Glenn Beck urges GOP to admit spending problem

WASHINGTON — Talk show host Glenn Beck poked and prodded the Republican hierarchy Saturday night in a raucous address to conservatives, comparing the party to an alcoholic who hasn’t hit bottom and golfer Tiger Woods before his public repentance.

Calling himself a “recovering alcoholic,” Beck said he believes in the concept of redemption but that he doesn’t think the GOP has taken the first step of achieving it.

“I have not yet heard people in the Republican Party admit they have a problem,” Beck told a packed ballroom in Washington. “I have not seen a come-to-Jesus meeting. … ‘Hello, my name is the Republican Party and I’ve got a problem. I’m addicted to spending and big government’. … They need that moment.”

The irreverent speech drew cheers, laughter and several standing ovations from the majority of the crowd gathered for the keynote address of the Conservative Political Action Conference, which organizers say drew 10,000 people over three days before closing Saturday night.

During that time some of the best-known figures of the Republican Party — members of Congress, governors, presidential hopefuls — trouped through to rail against the Obama administration and court conservatives. The political figures were greeted by the audiences mostly as kindred spirits.

Still, when hosts announced the results of the conference’s presidential straw poll late Saturday, the audience went wild to hear the name of the winner: Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, former GOP candidate for the White House and prominent leader of the grass-roots libertarian movement. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney came in second, almost 10 percentage points behind. Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin came in third with 7 percent and Gov. Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota finished with 6 percent.

According to Beck, the main villain is “progressivism” — a word he wrote in giant letters on a large chalkboard and labeled “a cancer” eating away at American ideals.

“Progressivism was designed to press past the constitution,” Beck said, charging that Republicans aren’t giving Americans much of an alternative.

“Dick Cheney was here a couple of days ago,” he said, “and he says it’s going to be a good year for conservative ideas.”

That may be true, he said, but Republicans should know that it’s not good enough to “not suck as much as the other side,” Beck said.

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