Iowa Independent: Branstad, Vander Plaats rivalry erupts in blogosphere
Last week we described the GOP primary for governor as a bumper car match.
Thanks to two right wing pundits, it's turning into a public boxing match.
The Iowa Independent reported an e-mail exchange between blogger Craig Robinson and radio host Steve Deace. The exchange was posted on Robinson's website "The Iowa Republican."
The two friends have been in a heated discussion over the past couple weeks that has summed up the GOP civil war going on nationally: tea partiers, secessionists, moderates and Christian fundamentalists all aiming to claim the title of "True Republican."
It's fascinating to watch from afar while Democrats are busy getting things done.
Here's the full Iowa Independent article...
By Jason Hancock
A growing rift between supporters of the gubernatorial campaigns of Bob Vander Plaats and Terry Branstad spilled out into the conservative blogosphere Monday, with both sides taking the other to task over perceived hypocrisy.
Vander Plaats supporter and Christian radio host Steve Deace lobbed the first volley in an e-mail to conservative activists. He pointed to portions of Branstad’s record — such as tax increases during his tenure, earning an endorsement from teacher’s unions and his appointment of a lieutenant governor who supports same-sex marriage and abortion rights — and asked if they would ever consider supporting a “hypothetical candidate” with that kind of platform.
Deace got responses from numerious individuals, including former and current GOP candidates and the leaders of several of the state’s most influential conservative organizations.
Blogger and former Republican Party of Iowa Political Director Craig Robinson, a regular guest on Deace’s program who calls the radio host a “good man” and genuine friend, quickly fired back with a hypothetical of his own that criticized Vander Plaats’ record. He then took Vander Plaats supporters to task for blasting Branstad for doing things similar to another governor many of them once defended, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee.
I also would remind you, and a number of people on this e-mail chain (and my wife for that matter), that you guys voted for a candidate who was in favor of higher income taxes, higher sales taxes, higher gas taxes, higher grocery taxes, higher tobacco taxes, higher beer taxes, higher Internet taxes, and higher nursing home bed taxes.
You voted for a candidate who was the ONLY Republican to speak to the [National Education Association] and later receive their endorsement.
You voted for a candidate who called No Child Left Behind “the greatest education reform effort by the federal government in my lifetime.”
You voted for a candidate who supported amnesty and taxpayer-financed welfare and health care for illegal aliens.
What’s so ironic about your hypothetical question is that almost everything you take issue with in Branstad’s record are things that you either didn’t care about or chose to overlook in regards to Mike Huckabee. It looks like you have flip-flopped on these issues quicker than Mitt Romney ever could have.
Vander Plaats was Huckabee’s Iowa campaign director during the 2008 presidential caucus season, and Huckabee endorsed his gubernatorial bid last May. Many of the same groups and individuals who were active in the Huckabee presidential campaign are now supporting Vander Plaats. By the same token, many of Branstad’s supporters, including one-time chief of staff Doug Gross, were active in the campaign of Huckabee’s chief rival, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.
Branstad has been drawing fire from social and religious conservatives from the moment he announced he was interested in re-entering politics. A meeting with several social conservative leaders aimed at soothing their concerns ended up bolstering them, as details of a disappointed group ended up on several blogs. The back-and-forth culminated last month with state Rep. Kent Sorenson, R-Indianola, and the Iowa Family Policy Center announced that not only would they be endorsing Vander Plaats but that they would never support a Branstad candidacy.
In the aftermath, Vander Plaats refused to sign on to a loyalty oath passed by the Linn County Republican Party and also would not rule out a third-party run for governor should he be defeated in the primary.