Wednesday, November 9, 2022

The One Man Making the GOP Want a Sane Ukraine Policy


Party leaders now have to listen to Tucker Carlson and the America First base.


The Ukraine war rages on with no end in sight, but the political establishment doesn’t seem to mind. The elites want to fight to the last Ukrainian rather than make peace. 

But a growing number of Republicans have had enough. A new poll found that nearly half of Republican voters think America is spending too much money on Ukraine.  Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), the man most likely to be the next speaker of the House, says the “blank check” America gave Ukraine may be re-examined when the new Congress meets in January. Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene promised Ukraine wouldn’t receive “another penny” from taxpayers when Republicans take the majority. Donald Trump wants Ukraine and Russia to engage in peace talks—an idea that appears to be anathema to the Biden Administration. 

This change is a massive win for America First policies—and it’s largely due to one man: Fox News host Tucker Carlson. Every other major political anchor is a devoted Ukraine fan who will gladly peddle such lies as the Ghost of Kyiv. Tucker is different. He presents stories about the conflict you won’t find anywhere else in American media. Tucker is also insistent on presenting the incredible cost of the war to the American public.

In May, America had given $54 billion in aid to Ukraine. That number has grown by additional billions since then. This astronomical cost comes at a time when the national debt stands at $31 trillion, and the country faces a severe recession. But the politicians believe it’s more important to underwrite another endless war that lines the pockets of their donors than to devote America’s resources to our own people.

The war doesn’t just come at a great cost for American taxpayers. It also contributes to 

inflation, food scarcity, and a global energy crisis. It also has the potential to escalate into a nuclear conflict. All of these terrible things are the result of liberal elites wanting to score points against Vladimir Putin rather than fix our own problems. Tucker repeatedly brings up these issues to his national audience.

The Fox News host also exposes the massive corruption and authoritarianism of the Ukrainian government. Tucker notes that much of the money and weaponry we send to Ukraine goes missing when it arrives. He says America now has to subsidize Ukraine’s budget deficit when we can’t pay off our own. And he presents the suppression of democratic freedoms in Ukraine, such as the outlawing of opposition parties and the arrests of political dissidents. 

Without Tucker, the message to the GOP base would be that we need to prolong the Ukraine war as long as possible. Compare Tucker’s pro-peace message to that of his fellow Fox News hosts. Sean Hannity has called for escalations in the conflict. In March, he urged NATO to bomb Russian convoys, which would obviously bring America and its allies directly into the war. Hannity also admonished Tulsi Gabbard over her failure to support unlimited funding to Ukraine. This is the man whose program follows Tucker Carlson’s every night.

Mark Levin is another prominent conservative who promotes a hawkish line on Ukraine. In April, he attacked the Biden Administration for not doing enough for Ukraine. He claimed the nation will look back with shame at how Biden allegedly allowed innocent women and children to be killed by the Russians. In the same rant, he went on to attack the “Putin wing of the Republican Party.” “I am sick and tired of the Putin wing of media, the Putin wing of the Republican Party, the Putin wing of the Democrat Party, I am sick of them,” Levin said. “They have been lying for weeks if not months. I’m tired of isolationists and those that say, ‘what do you want to do, drag us into a war?’ Did you not see the pictures? There is a war going on. World War III has begun.”

Levin’s position was common among many Republicans and conservatives early on in the war. Many Republicans and conservatives attacked Biden for being “weak” and not doing enough to aid Ukraine. Now they’re sounding more like Tucker Carlson. 

If Carlson wasn’t the most popular name in conservative media, hawks like Hannity and Levin would set the tone for the GOP. Instead of Republicans wanting to end Ukraine’s blank check, we’d have the whole party demanding a no-fly zone and NATO bombing runs. The hawkishness would make Democrat warmongers look like doves. 

Thankfully, the most popular cable news host advocates for sanity and non-interventionist principles. Tucker held strong instead of making cheap attacks on Biden for being “weak” on Russia. Tucker’s stance is not that of the GOP foreign policy establishment, which learned nothing from the debacles of Iraq, Libya, and Afghanistan. Carlson’s position increasingly reflects that of the GOP base. For too long, the base was poorly represented by its leaders in Washington. That changed with the nomination of Donald Trump in 2016 and his election as president. A man who promised to bring the troops home and avoid idiotic entanglements easily won the Republican primary, signaling the base’s alienation from the foreign policy establishment. 

