Is this the best argument for Kevin McCarthy as speaker? The most generous interpretation is that he is the candidate with the best argument.
The most charitable interpretation is that he is the candidate with the best argument.
The most charitable interpretation is that he is the candidate with the best argument.
Kevin McCarthy is a Republican who has a long and distinguished career on the right as a congressman, congressman-elect, and senator.
He has no apparent or apparent, political party affiliation.
He was, he is, and perhaps always has been an independent thinker.
He is the candidate who made the biggest change for Republicans in his time as speaker.
He became the Republican speaker of the house on April 28, 2016, and he immediately set out to do what he would always do when first elected: improve the Republican Party.
To his credit, the first step was to take the issue of abortion back from Democrats and hold town halls aimed at repealing Obamacare.
As I have often said: The problem with the issue of abortion is in the issue. The issue is with the Democrats, never with Republicans.
By repealing Obamacare, he became the first Republican speaker in modern history to make a major change in party policy. It was a political problem, not a philosophical or ideological one.
A number of factors were involved, as they always are, but one of the most powerful was that Republicans are the party of personal responsibility and personal liberty. The pro-life position is, and the pro-life position is the strongest position in American conservatism.
Republican voters have been, and will continue to be, willing to sacrifice their personal freedom if it will deliver a higher standard of living for their families.
Voting for a candidate who has a plan on how to do that, whether it is abortion or Medicare for all, is a vote for personal responsibility and the freedom that comes from rejecting government action that infringes on our rights.
It is a vote against the kind of government that forces people to go with the popular vote when, in a presidential election, people must make their choice between the lesser of two evils rather than an individual choice.
McCarthy made two other major political changes that