Does Michael Steele Pass Muster With Conservatives?
Posted 10:54AM on Wednesday, February 4, 2009
The mainstream media will never give him a break, but conservatives should probably be comfortable with new RNC Chairman Michael Steele. On CNN, Don Lemon asked the CNN political reporter, "Is the RNC pandering, is Michael Steele legitimate?"<br />
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In an appearance on my radio program on Monday, Steele said "the Republican party is called racist when they don't reach out and pandering when they do." He went as far as to tell a reporter that asked him if he was legitimate to come back when he had a real question. If only the questions about his credentials were coming from the left. So the question is, will Steele pass muster with conservatives?<br />
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Three months ago, I wrote about Steele after we participated in a panel on the 2008 Elections. I believed then he would be the next chairman of the party, and it had nothing to do with race. <br />
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It was not an easy path to the chairman's office for Steele. Groups opposing his involvement with the Republican Leadership Council say he's too liberal. When Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday tried to box him in on the RLC's mission to recruit pro-choice and pro-gay rights Republicans, he said he was not going to focus in on two issues and then invoked Ronald Reagan. However, these two issues are at the core of the social conservative agenda. <br />
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Michael Steele is a social conservative. He's encouraged by the success groups in California cobbling together social conservatives, religious Latinos and Blacks on Proposition 8 in November. In 2008, the value of preaching a socially conservative agenda in minority communities increased dramatically. Prop 8 represents the future of the morality movement in America, and Steele sees it as both a winning movement and a way to mend fences with social conservatives who think he's not one of them.<br />
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The new chairman understands the GOP message on immigration, and he knows how to communicate it. It's not just conservatives that want border security. Steele said on Sunday, "The GOP's position on immigration is very much the position of many, many Hispanics who are in this country." Steele went on to make the case when he said, "The GOP's position is secure our borders first. Let us know and let us make sure the American people know that we've taken care of the important business of dealing with illegal immigration into this country. You cannot begin to address the concerns of the people who are already here unless and until you have made certain that no more are coming in behind themâ