Esquire magazine polls GOP

Status
Not open for further replies.
Esquire magazine conducted an anonymous poll of 75 current and former GOP leaders. Curious about the [ur=http://www.esquire.com/features/republican-party-survey-0310]results?[/url]

Some highlights-

75% of respondents said they are Fiscal Conservatives (You believe, above all, that the primary emphasis of the party should be on lower taxes, free markets, and limited government regulation.)

6. You've been given the opportunity to kick one person out of the party--his or her values...
...simply aren't compatible with the Republican Party as you see it. Whom would you choose?
30% Senator Olympia Snowe
7% Representative Michele Bachmann
15% Colin Powell
12% Glenn Beck
37% None of the above/Other
Notable write-ins: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Steve King, "We need to grow our tent, not shrink it."


8. If you could poach one player from the other team, which of the following Democrats would...
...make a useful addition to the republican party? (I admit, I thought this question was funny)

34% Warren Buffett
0% David Axelrod
5% Hillary Clinton
5% Oprah Winfrey
55% No, thanks. You can keep 'em.

11. In a poll released by Public Policy Polling in early August, just 32 percent of Republicans...
...in Virginia believe that Barack Obama was born in the United States. How would you characterize the role of the so-called "birthers" in the Republican Party?
2% They're the base.
87% They're the fringe.
12%They're the mainstream.



13. Do you consider Barack Obama a socialist?

78% Yes
22% No

15. Should the fight against gay marriage be among the highest priorities of the Republican Party?
31% Yes. It's a critical issue and we must remain vigilant in defending traditional values and practices.
69% No. It's a distraction from more important conversations we should be having about national security and fiscal responsibility.

17. Do you agree that America has the right to impose its will on sovereign countries when...
...its interests are concerned?
59% Yes
42% No



 

GasBandit

Staff member
The problem with the GOP is that there's all too often a huge gulf between what they purport to believe, be it publicly or anonymously, and what they do.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
The problem with the GOP is that there's all too often a huge gulf between what they purport to believe, be it publicly or anonymously, and what they do.
That goes for the Dems as well.[/QUOTE]

Eh, if anything, I think the Dems are a bit more honest with their intentions, even if it only comes out in the unscripted slips of the tongue (such as the famous "I just want to spread the wealth around" remark Obama made to Joe the Plumber). Not by much, grant you, but I think they come by their opposition more honestly than the Republicans do.
 
W

WolfOfOdin

The Republican party's not the republican party until they stop bowing and scraping before the moral majority.

That and admit that supply-side economics is mostly useless without demand-side implemented as well.

And that a government has no place regulating the bedroom.

Anywho, what I'm getting at is, True Fiscal Conservatives are fine by me, at times their ideas actually work, if implemented properly and without hemming and hawing and shrieking 'treason!'.
 
W

WolfOfOdin

..I'll agree with you there, Gas. I can't believe I actually typed that.

As much as I vehemently disagree with libertarianism, I have to admire their ability to not kowtow to Falwell and Robertson's legions of dominionist hacks. And at least you're not a Galambosian.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top