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This was forwarded to me. Read it and prepare, grasshopper.
This is an exciting time in American politics as centrist Republicans assert ourselves and prepare to lead our Party to victory in the fall. Unity has been a buzz word among Republican activists lately and the Republican Leadership Council stands ready to show that the core conservative principles of fiscal discipline and limited government can and will unite all parts of the Republican coalition.
The recent news articles and editorials below emphasize what the Republican Leadership Council has argued all along ? that the Republican coalition can not only stay intact, but it can also win elections if it focuses on the core fiscal principles that unite our Party and inspire the American people.
National Review: Truce!
"Conservatives and McCain should neither pretend that we have no differences nor obsess about those differences. We should instead work on the common task of building a center-right majority in this election year and future ones, each appreciating that the other will play a different role in that task."
Karl Rove: Crackup? Not so Fast
"The Reagan coalition has a natural desire to stick together. Fiscal, defense and values conservatives have more in common with each other than with any major element of the Democratic Party's leadership."
Fred Barnes: Let's Grow Up, Conservatives
"McCain, probably alone among Republicans, can win this fall, but not without the full-blown support of conservatives. If he continues to reach out to them while running as a conservative, they need to heed Barry Goldwater's advice in 1960. "Let's grow up, conservatives,' he said. 'If we want to take this party back, and I think we can, let's get to work.'"
RealClear Politics: GOP Stronger or Broader?
"Republican voters in general clearly understand that, in a democracy, the all-or-nothing equation has only one sure outcome: You get nothing."
Washington Post: McCain's GOP Big Tent or Badly Fractured?
"McCain advisers are confident that over time he will unite the party -- and, more important, that he will be able to do so without compromising his ability to appeal to independents in a general election."
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