A Blog-Savvy Republican Party?

Virginia bloggers are familiar with Saun Kenney, the long-time political blogger who became communications director for the Republican Party of Virginia. The RPV as an institution (as opposed to elected officials) had never made much effort to reach out to the blogging community, but that’s changing.

Writes Jeff Schapiro in his update on the transportation saga in today’s Times-Dispatch: “[Kenney] said Republicans also want to ‘keep the conversation going’ on transportation through bloggers. Kenney circulates to reporters the Web addresses of blogs carrying musings on the road-and-rail fight.”

If Kenney has any sense, which he does, http://www.baconsrebellion.blogspot.com is not one of the URLs he’s passing around. None of the contributors to this blog, or the people commenting in it, have taken kindly to the Republican transportation plan. Whether we’re on the list or not, it’s good for MSM reporters to see what the blogs are saying. The commentary on the better blogs is a lot meatier than the 30-second campaign commercial the PRV has been running.

Anything that Kenney can do to “keep the conversation” going is a positive, too, if it helps disrupt the MSM meta-narrative of the transportation debate as purely a tax-and-spend issue. Try as they might, the Republicans have had a dilly of a time shifting the conversation to the positive elements of the GOP transportation package (and, yes, there are positive elements). My teeth nearly dropped out of my head when I saw that Schapiro actually acknowledged other aspects of the debate with an entire sentence in his story:

Kenney said the proposal includes features about which Kaine has spoken favorably. Among them: controls on land use and greater accountability from the state road bureaucracy.

If the Republicans read Bacon’s Rebellion, they’ll grasp very quickly that there is widespread skepticism that the billions of dollars their plan would raise would be spent wisely. If the GOPpers want to win the tug of war with Gov. Timothy M. Kaine over the transportation debate, they need to pound away at the reform and accountability features of their bill, which have gone largely overlooked in the press coverage so far.


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Comments

4 responses to “A Blog-Savvy Republican Party?”

  1. Shaun Kenney Avatar
    Shaun Kenney

    The reform measures and the step towards tying land use to transportation spending are critical components that separate this plan from all the others. On this component, Republicans did not compromise — reforms readers of Bacon’s Rebellion have long assumed as common ground.

    You said it correctly — there are good aspects to this bill and they deserve greater attention.

    As for getting more folks to read BA, I’m working on it, Jim. 🙂

  2. Phil Rodokanakis Avatar
    Phil Rodokanakis

    Jim: I get copies of RPV talking points sent out by Shaun Kenney. I’m not aware that he puts out anything special for bloggers.

    And the RPV talking points are nothing short of Party propaganda that usually raise even more controversy. For example, in the Talking Points Kenney sent out announcing the RPV TV Ad, I responded to him questioning the veracity of the ad:

    “I realize it’s your job to spew out this sort of propaganda, but it’s really shameful when the RPV is accusing Kaine of playing politics, when the “facts” stated in the ad are nothing short of lies.”

    My message was copied to a number of conservative grassroots activists and that spawned a fiery response. If Shaun reads these messages, to my knowledge he is not responding.

  3. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    I too responded to Shaun about the truth of the ad that Ed Gillespie put out in the name of the RPV.

    Lying to the voters is wrong.

  4. Larry Gross Avatar
    Larry Gross

    I’m waiting to see what Conservative R’s will run on come fall.. both incumbents and challengers.

    Do they claim the “compromise” as proof of a superior approach to transporation problems or do they run away from it and if they run away from it.. what do they support instead?

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