It’s a new era for the Republican Party. No longer do neocons hold a monopoly over the party’s foreign policy. Party leaders now have to listen to Tucker Carlson and the America First base.



X22, Christian Patriot News, and more- Nov 9

 



Do I have an explanation for last night? There is, but it's very long, and the podcasters down below can explain it far better then I ever can.

I will say this though: There is a huge doom and gloom push going on from the MSM and even weakling conservatives saying that we should just give up on certain states, give up on Trump, and other bullcrap. DON'T BUY INTO ANY OF IT!! This is exactly what the enemy wants, they want us to think there is no chance of any of us ever winning so we don't feel compelled to fight them. Don't give them that satisfaction! What have the last 2 years been about? And what have we accomplished in these last 2 years from fighting back? Think of it carefully before you think it's time to become forever slaves to the liberals.

I can see how easy it can be to think that all is lost, that's how vulnerable people end up becoming doom and gloomers. The trick is to either ignore them, or tell them to become more informed. Hope and encouragement is contagious, and it sure as hell beats being very gloomy!

If anyone thinks I'm some kind of fraud or controlled opposition because things didn't go the way you wanted it to, then I suggest you either go back to your doom bubble, or become very very more informed! Because I am neither of those.

There is a bright light at the end of all this, it may not come exactly when you want it to, but it's there. Whether or not you choose to believe it is up to you.

Enjoy tonight's podacsts. Hope you find them informative and comforting. 

The Partisan Rigging of the 2022 Election

Election reform candidates are not the threat. The threat to democracy is to leave things the way they are.


In a society that retains trust in its institutions, the most authoritative source for news and information would probably be the publicly funded media property that is supposed to adhere to the highest standards of journalistic objectivity. Here in America, that would have been PBS. Except it isn’t. The American media, by and large, along with Silicon Valley’s social media communications oligopolies, are doing everything they can to deny American voters the opportunity to politically realign their nation.

It’s always useful for conservatives to watch the legacy networks, starting with PBS, to fully appreciate the level of bias that pervades their “news” organizations. While watching them all the time might quickly become intolerable, return periodically to be reminded: The political content on these networks serve the interests of the Democratic Party.

These days, and for at least the past year, PBS anchor Judy Woodruff, along with every PBS reporter, repeats the term “election denier” dozens of times during every daily news broadcast. They repeat it without irony, without hesitation or qualification. It doesn’t matter what level of skepticism someone may have about the 2020 election. Skepticism in and of itself makes one a “denier.” One can have well founded, incrementalist concerns about election integrity, or one can believe every allegation ever made about systemic election fraud, but there’s no room for such a continuum. According to PBS, all these folks are “election deniers.”

Characterizing anyone concerned about election integrity as an “election denier” is manipulative and deceptive, and with rare exceptions, every major news network is doing it. The pervasive deception practiced by the national media throughout the Trump presidency and ever since, in addition to being deliberately manipulative, is designed to cause profound election consequences. We know it was coordinated; we know it was effective. It still is. And all of it designed to elect Democrats and defeat Republicans. Does that constitute “rigging” an election, and if not, why not?

The media’s role in rigging elections to favor Democrats cannot easily be overstated, but it’s far from the only way in which elections in America are rigged. We’re all familiar with the way laws were ignored in swing states by partisan election officials. Depending on which state these violations occurred, they included ballot drop boxes, ballot harvesting, mailed ballots, changes in procedures governing ballot custody and ballot verification, same day registration, waiving voter ID requirements, and more. We all remember how one activist multi-billionaire sent over $400 million dollars to public agencies tasked with administering elections, and restricted his donations to Democrat-heavy precincts in these same swing states in order to “get out the vote.”

To reduce this to the obvious: Ignoring laws is against the law. And public entities accepting private donations that are made with explicitly partisan objectives, at the very least, violates the supposed impartiality and political neutrality of the election bureaucracy. Does any of that constitute rigging an election? Why not?

These allegations are beyond serious debate. Nearly all media is partisan, favors Democrats, and manipulates their audiences. Election officials broke state election laws to help Democratic candidates. Partisan private-sector billionaires made donations to public entities with the goal of increasing Democratic turnout.

But there’s so much more. Consider the manipulated search results on Google, and the suppressed content on the major social media platforms. The partisan participation of America’s social media and search giants in manipulating public opinion, all by itself, has decisive election consequences. These communications platforms deliberately shape political sentiments in open defiance of their legal obligation to refrain from censorship in exchange for their Section 230 exemption from publisher liability. If nothing else were stacking the deck in favor of Democrats, the activities of Google, Facebook, and Twitter would be sufficient reason to allege the 2020 election was rigged.

