Let’s Start Working Toward A Brokered Convention: Bob McDonnell For President.


Ladies and Gentlemen, unless you’ve been living under a particularly dense rock, it’s obvious we’ve got ourselves a serious problem.

I’m not going to say that no one of the three men in the running for the Republican Presidential nomination can beat Barack Obama, but at this point, it’s obvious that whoever we pick, whether it be Romney, Santorum or Gingrich, none of them will face anything short of a  sheer vertical climb. It’s not just Obama and his billion $ campaign, Left-Wing SuperPACs and the wholehearted support of the MSM, it’s the fact that the candidates themselves are hideously flawed – the candidate with the most discipline and the ability to raise cash seems determined to run a standard issue risk-averse campaign and is hated beyond reason by the most active segment of the rank-and-file, the candidate with the momentum now cannot seem to avoid getting suckered (in the worst way) into the thicket of social issues when the number one issues are energy, the economy and unemployment, while the candidate with the most ideas and the willingness to take the necessary risks is the least disciplined and (no coincidence) has a personal history that is going to be hard for a lot of voters – especially female voters – to overlook.

Our best hope at this point is for another – better – candidate to leap in before the last of the filing deadlines pass in mid-March to April and get on the ballot of the last seven states. If this candidate can unite all wings of the party, it’s very likely he can win all seven and send the Party into a contested convention in Tampa. This prospect – of a disorganized, disunited and fractious party being televised for the entire world to see – rightfully terrifies a lot of the old guard.  But remember also that it is entirely possible that if this late entrant generates enough excitement with Republican voters and Independents, and it reflects in the polls that he’ll be best placed to go toe-to-toe with Obama, one (or two) of the current candidates could – could (because we’re dealing with big egos here) – be convinced to withdraw his candidacy and throw his support and convention delegates behind him even before the Party assembles for the convention.

The only thing left is to identify this guy (preferably someone who’s spent some time in a Governor’s office) and do our best to convince him to put his nation first and get into the ring.

Jeb Bush is mentioned often, but he is not that guy – and he knows it. If his name was John Ellis Smith, we wouldn’t even be in this situation in the first place because he would have wrapped this up by South Carolina – we wouldn’t need to be talking about drafting him in at a brokered convention. The problem is that his last name is Bush, and not some other Bush (like Kate or Reggie). Simply put, the average (superficial, ignorant, gullible, etc.) Independent is not going to vote for another President Bush, no matter how different us political junkies know he is from his father and brother. Nominating him for President at the Convention would be a catastrophic mistake.

If Rick Perry were to jump back in with a revamped (i.e. entirely new) campaign team and a viable plan to rebuild his image after his disastrous initial foray into the race, he may be able to get the GOP Primary electorate to take a second look at him and build the momentum necessary to carry him to Tampa as a viable option in a contested convention. But this would be monstrously tough in this day and age of YouTube and a media that is shameless in its open shilling for the incumbent.

Gov. Bob McDonnell

So I’m throwing out one other name; Robert Francis McDonnell. He may be only two years (three years by inauguration day 2013) into his tenure as Governor of Virginia but he seems to meet every other requirement – better yet, it’s still far more executive experience than Barack Obama ever had before he started running for President. Another thing to note is that he is term limited (Virginia does not allow their Governors consecutive terms) so he can’t run for re-election, so it won’t be like he’s abandoning ship – especially given that his approval ratings generally top 60% and that he’s on everyone’s shortlist for Vice-President. If he can resign his office to be VP, why can’t he resign it to be President?

Second, he is a retired Army Lieutenant Colonel – something i.e. military service, that will always be a strong plus with the average GOP Primary voter. Third, academically he’s no slouch – he has degrees in Business (B.B.A. and M.B.A.) and Law – which would make it very difficult for the media to fit him into the same “dumb” narrative they applied to Rick Perry (and George W. Bush and Ronald Reagan before him). Fourth, he looks the part – something that is of very high importance to Independent voters. Fifth, he is the current Chairman of the Republican Governors Association – meaning establishment cred; having both the base and the “establishment” on the same page is always better than when they are at loggerheads.

Sixth, and in my opinion, very important, is that he ran a magnificent campaign in 2009. From his website to his messaging and GOTV operations, his team’s work led to him ruthlessly pounding into the ground (by a 17 point margin) an opponent backed by the Washington Post and the Obama White House’s political muscle. His election emphatically took back a state the pundits all thought Obama’s victory in 2008 had forever shifted to the Left. Bob McDonnell as our candidate puts Virginia firmly back in the GOP column on Election Day and neighboring North Carolina as well.

The only problem is that he has already endorsed Mitt Romney, but like OH Attorney General Mike DeWine, nothing prevents him from withdrawing his endorsement if he sees that Romney is not able to close the sale.

Bob McDonnell for President.


Milton Friedman And The Case For Mitt Romney …


Milton Friedman in a nutshell elegantly explains why I believe that Mitt Romney is going to end up pleasantly surprising Conservatives if he’s elected President. Unlike Jonah Goldberg, I don’t believe he’ll be a Conservative out of gratitude, i.e. because he’ll “owe” us – it will be because he’ll have no choice. Keeping the GOP’s conservative rank-and-file happy would not be just be a matter of political profit for a President Romney, it will be a matter of political survival.

