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Vin Weber (1952-) is Managing Partner of Clark & Weinstock, a lobbying and policy advisory firm. He chairs the National Endowment for Democracy, and is a member of the board of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Aspen Institute, and theAdvisory Committees to the Defense Policy Board and U.S. Secretary of State's Advisory Committee on Democracy Promotion. At the University of Minnesota, he is a senior fellow at the Humphrey Institute and co-director of its policy forum. Political policy[edit]In March 2010, he told Newsweek that Liz Cheney appeals to the
Newsweek quoted him, in January 2010, as describing neoconservatism as ""the dominant intellectual force on foreign-policy thinking in the Republican Party," as opposed to realism and paleoconservatism. [2] With Madeleine Albright, he co-chaired, in 2005, a Council on Foreign Relations task force on Arab democracy promotion for the Arab world. [3] For the 2004 United States presidential campaign, he was the Bush-Cheney '04 Plains States Regional Chairman. He was a member of the Death Penalty Committee of the Constitution Project between 1999 and 2001. In 1998, he signed the Project for the New American Century letter to Bill Clinton, declaring Iraq a threat and recommending a preemptive U.S. attack. Before starting Clark & Weinstock's Washington office in 1994, he was president of Empower America, and co-director with Jack Kemp, Jeane Kirkpatrick and Bill Bennett. U.S. Republican leadership[edit]Between 1980 and 1993, he was a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives, for the 2nd District of Minnesota. He was also a member of the House Republican leadership. In 1983, he was one of the members of the Conservative Opportunity Society founded by Newt Gingrich, which he saw as an evolution of the conservatism of Barry Goldwater. He called it "a philosophy, but not a rigid, narrow, almost theological conservatism. There is certainly a conservatism." [But it's], in some ways, broader than the conservatism of the past generations of Goldwater, not to denigrate that at all though. It's a little different. [4] While others, such as Mickey Edwards[5], and Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam,[6] have argued that Gingrich made Republican dominance more of a goal than governance, Weber argued "Newt Gingrich understood and argued that the Republican Party could not simply be against. They had to replace what existed with something new." Weber described the Conservative Opportunity Society view as the welfare state being an alternative to "... an authoritarian state [and] with the Darwinian free enterprise, laissez-faire. Liberal Welfare State was a positive idea." Douthat and Salam believed that Ronald Reagan was not opposed to a positive model of the welfare state, and "would attack government waste and oppressive bureaucracy, but never the pillars of the welfare state." [7] Weber called the conservative ideas "opportunity as opposed to welfare; welfare being, in our view, synonymous with a dependency society," but considered them an evolution.
"Society, as opposed to state, recognizing that the dominant form of our culture is not governmental and that the most important centers of activity in society, if you will, are families, non-profit organizations and neighborhoods. The grand ascent of the state has been an abnormality, a move away from the norm....I argue, even today as we're sitting here, the main challenge to the Republican Party and the conservative movement is to think through what replaces welfare state policies as opposed to simply editing them, defunding them and tearing them down. "...The public expects government to respond to a lot of different problems like education, poverty, problems of the inner city and [to] figure out exactly how to approach those. It remains our major challenge. " He saw two key wedge issues, differentiating the Democratic Party from its constituency, as the Balanced Budget Amendment and voluntary school prayer.
Early career[edit]Prior to being elected to he was campaign manager and chief Minnesota aide to Sen. Rudy Boschwitz (1978-1980), and the co-publisher of The Murray County Herald (1976-1978). References[edit]
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