And then there were the statistically improbable results, the dubious integrity of the ballot counting process and the questionable security of the voting machines. We can go down that speculative path a very long way. But we don’t have to. It is enough to say that legacy media, online platforms, partisan election bureaucrats, and billionaire donors made sure the election went their way. Because they rigged what they reported, what content we saw, the rules they violated, and every donation they made to a public entity. In my book, that’s a rigged election.

Small wonder there are new laws being passed in multiple states requiring (gasp) voter ID, signature verification, a secure chain of custody for ballots, cleaned up voter rolls, paper ballots that can be saved for audits, restrictions on partisan donations by private citizens to public election bureaucracies, and other reasonable measures to reduce the probability of another rigged election. And for their trouble, Judy Woodruff & Co. calls the people supporting these measures “election deniers” engaged in “voter suppression.”

The Partisan Corruption of Election Bureaucracies

At the time of publication, the polls will have just closed on the West Coast. But for any close race, we won’t know the results for several weeks. In California, election results don’t have to be certified and publicly disclosed until December 16

This is preposterous on its face. No major nation except America requires such a protracted period to count votes, and this never happened in America until very recently. The reason for it has little to do with the COVID pandemic, because just one reform would have solved that problem (and still would): Restrict mail-in ballots to absentee voters who complete a rigorous application process.

What the partisan media won’t share with their audience is the degree of corruption that has infected the administration of elections in urban, Democratic Party-controlled counties for decades, or how the new laws enabling same day registration, early voting, ballot drop boxes, mailed ballots, ballot harvesting, and similar measures have enabled even worse corruption. In California, where the supposedly enlightened fight against “voter suppression” is the most evolved, it is uncanny how every race initially reported as too close to call ends up, several weeks later, a victory for Democrats. The voter file in California, according to expert Democrats and Republicans alike, is a mess. And as voter sentiments realign and races tighten even in this blue bastion, voter integrity matters.

Deep blue Los Angeles offers a good illustration of just how broken the system can get. Consider this excerpt from a report in City Journal that describes the voting process: “This year, every registered voter was mailed a ballot, and 84 percent of ballots were cast by mail. The city now permits ballot harvesting and unguarded drop boxes, and it doesn’t check signatures.”

The City Journal story describes how Democratic Socialists are on the verge of complete control over the Los Angeles City Council, where they have, among other things, committed to “no new cops,” the “abolition of police and jails,” “a universal public and unionized education system,” and “new housing that is permanently affordable and not operated for profit.”

These fanatics get a pass from the media, they get funding from feckless, virtue signaling, delusional billionaires, and, more to the point, they operate in an election system that is rife with defects. In 2019, to settle a lawsuit brought by Judicial Watch, the State of California agreed to purge over 1.5 million names of inactive voters. At the time, in violation of federal law, which requires the removal of inactive registrations that remain after two general elections, Los Angeles County had more registered voters than citizens old enough to register. The voter registration rate was 112 percent of the adult citizen population.

One year later, in the 2020 primary election, Los Angeles County officials rolled out new and unproven voting machines, or “ballot marking devices,” which would “be accessible for everyone, including the disabled and visually impaired.” The result—jamming ballots, confusing procedures, election gridlock, and incomplete screens so voters had to push “next” merely to see all the candidates competing for each office, were so disastrous that even the very left-wing American Prospect called it a debacle.

There isn’t much reason to expect that problems with the voter rolls or the voting machines have been completely fixed. Much more likely, what happens in Los Angeles elections is the opposite of “voter integrity.”

A prime example of this can be found in the recent attempt to recall Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón, someone who is either a certifiable idiot or a cunning revolutionary bent on destroying civilization. On the surface, the story of how the Gascón recall failed is merely questionable. The petitioners failed, by an eyelash, to produce enough valid signatures, and that’s all there is to it. One might raise eyebrows at a 27 percent rate of invalid petitions, but it happens.

