Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

red dog 1

(29,254 posts)
Tue Sep 17, 2024, 02:25 PM Sep 17

J D Vance got a former professor to delete a blog post he wrote in 2012 attacking GOP over anti-immigrant rhetoric

CNN
September 17, 2024


(CNN) --- A week after President Barack Obama won reelection in November 2012, J D Vance, then a law student at Yale, wrote a scathing rebuke of the Republican Party's stance on migrants and minorities, criticizing it for being "openly hostile to non-whites" and for alienating "Blacks, Latinos [and] the youth."

Four years later, as Vance considered a career in GOP politics, he asked a former college professor to delete the article.
That professor, Brad Nelson, taught Vance at Ohio State University while Vance was an undergraduate student.
After Vance graduated, Nelson asked him to contribute to a blog he ran for the non-partisan Center for World Conflict and Peace.

Nelson told CNN that during the 2016 Republican primary he agreed to delete the article at Vance's request, so that Vance might have an easier time getting a job in Republican politics.
However, the article, titled "A Blueprint for the GOP," remains viewable on the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.

"A significant part of Republican immigration policy centers on the possibility of deporting 12 million people (or 'self-deporting' them)," Vance wrote.
Think about it: we conservatives (rightly) mistrust the government to efficiently administer business loans and regulate our food supply, yet we allegedly believe that it can deport millions of unregistered aliens.
The notion fails to pass the laugh test.
The same can be said for too much of the party's platform."


More:
https://cnn.com/2024/09/17/politics/jd-vance-delete-2012-blog-post-attacking-gop-anti-immigrant-rhetoric/index.html

3 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
J D Vance got a former professor to delete a blog post he wrote in 2012 attacking GOP over anti-immigrant rhetoric (Original Post) red dog 1 Sep 17 OP
Thanks for posting red dog 1. The Hillbilly Hypocrite strikes again. appalachiablue Sep 17 #1
Ruh roh...However, the article, titled "A Blueprint for the GOP," remains viewable on the Internet Archive's Wayback GreenWave Sep 17 #2
Archived link: dalton99a Sep 17 #3

GreenWave

(9,167 posts)
2. Ruh roh...However, the article, titled "A Blueprint for the GOP," remains viewable on the Internet Archive's Wayback
Tue Sep 17, 2024, 02:48 PM
Sep 17

machine.

dalton99a

(84,221 posts)
3. Archived link:
Tue Sep 17, 2024, 03:21 PM
Sep 17
https://web.archive.org/web/20140305032241/http://centerforworldconflictandpeace.blogspot.com/2012_11_01_archive.html

A Blueprint for the GOP

When the 2008 election was called for Obama, I remember thinking: maybe this will teach my party some very important lessons. You can’t nominate people, like Sarah Palin, who scare away swing voters. You can’t actively alienate every growing bloc of the American electorate—Blacks, Latinos, the youth—and you can’t depend solely on the single shrinking bloc of the electorate—Whites. And yet, four years later, I am again forced to reflect on a party that nominated the worst kind of people, like Richard Mourdock, and tried to win an election by appealing only to White people. The 2008 election, it seems, taught Republicans precious little.

At no time was this more obvious than last Tuesday. During the weeks before the election, conservatives I spoke to were confident—even hubristic—that Mitt Romney would win. But even before Tuesday, I thought that confidence was misplaced. The New York Times’s resident prognosticator, Nate Silver, had the odds of an Obama victory somewhere between 85 and 90 percent. Every non-partisan poll had the president winning the states he needed to secure a comfortable victory. Yet conservatives remained confident. The worst of the ideological conservatives criticized Nate Silver as a political plant of the “liberal media.” Even the best, from George Will to Michael Barone had constructed complex arguments for why the public polling was undercounting Romney’s strength. Whether you were an average Joe who listened to Rush on the way home from work, or an Ivy League reader of the National Review, if you were a conservative, you were likely to believe that Romney would win.

And then reality intervened. Nate Silver, that political hack from the Times, correctly predicted that Obama would win 332 electoral votes. Dick Morris, a conservative pundit on Fox News, was left apologizing for the Romney landslide that didn’t materialize. Conservatives lost, they lost big, and now it falls to the party’s leaders to explain why.

Many movement conservatives are already trying to deny the undeniable. Dave Wiegel, in an awful blog post on National Review, blamed the election results on an electorate that has become dependent on government and the Democratic politicians who make such dependency possible. The problem with this logic is that the people who depend most on government—retirees—are the Republican Party’s base—to the degree that the party even has a base. Wiegel similarly blamed public sector union beneficiaries, despite the fact that federal government workers in the DC suburbs broke decisively for Romney. Others blamed the party’s frontrunner and the “establishment wing” of the party that nominated him—essentially arguing that Romney was insufficiently ideological. The problem is that Romney did better than virtually every Republican Senate candidate in every competitive state. One glaring exception was Wisconsin senate candidate Tommy Thompson—an “establishment” Republican if there ever was one—who lost by a slightly narrower margin than Mitt Romney. Others pretend that the Democratic win wasn’t that impressive. After all, we are in the same place we were before the 2008 election: a split Congress with a Democratic president. But this ignores the inherent weakness of an incumbent party in a tough economic climate, and the fact that Democrats were able to overcome all of these problems to gain seats in both houses of Congress and re-elect the president. In short, the Republicans lost big, and they can’t blame Mitt Romney or the American electorate for their problems.

...

Latest Discussions»Editorials & Other Articles»J D Vance got a former pr...