Establishment

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See also: Uniparty

The Establishment are the "powers that be," the group of leaders in a society who hold power and use it primarily for their own benefit, opposing meritocracy and making it unjustifiably difficult for others. The establishment is entrenched in both U.S. political parties, and its adherents support the same goals regardless of the stances they voice to voters.[1] The 1964 conservative classic A Choice Not An Echo exposed and defeated the Establishment control over the Republican presidential nominating process, resulting in the upset victory of Barry Goldwater for the nomination. The Gospel of Mark is the most anti-Establishment Gospel.

In politics, the Establishment consists of globalists and the insiders in the Republican and Democrat Parties who do things behind the scenes to preserve their own position and thwart real competition. Nomination by endorsement is one way that the Establishment gets what it wants.

For nearly three decades, the Establishment of the Republican Party has been connected with the RINO Bush and Rockefeller families. In the Democrat Party, the Clinton family and the Kennedy family are part of the Establishment. John Boehner was the Establishment's choice as Speaker of the House. When he surprisingly resigned from that position, the Establishment turned unsuccessfully to Kevin McCarthy to take the reins of power, and then to Paul Ryan, who had been the Establishment pick as the GOP vice presidential nominee in 2012.

The GOP establishment has no interest in defending religious liberty, protecting First and Second Amendment rights, stopping and reversing socialist policies, protecting U.S. sovereignty and advancing other America First policies. The establishment often fails to strongly and adequately stand up for conservative beliefs.[2]

In the 2016 presidential election, the Establishment was all-out against the nomination of Donald Trump by the Republican Party.[3] The Establishment was initially in support of Jeb Bush on the Republican side, and Hillary Clinton on the Democrat side. Marco Rubio was a backup candidate for the Establishment in case Jeb Bush faltered, but then Rubio rebelled and obtained independent financial backing, and stayed in the race long enough to prevent Jeb Bush from gaining any momentum. When Jeb Bush pulled out after spending more than $100 million, the Establishment swung their support behind Rubio. Rubio withdrew on March 15, 2016, leaving John Kasich and Ted Cruz as the remaining Establishment candidates.

However, now that Trump was elected president, the establishment is trying to publicly align itself with Trump while marginalizing those who truly support Trump's agenda. One can see this in the fact that President Trump appointed many liberals and globalists – such as Gary Cohn, H.R. McMaster, and Jared Kushner – to his administration while marginalizing America First conservatives such as Sebastian Gorka. The establishment did the same with Reagan after his election, having him appoint liberal establishmentarians such as George H. W. Bush who betrayed conservative principles while marginalizing actual conservatives. The establishment frequently slanders real conservatives by labeling them "far-right" or "ultra-right."[4]

GOP establishment opposition to movement conservatism

The Republican establishment is known for its opposition to movement conservatives, from opposing Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock in 2012 to opposing Donald Trump in 2016. Rather than put American interests first, both in domestic and foreign affairs, the establishment within the Republican Party prefers to stay "moderate", often siding with Democrats for personal and political gain rather than support consistent conservatives, whom they view as "extremist" and "unfit". Many GOP establishment tokens served in the Bush administration, such as Colin Powell, Karl Rove, and even George W. Bush himself. Others include Mitt Romney, John Kasich, and liberal Republican senators Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski.

The GOP establishment played a huge role in the Republicans' huge defeats in elections in 2012. Rather than siding with Todd Akin and move on, RINOs and RINO Backers teamed up with Democrats to attack Todd Akin,[5] subsequently causing him to lose the 2012 Missouri Senate election to then-incumbent Democrat Claire McCaskill. Similarly, several Republicans attacked Richard Mourdock and caused him to lose the 2012 Indiana Senate election to Joe Donnelly.[6] After Mourdock said: "I just struggled with it myself for a long time but I came to realize: Life is that gift from God that I think even if life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that it is something that God intended to happen",[7] Dan Parker later took Mourdock's words out of context, saying, "As a pro-life Catholic, I’m stunned and ashamed that Richard Mourdock believes God intended rape." Romney also withdrew his support for Mourdock. Note that Mourdock never said that God intends rape, rather he could have worded his sentence better. Since the second clause of the sentence regarding God's intentions in Mourdock's words comes right after the second half of the first clause regarding rape, the slight vagueness of the sentence was too easily exploited to construct a strawman attack. In fact, Mourdock himself later clarified his earlier statement and accurately slammed the strawman attack as "absurd and sick", in his own words.[see previous citation]

See also

Further reading

References

  1. McManus, John F. (July 30, 2016). The Hidden Establishment. The New American. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  2. Kozak, Edmund (May 16, 2019). No Country for Conservative Inc As The Left Comes for Us All. Human Events. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  3. Jasper, William F. (August 23, 2016). Trump vs. the Establishment. The New American. Retrieved January 3, 2018.
  4. Williams, Thomas D. (June 24, 2018). Williams: For the Establishment, Anything Not Them Is ‘Far Right’. Breitbart News. Retrieved June 24, 2018.
  5. Romney: Akin’s Comment ‘Inexcusable’
  6. United States Senate elections in Indiana, 2012
  7. Richard Mourdock under fire for rape remarks