Since 2008, however, the man in charge of ensuring Angelenos are given secure elections is Dean Logan. This excerpt from UpintheValley.org, one of the best political blogs in America that nobody’s ever heard of, describes Logan’s history, and how he oversaw verification of Gascón recall petitions:

In secret, courtesy of Dean Logan, Registrar of Voters, who managed to disqualify 195,000, or 27%, of the signatures away from the eyes of Recall Committee observers, who were banned from the building on the grounds it was not an election but a signature verification process. Dean Logan has a history. In 2004 he was the Director of Elections in Seattle during the Dino Rossi-Christine Gregoire gubernatorial race, in which Rossi prevailed by 261 votes, then 46 votes in the recount, and then in a second manual recount Logan ‘found’ 573 votes for Gregoire, previously disqualified due to -wait for it- signature matching issues. The blowback was so intense Logan was forced to resign. Because one can only fail upward in the administrative state, Los Angeles hired him soon after.

Partisan election functionaries such as Logan, concentrated in corrupt urban strongholds where Democratic Party machines exercise absolute political power, are never the ones under the media microscope. Yet they always seem to select the right combination of ballot irregularities and technicalities to decide close races in favor of Democrats, taking full advantage of the extended period allowed for vote certification and the gaping loopholes in election security enacted by partisan legislatures.

Reserved instead for microscopic scrutiny and withering stigmatization are those “election deniers” whose candidacies for the influential secretary of state offices in states across the nation are a mortal “threat to democracy.” But these reform candidates are not the threat. The threat to democracy is to leave things the way they are. Rigged.

Americans, by the millions and irrespective of their background or ideology, are increasingly appalled by the psychotic absurdity of what are now mainstream Democratic talking points. Murdering a full-term fetus is a woman’s inalienable right. Mutilating a child who “chooses” a new gender can be done without parents’ consent. Burning down cities in pursuit of social justice is not a crime. Smothering city streets in feces and discarded syringes is necessary to protect the rights of homeless drug addicts. Criminals are victims. Productive, hard-working citizens who struggle to maintain financial independence are privileged oppressors. White people, men, heterosexuals, and Christians: Bad. BIPOC, LBGTQ+, women (if they’re liberal or trans), and non-Christians: Good. Shutting down the energy industry so an entire nation can freeze to death is necessary to counter “climate change.”

And if you vote against the political party that spews this dishonest, nihilistic, manipulative, misanthropic insanity, you are “endangering Democracy.”

Democratic Party power will diminish as a result of this election. But if not for a rigged system that is rotten to the core, they would be handed a ticket to well-deserved oblivion.



I'm Sick of Losing, I Hope You Are Too

While votes are still being counted, and there could be a few, rare bright spots left for Republicans, one thing is clear: The red wave didn’t materialize in 2022.

Ironically, some accused me of being too conservative when I predicted the GOP only getting to 235 seats in the House. Now, the Republican Party might end up with a majority far less than that. The Senate is pretty much a wasteland as well, with Mehmet Oz, despite a strong push down the stretch, not being able to overcome his unfavorables in Pennsylvania. Don Bolduc got trounced in New Hampshire, Georgia is headed to a runoff, and Masters is an underdog as counting continues in Arizona.

Far from the optimism of suggesting that 54 senate seats were on the table, my “low” prediction of winning 51 seats would actually be a minor miracle for Republicans now. I whiffed, not because I was too conservative, but because I was too bullish. That’s an outcome that seemed improbable just a day ago.

What happened on Tuesday can’t be left to lie. There has to be a reckoning, and it’s going to be uncomfortable and challenge some deeply-held priors. Republicans can’t keep running the same play over and over, hoping that the next time things will be different. No one should escape accountability.

On the congressional side, Kevin McCarthy did not earn the mandate necessary to be handed the role of Speaker of the House. There should be a real battle for the position. In the Senate, Mitch McConnell, even though he should be lauded for raising and spending a ton of money this cycle to help elect Republicans, is 80 years old and is deeply unpopular with most Americans. For Republicans to escape their current malaise, new leadership is needed.

The recriminations don’t stop with elected officials, though. Donald Trump is the de facto leader of the Republican Party. He is the face, he does the rallies, he makes himself the center of attention, and he is the kingmaker. He has now failed in that role for three straight elections. Frustratingly, he refuses to take any responsibility for his failures, pointing to no possibility of change on his part as the standard-bearer.

For example, after Don Bolduc lost in New Hampshire, Trump trashed him despite the fact that he was one of the former president’s endorsed candidates. He also bashed Mehmet Oz after that race was called. Worse, in the midst of Republican struggles becoming clear late on election night, Trump took to Truth Social to celebrate the loss of Joe O’Dea in Colorado’s senate race. Later, he bragged about his supposed endorsement record, calling the disappointing night a “great victory.” That’s not leadership. It’s self-serving buck-passing, and it’s especially off-putting given Trump was attempting to take credit for the red wave right up until the moment that it ceased to be.

