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Cantor unveils new strategy for politically hobbled GOP

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Delivered a week before President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address, Cantor’s speech had some presidential flourishes. He pointed to members of the audience who represented the initiatives Republicans hope to advance — increasing the use of charter schools to help “the most vulnerable”; expanding a visa program to allow foreign nationals with advanced degrees to stay in the U.S.; giving more hourly workers flexibility to spend more time with their families; and simplifying the tax code.

During a battery of television interviews intended to highlight his message, Cantor acknowledged that his party has become too closely identified with line items in the federal budget.

“Talking about numbers has been our way in the past of saying, ‘Hey, we want to do something about it,’ ” he said on CNBC. While on MSNBC he said, “Where we have a lot of room to grow as a party, as conservatives, is to explain again why we’re for the kind of fiscal discipline that we’re for — what is the reality and how are we going to help people?”

Cantor has made similar speeches in the past, but setting a new course could be more important than ever this year. In 2012, the Obama campaign succeeded in part on a strategy that tied Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney to unpopular policies advocated by the GOP-led House. That connection was underscored when Romney selected Budget Committee Chairman Paul D. Ryan, R-Wis., as his running mate.

Republicans say they are under increased pressure to give voters a reason to keep them in power.

“I like my accountant. I appreciate my accountant. But I don’t love my accountant. And he usually brings me pretty stern news,” said Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, a former head of the House GOP campaign committee. “Our brand is at a very low rating right now, and I think how we perform in this House, and what our image is going into the election, will have a lot to do with whether or not we retain the majority.”

While Obama’s job approval rating has hovered above 50 percent over the past month, a batch of polls conducted recently continued to show congressional approval ratings no higher than the mid-teens.

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unionguy wrote on February 6, 2013 11:30 a.m. ...
BLAH, BLAH, BLAH! It's the same ole Republican mantra...."to hell with the middle class, we are for the 1%".

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