Snowe Fall, Ctd.

TPM's Eric Kleefeld has more fallout from that PPP poll I cited on Tuesday, showing Olympia Snowe potentially vulnerable to a conservative primary challenger:

I just spoke to Connie Mackey, president of the Family Research Council Action PAC, and she told me that if a conservative candidate were to emerge to run against Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME) in the 2012 Republican primary, FRC Action will back them. "Well of course there is an audience that would love to see Olympia Snowe out of office, within the ranks of social conservatives, that's for certain," said Mackey....

As luck would have it, Mackey is headed up to New Hampshire this weekend for a regional Family Research Council conference on family policy. And she expects that this subject will probably come up in her discussions with FRC members from Maine. Mackey reiterated that nobody would have expected to see numbers like this until now, "so now the process of discussion will begin."

In related news, Marc Ambinder reports

The Republican Party of Charleston, South Carolina has voted to censure Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) for working with Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) on cap-and-trade emissions legislation. This is getting a fair amount of play, as the whole notion of purging moderates and bipartisan sympathizers from the GOP is a big deal these days.

But it's a whole range of positions that the Charleston GOP hits Graham for taking: support for TARP and John McCain's comprehensive immigration bill... are both thrown in as well.

In fact, Graham "in the name of bipartisanship -- continues to weaken the Republican brand and tarnish the ideals of freedom, rule of law, and fiscal conservatism," the Charleston GOP resolution says, also voicing skepticism of global warming science.

Reader should feel free to make their own jokes regarding inmates and asylums.

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COMMENTS (3)

11/12/2009 - 11:16am EDT |

Actually, no one can beat the line of the conservative antisecessionist James Louis Petigru: South Carolina couldn't possibly be an independent nation, because it was "too small for a republic and too large for an insane asylum." I speak, BTW, as both a native and a historian of the place. I might add that this discontent with Graham has been building for some time in the fever swamps--and believe me, we South Carolinians know swamps.

11/12/2009 - 12:12pm EDT |

colablease, yeah, I agree it is harder to write something funnier than the reality of South Carolina itself. Be honest, is it inbreeding, bad shrimp, a tradition of dropping babies on their heads, what is it that has made South Carolina what it is?
The funny thing is Conservationism was originally a Republican construct.

11/12/2009 - 12:14pm EDT |

You'd think that last quote could be easily juxtaposed against some other Republican (or even the Charleston GOP) decrying the "lack of reaching across the isle" in an ad that starts with "Want know why nothing gets done in Washington?...".

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