This excerpt from Spencer Brown’s post-election write-up over at Townhall is correct.

It’s also impossible to separate the national GOP political apparatus from former President Donald Trump, who, before the election, circulated a memo hyping up the number of rallies, candidate endorsements, fundraising numbers, and primary wins for which he claimed responsibility.

For Trump, his biggest win on Election Day was arguably J.D. Vance’s victory in Ohio. But losses for his candidates, including Oz, Walker, Bolduc, and numerous others, call into question his role in picking candidates and getting them across the primary finish line — something he’s bragged about endlessly.

After all, the rest of the GOP machinery ended up pouring money and time into the races where Trump-endorsed primary candidates advanced to the general, but that’s all downstream from Trump (and in some cases, Democrats who backed the same candidates in a now proven theory that those candidates would be easier to beat).

Meanwhile, in Florida, Ron DeSantis turned a state he won by 30,000 votes four years ago into a 20-point blowout. It was the most shocking shift in a single state in decades, with Republicans actually winning Hispanic voters outright. In a sea of terrible, what happened in Florida showed a better way. It showed what issues voters care about. It showed that being likable and effective as a leader matters. I don’t know if DeSantis runs in 2024, but Republicans would be foolish to pass over him for a nearly 80-year-old man with extremely high unfavorable ratings.

I realize saying that definitively is going to ruffle some feathers, but I assure you that’s not my goal. None of what I’m saying means that 2016 wasn’t special. It doesn’t mean that the big rallies weren’t fun when they actually meant something and weren’t just irrelevant spectacles. It doesn’t mean Trump didn’t accomplish a lot in the White House.

What it does mean is that times change, appeals diminish, and not adapting going forward would only guarantee another gut-wrenching loss in the next election. Republicans need a course correction just as they needed one after the George W. Bush era (which ended with Mitt Romney). It’s not about establishment vs. Trump because, to be frank, both sides have shown themselves incapable of winning at this point.

It’s going to take a combination of inspirational fight and extreme competence that hasn’t been shown by the party’s national leadership, from McConnell to Trump, to turn this ship around. And while I may personally think that’s DeSantis, I’m not trying to browbeat anyone into that position. I encourage people to support whoever they feel convicted to support, and if we end up agreeing on 99 percent of everything else but disagreeing on that one issue, there should be no hard feelings. All I ask is that people step back, look at the whole picture, and think critically about how we got to where we are. Changes have to be made because I’m tired of losing, and I hope you are too.




Win or Lose, Republicans Should Maintain a Healthy Level of Distrust in the Voting System


Brandon Morse reporting for RedState 

I want to start this out by saying there’s nothing wrong with distrusting the system that is the gateway to our country’s future. You should. Having a healthy dose of paranoia around how the system works and operates makes it that much harder for anything to go wrong.

It never sat right with me that it became taboo to even question the 2020 election in mainstream society. Even if there wasn’t any cheating and it really was the “safest election in history” the fact that we weren’t allowed to talk about it was only ever going to stoke doubt. To this day a lot of questions still hang in the air that aren’t going answered, and getting angry with people who have these questions says a lot more about the people refusing to answer them than it does the askers.

Right now, there are some very odd things happening in Arizona. Maricopa county is seeing one in five polling locations experience trouble with their machines. The fact that gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake went down to a heavily blue area only to find their machines worked fine only makes this look worse.

As of this writing, Maricopa is severely under where it should be in terms of turnout.

But let’s say Lake wins despite all of this weirdness. In fact, let’s say the vaunted “red wave” is actually a tsunami that sweeps far more seats in the House and Senate than even the most biased of analysts predicted. Do we put our minds at ease and say “well it would appear we were just being paranoid?”

According to The Hill, that’s exactly the prediction when it comes to a Republican reaction to a big night of winning. Judging by the calm that settled after the 2016 elections, a red wave will ease the paranoia Republicans felt in their bones after the 2020 election:

GOP electoral confidence plummeted in 2008 as the presidency passed to Barack Obama and the Democrats. It sank further in 2016, when Trump, lagging in the polls, theorized the election system might be rigged against him. Republican confidence rose anew when Trump won, only to plummet again when he failed to secure a second term.

