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Archive for February, 2010

Primaries and Debates Matter

Saturday, February 27th, 2010

“I firmly believe that the current administration has launched an all-out assault
on the American dream.”
- Don Bates Jr. at the New Castle Debate

Primaries and the debates that go with them are an important part of the electoral process.  Unfortunately, Democrats in Indiana are not going to get a chance to have a primary because of Senator Bayh’s late announcement that he will not be running for re-election.  The filing deadline that passed hours after Senator Bayh’s announcement means that Democrat voters in Indiana will be forced to accept as their nominee whoever is chosen behind closed doors by the Democrat State Central Committee.

Team Bates is proud to be part of the exciting Republican primary race that is underway, and today’s debate at the Henry County GOP’s Lincoln Day Dinner in New Castle was the first debate between all 5 of the Republican senatorial candidates since the filing deadline earlier this month.  Last week, Indiana Republican Party Chairman Murray Clark noted the importance of the primary when he said, “we have five solid choices as we decide who best represents our party. Contrary to how some Democrats may portray it, we believe without reservation that a robust primary is good for Hoosiers and our party.”  He further said that the primary “[will] raise our profile and sharpen our operations” and “require the media and others to focus on our ideas and our vision.”

We agree with him.  The primary race gives not just Republicans, but all Hoosiers an opportunity to get to know each candidate better, and we feel the momentum building behind Don everywhere we go around the state.  Take a look at some of these articles talking about today’s debate:

Evansville Courier and Press – Note what one new supporter said about Don’s performance.

WTHR – TV – Catch clips of the debate.

New Castle Debate Coverage Part I

Saturday, February 27th, 2010

Today the 5 contenders for the Republican nomination for the US Senate met in New Castle at the Henry County Lincoln Day Dinner to debate the issues facing the state and the country.  Here is a snapshot of the debate via WTHR-TV.  Don did a great job of energetically presenting the need to move the country forward for freedom and supporting alternatives to more government takeover of the lives of everyday Hoosiers.

Why Did Bayh Quit?

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

That’s a good question, and one contributor to a Wisconsin political newsletter wrote the following column on that topic.  At the end of the column Don is highlighted as a strong candidate.

He used to be the most invulnerable Democrat senator running for re-election.  Now he’s not even running, and his party is trying to figure out how the race will fare without him.  In December of 2008 you didn’t have to be a political insider to figure out that Evan Bayh was in a strong position.  With a war chest that still stands around $12 million, a relatively good image in the public eye, and Indiana voting for the Democrat presidential nominee for the first time since LBJ vs. Barry Goldwater in 1964, Bayh was going to be tough to beat. 

Between December of 2008 and February of 2010, a couple of things changed.  First, Democrats were able to govern with their majority in Congress and their president in the Oval Office.  With their hands on the levers of government, Democrats proceeded to implement a radical agenda that was not part of their public message strategy involving “hope and change.”  Those with the willingness or the wisdom to see past the broad and generic statements of the 2008 campaign saw a policy disaster looming.  That disaster has now come to us by way of more reckless “stimulus” spending, greater economic regulation, a proposal to cap economic growth and trade away jobs in the name of voodoo science, and a half-hearted approach to victory in the almost forgotten War on Terror. 

Second, although Democrats have had a majority, that majority has been narrow enough to require the support of almost every member of their party in Congress.  So while the liberal Democrats set the policy agenda and hurt the overall name of the party, Democrats in leadership have been whipping moderate members to toe the liberal party line.  It is bad enough to have your party outflanking you on the left, but when you have to move in step with them and place your name in support of their position in roll call votes, you have an even bigger problem.  [Click here to read the rest on the InsideScoop.us]