And the Republicans stand for what, exactly?

It’s been a revealing week, I guess.

First off, we all learned that Rob Portman, the conservative Republican who spent most of last year campaigning for Mitt Romney, has decided he’s in favor of marriage equality, and all it took was learning that the issue personally affects his son.

We also learned something important about other Republicans.

You might have seen the story in the New Yorker about Eric Cantor*, the nasty piece of work in charge of the Republicans in the House (actually, he’s only Number Two, but he doesn’t take a back seat to anyone in being a nasty little prick).

What I thought was very striking was this line about Ramesh Ponnuru: He argued that too many voters believe that the Party’s economic agenda helps nobody except rich people and big business.

Read more: http://www.newyorker.com/repor…

Wait. “Too many voters believe”? So they have an image problem? Well yes, that’s exactly what Cantor believes. Or, as he explained it with an analogy to Domino’s Pizza, when Domino’s realized their problem was that their pizza sucked they decided to fix it so it wouldn’t suck so bad.

If the Republican Party is the pizza, here’s Cantor’s solution:

Since the 2012 elections, the Republicans have been divided between those who believe their policies are the problem and those who believe they just need better marketing-between those who believe they need to make better pizza and those who think they just need a more attractive box. Cantor, who is known among his colleagues as someone with strategic intelligence and a knack for political positioning, argues that it’s the box.

Maybe this was the week for the new box, and what better packaging to prove that people are wrong, that the Republicans are not just for the rich people and big business. The vote was to increase the federal minimum wage, surely an opportunity to show whether the Republicans are purely on the side of rich people and big business.

227 Republicans voted against raising the minimum wage. How many voted in favor of it? Well, that would be none. Zero. The Republicans were unanimous in opposing an increase in the minimum wage.

Where’s that new pizza box?

And using Rob Portman as an example, I guess we know that none of the Congressional Republicans have kids trying to live on minimum wage.

*Correction: The diary originally got Eric Cantor’s first name wrong.

3 thoughts on “And the Republicans stand for what, exactly?

  1. watching these jokers try and out-soulsearch each other was rich rich rich.

    Mitts mea a huge joke, as are the rest of these sorry-asses. Just more of his ever-present disingenuous douchebaggery  

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