They likely aren’t wrong. A red wave would do a lot to quell people’s belief that there’s something odd in our election system.

The thing is, I can’t advise against that enough.

There are enough stories of bizarre occurrences and outright illegal activity to know that cheating in our elections is real. Lest you forget, Project Veritas blew an illegal ballot harvesting scheme connected to Ilhan Omar wide open. In 2021, 1,334 cases of voter fraud had been registered and 1,147 people had been convicted.

This isn’t counting the cases of suppression and intimidation that go relatively unprovable. To be sure, voter intimidation is oftentimes hard to prove, but so were black holes. We had every reason to believe they were out there, but we wouldn’t actually discover them until later. If all the signs point to something existing, then the chances that it exists are high, much like billowing smoke indicates fire.

If Lake takes it and Republicans sweep, they should continue looking for smoke in the sky. In fact, with Republicans in charge, it’s one of the best times to begin firefighting. Getting lazy because we won will only open the door for it further, making Republicans as guilty of inaction as Democrats are of the action.

Despite what mainstream society says, it’s okay to be wary of how safe the systems that play a part in controlling your life are. Continue to push for investigations into anomalies and possible cases. Oddities should be looked into and questions answered. This isn’t anything to play games with. This is your life and the future of your children we’re dealing with here.




138 solo sailors take on the Atlantic Ocean!

 

Postponed for three days due to stormy conditions in the English Channel and the Bay of Biscay today’s rescheduled start to the 12th Route du Rhum-Destination Guadeloupe was blessed with near perfect weather conditions as the record sized fleet set sail on the 3542 nautical miles solo Transatlantic race from Saint Malo to Guadeloupe.  


Congratulations, Sarah Huckabee Sanders Becomes Arkansas First Woman Governor


Amid all the races of note last evening, it is worth drawing attention to the Arkansas governor race where very MAGA Sarah Huckabee Sanders has won the election and will now be the first woman governor in Arkansas history.  [Data Link]

Former President Trump Press Secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, is buckets of awesome and has won a great election.  Congratulations.




3 Takeaways From Ron DeSantis’s Blowout Win For Every GOP Governor In America

If every Republican state goes on the offensive as forcefully as Florida has, it could do more for the country than any changes in Congress.



Ron DeSantis won the Florida governor’s mansion by fewer than 33,000 votes. No, not yesterday, when he trampled former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist to win a second term (with, as of election night with 85 percent of precincts reporting, a nearly 20-point lead). When the Republican — whose handy reelection victory was all but decided long before Election Day this year — ran just four years ago, the contest was decided by less than half of a percentage point, fewer votes than the population of Florida’s 19th-smallest county.

What changed?

Yes, DeSantis has the incumbent advantage. And yes, he was lucky enough to ride the Trump wave after 2016 (and smart enough to adopt what worked). But his decisive victory should also signal to Republican state leaders across the country: In today’s political climate, voters are rewarding competent governance and tactical culture war offensives.

Too many Republican governors have taken office only to reject the concerns of the people who voted them in. Republicans, from Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb to Utah Gov. Spencer Cox to Arkansas’s Asa Hutchinson to South Dakota’s Kristi Noem, have opposed bills by their state legislatures to keep sexually confused males out of girls’ sports. (DeSantis signed the Florida legislature’s bill to do just that, signaling that Florida is “going to go off of biology, not ideology.”)

Holcomb shuttered church buildings and limited services to 10 people or fewer during the Covid panic. Cox defended excluding white kids from a basketball scholarship program based on their skin color. Noem refused to call a special session to allow her legislature to pass a bill banning Covid vaccine passports. Republican Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland compared people (including many of his constituents) who chose not to wear a mask during Covid to drunk drivers. The office of Republican Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee refused to condemn the politicized Justice Department’s prosecution of peaceful pro-life demonstrators in his state and the FBI’s raid on the home of one pro-lifer, 73-year-old Tennessean Chester Gallagher.

It shouldn’t be hard for red-state governors to stand against boys in girls’ sports, the sterilization of sexually confused kids, the killing of babies in the womb, porn in school libraries, or racist school curricula. By latching onto the fringe depravity in their own party, Democrats have made Republicans’ jobs of opposing them easy! Republican politicians watching DeSantis turn Florida from a purple state that voted for Obama twice into, this year, a reliably red state that elected its GOP incumbent by certain double digits, should take note.

