percent of GDP in two years, without vast waste, fraud and abuse, this stimulus package is going to come back and bite Obama by 2010.
And, recall, in his address to Congress, Obama assigned Joe Biden to see to it there was no waste, fraud or abuse in spending the $800 billion: "And that's why I've asked Vice President Biden to lead a tough, unprecedented oversight effort – because nobody messes with Joe."
Joe has been set up to take the fall.
The next place to take a stand is against "cap and trade."
More and more Americans are coming to conclude, after the record cold temperatures in many cities this winter, that global warning is a crock – that there is no conclusive proof it is happening, no conclusive proof man is the cause, no conclusive proof it would be a calamity for us or the polar bears.
But cap and trade would mean a huge hike in the cost of energy for all Americans, the shutdown of fuel-efficient U.S. factories, and their replacement by dirtier and less fuel-efficient Chinese plants.
And we do know the agenda here is a vast transfer of wealth and power from U.S. citizens to government bureaucrats, and from the U.S. government to global bureaucrats who will run the oversight and enforcement machinery set up by the Kyoto II conclave in Copenhagen.
A third issue on which Republicans ought to stand and fight is health care. For the end goal of Obamacare is the same end goal as Hillarycare: nationalization, bureaucrats deciding what care each of us shall receive, when we may receive it, and whether we even ought to have it.
If the Republican Party remains the party of the individual and the private sector, does it have any choice but to fight?
For if cap-and-trade passes, and Obamacare becomes law, the government share of GDP rises to European socialist levels, and, as we saw after the Great Society, there is no going back.
A party defines itself by what it stands for, and what it stands against. After the Bush era, the Republican Party has been given the opportunity to redeem and redefine itself – in opposition to a party and a president who are further left than any in American history.
A true conservative party would relish such an opportunity.
After all, the Goldwater young did not lie down and die after a defeat far more crushing than the one the party suffered last fall.
Is this Republican Party made of similar stuff?


 

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Robert Ellis, Treasurer.

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Davie County Republican Party
P.O. Box 1032
Mocksville, NC 27028