Republican �Super Lobbyist�: Conservatives Need To Shut Up And Listen To Republican Leaders

I love self-described �bi-partisan, super lobbyist� John Feehery. If you wanted to create a caricature of the out of touch, self-important, above it all Republican establishment class you�d have to invent him. Thankfully he already exists and he loves to take to the digital pages of The Hill every now and then to remind the rest of us who runs things.

Today�s sermon is dedicated to the joys of knowing your place if you�re a conservative. You see according to Feehery the real problem in the GOP and our politics at large is too much individualism and not enough collectivism with a chosen few (not surprisingly he's among the few) leading the way. Sure it starts out as a bashing of millennials but he really only warms to the task when he gets to his frequent target�conservatives.

For our kind of democratic Republic to work, the people have to delegate certain powers to their elected representatives, and with that delegation comes a certain amount of trust. But if the people don�t trust their fellow citizens, how can they trust their elected representatives? And that is where you hit the limits of individualism. We are seeing the fraying of the social contract in both political parties, but perhaps more acutely in the Republican Party today. Sure, Barack Obama is unpopular with the conservative base, but almost as unpopular are Republican leaders John Boehner and Mitch McConnell. There is little patience to follow the leaders within the GOP. Trust has broken down. The movement will not be satisfied. The Republican Party used to fall in line, but now, it is seemingly falling apart. The Tea Party insurgency is virulently distrustful of big government, big business and big labor. It despises the �Republican Establishment.� It has even declared war on the Chamber of Commerce. The Democratic Party will not escape this chaos, as we hit the limits of individualism. The gender and racial political alliances upon which the modern party is built are not sturdy. One slip of the tongue, one off-color joke can end the career of a Democratic politician. Liberals are even more anti-establishment than the Tea Party. They glorify Edward Snowden just as they call for the dismemberment of Wall Street. The Democrats are primarily a secular party that ignores, if not condemns, most church teachings (such as on abortion and gay marriage). The party has come unmoored from any religious values. It glorifies the individual, no matter what choices that individual might make.

Someone actually wrote with pride and a sense of loss that �the GOP used to fall in line�. And look where that got us. Bigger government, record debt, oh and the loss of the House, the Senate and the White House.

While those results might be cause for concern if you care about the future of the country more than a party, Feehery longs for those days. He seems very upset that conservatives aren�t satisfied with a pat on the head for their volunteer efforts and votes. Now they want not just rhetoric but results? It�s terribly embarrassing for everyone when the help forgets their station.

I love the part where he�s absolutely flummoxed as to why conservatives would turn on the Chamber of Commerce so allow me to help� they supported Obama�s so-called �stimulus�, they are cutting deals with big labor to force amnesty on the country and exists basically to get as much money and regulatory favor from taxpayers via D.C. as possible.

What a bunch of ungrateful bastards these small government, pro liberty conservatives are. Why aren�t showering the entrance of the Chamber�s offices with rose petals?

This self-declared elite wasn�t built in a day and it won�t be destroyed in one election cycle either. But when people wonder why I don�t really care if the GOP wins the Senate or even the presidency (get in line and support Chris Christie! Or Jeb Bush!) guys like this are at or near the top of the list. Putting the same people back in power and expecting different results is a fool�s errand.