1. Pick Culture War Fights

For too long, Republicans have played defense, relying on economic talking points while failing to win or even preserve ground in the culture war Democrats have waged from preschool classrooms to abortion facilities. Republicans who don’t know what time it is allow left-wing activists to target unsuspecting students with racialized curricula and transgender propaganda, even in deep-red states such as Idaho.

Instead of rolling over for corporate interests or worrying about criticism from The New York Times, Republican governors should be seeking out opportunities to tactically punch back. There are plenty.

Other GOP governors and legislatures should pass laws prohibiting teachers from lecturing kindergarteners about “sexual orientation or gender identity.” When those commonsense protections of parental rights are incessantly attacked by corporations like Disney that enjoy special privileges from the state, governors should reconsider those special privileges, not give in to corporate pressure.

They should insist on protecting students from being inundated with critical race theory and sign legislation doing so. States affected by President Joe Biden’s border crisis (which increasingly means all of them) should take action to show they won’t put up with the Biden administration secretly shipping illegal aliens into their states. They should all pass vigorous protections of unborn life (and many have). They should make it clear that lawless rioting threatening their communities will not be tolerated. They should pass laws to help protect their citizens from Big Tech censorship and prohibit Silicon Valley giants from meddling in their elections.

Notably, DeSantis’ culture war fights also appear to have earned him historic support among Hispanic voters, in a sea change every Republican should be taking notes from. After losing the Florida Hispanic vote by 10 points just four years ago, Axios reported the day before Election Day 2022 that DeSantis was leading his Democrat opponent 51 to 44 percent among likely Hispanic voters. In Miami-Dade County, which is 69 percent Hispanic or Latino, DeSantis went from losing the county by 20 percentage points in 2018 to winning it by an 11-point margin this year (as of election night, with 93 percent of votes in). For context, in 2016 Hillary Clinton carried the county by 30 points, Joe Biden won it by 7 points in 2020.

Many Florida Hispanics, especially Cuban Americans who fled communism in their former home country, have been trending away from Democrats’ increasingly socialist policies in recent years. And Hispanic Americans — half of whom identify as Catholic and a quarter of whom identify as Protestant — are less likely to support abortion than the general U.S. population. As Democrats cater to their party’s fringe by endorsing abortion for any reason until birth and irreversible transgender surgeries for minors, every GOP leader should fight hard against their agenda and fervently welcome disillusioned Hispanics to join the fight.

2. Play Offense Against the Narrative

Not only does a successful offense against leftist ideology require picking fights on heavyweight cultural issues, but it also requires an understanding of the corporate media narrative and a willingness to contradict it. Legacy outlets such as MSNBC, The New York Times, and The Washington Post are practically extensions of the Democrat Party; as a Republican, if you’re getting favorable coverage from one of those outlets, you’re doing something wrong.

Instead of letting the threat of bad press scare them into obsequience, GOP leaders should take the narrative of the propaganda press head-on. “In some respects, [corporate media] really are the heart and soul of the Democrat Party,” DeSantis told The Federalist in an interview last year. “The politicians are on the side, it’s really corporate media that drives their agenda.”

From acknowledging the press has a narrative that’s anything but mainstream, to refusing to let that narrative define what issues matter, Republicans can learn a thing or two from the way DeSantis (and other rising stars like Arizona gubernatorial hopeful Kari Lake) handles media propagandists, instead of letting the media handle him.

From quickly opening schools and businesses during Covid to going on the offensive against vaccine mandates and critical race theory, the DeSantis administration is a lesson in taking a stand before the media-establishment consensus decides it’s politically acceptable to do so. “The goal is not to just lose ground more slowly,” the Florida governor explained. “The goal is to regain ground in an offensive direction.”

3. Strong States Keep Federalism Alive

As federal overreach becomes more and more brazen, voters (and the welfare of the entire country) demand strong state leadership pushing back against the Washington machine. The legacy media, woke corporations, Big Tech, academia, and every other major secular institution have abandoned the interests of average Americans who don’t want to pay $5 for gas and just want their kids to learn math in math class.

America’s constitutional system is predicated on a balance of power between state and federal governments, not just between federal branches. State leaders who don’t pull punches are a deterrent against the excesses of Washington, creating a healthy tension that curbs government power. If every state that elects a Republican governor tonight goes on the offensive against the Biden administration’s abuses of power as forcefully as Florida has, it could do more for the country than any changes in Congress.