Like I’ve written before, when I look at Romney’s record, I add in 800 vetoes (700+ overturned) and factor in an 85% Democratic State Legislature and a 100% Democratic Governor’s Council (which signs off on judicial nominations). I also count eight overturned line item vetoes in the Massachusetts Health Care Insurance Reform Law (AKA RomneyCare), multiple attempts to cut taxes and the fact that he came in facing a $3 billion deficit and left office with a nearly $600 million surplus.

I believe Romney would be a strong and able President and he would be fiscally better than George W. Bush and most importantly stratospherically better than Barack Obama. I believe he will be pro-life and pro-gun in word and deed throughout his Presidency and that he would nominate conservative judges and push them through the Senate.

I believe all this because I believe that a President Mitt Romney would seek a second term in 2016. He’s too ambitious not to, and if there’s anything no one can doubt, it’s the breadth and depth of Mitt Romney’s ambition. And he certainly would not want to be a one-term President. Which is where we’ll own him, lock, stock and barrel.

Jonah Goldberg’s Case for Romney has as a subtitle; “A president who owes you is better than one who owns you.” My case is somewhat different; “A President you own is better than one who owes you.

Let me spell it out; 2016 will see a whole bunch of people finishing up their sixth years as Governors in their states – people with names like Susana Martinez, Brian Sandoval, Nikki Haley and Scott Walker(!). A man named Chris Christie would actually be rounding up their seventh year in office while another guy named Bobby Jindal would be just one year out of the Governor’s office in Baton Rouge. There’s also a guy named Bob McDonnell who would be three years termed out of office in his home state of Virginia, perhaps even serving in the Senate. And speaking of the Senate, there are one or two former Governors who are young enough to try their luck if a President Romney is stupid enough to provide them with an opening, not to mention a rising star named Marco Rubio and old veterans with names like John Thune.

In other words, unlike 2008 and 2012, in 2016 Conservatives are going to have lots and lots of … options.

And you’d best believe that a President Romney and his staff are going to be well aware of those options and what would happen if he fails to walk the line – and the need for him to do so would be even more acute given how little he’s trusted by Conservatives in the first place. No Republican White House would want a repeat of 1992 – and with so many viable alternatives, and a significantly more organized conservative base, it’s not so much that a President Romney would fear not being able to win the General Election in November 2016, it’s that he might just become the very first sitting President to experience the humiliation of failing to win his own Party’s nomination in the Primaries.

That’s why I will vote for Mitt Romney in my state’s upcoming primary -  not only do I believe that he’s the most electable in a General Election of the three candidates left, I believe he’ll govern as a conservative because I believe he’s much more conservative than he’s given credit for.

And because we’ll have him by the cojones.


John Hoeven for President 2012 …


If a brokered convention is our only hope … then we need to;

  1. Get united around someone.
  2. Convince him (or her) to throw his hat in.
  3. Help him  win some of the Primaries he can still qualify for …

… and hopefully he would have gathered the support he’ll need to make him a viable choice for the nomination by the time we get to Tampa. That’s the only way we get an acceptable alternative to the three men we are currently having to choose from. We have to identify someone, have him step up and demonstrate that he can unite all the Party’s various factions and convince people that he can defeat Barack Obama.

The idea that the decision would go down to the convention  floor in Tampa and someone acceptable to all, who had previously not declared himself or campaigned for the nomination in any way, would magically be drafted (and save us all) is a pipe dream. This didn’t happen in the last somewhat-contested convention in 1976 – Reagan had already put himself out there and mixed it up with Ford before everyone got down to Kansas City – and it’s not going to happen now. Even in 1948 – the last truly brokered GOP convention – every single one of the names on the ballot had already thrown their hats into the ring.

So, for us to head into a brokered convention just to pick between Mitt, Rick and Newt is nothing more than a waste of time. It becomes significantly less so if Rick Perry were to withdraw his endorsement of Newt, acquire better communications skills and a new campaign team and aim to win at least ten states. But the possibility is, if anything, lower than that of a brokered convention actually happening.

Either way, Al Cardenas, boss of the ACU – which runs CPAC – is already calling out the name of his fellow Floridian – Jeb Bush as a possibility should it come down to a contest on the convention floor. But we all know that dog won’t hunt – if Jeb Bush had been Jeb Smith, he would not need to be drafted as a last resort at the convention because he would be far and away the frontrunner and I won’t be writing this because the race would have been over three weeks ago.

But using Jeb Bush as a template – someone articulate, late fifties-to-early sixties, with some executive experience (preferably in a Governor’s office), a record of conservative accomplishment in office, success at the polls i.e. reelected at least once, a strong home base of support and without the baggage from being the brother and son of Presidents widely perceived to have failed in office …

Off the top of my head, this leaves us with people like  John Hoeven (who might have to shave off his mustache) and Mike Johanns, both of whom are in the first terms in the Senate, both of whom have been Governors for more than a single term and both of whom come from states that are reliably Red. Of course, there would be an immediate influx of people who will declare that they can never ever vote for one or the other because blah blah blah …, but I do not foresee any major problem with any one of  them winning support from all the necessary wings of the Party.

That is, if they can be coaxed to enter the meat-grinder that is a Presidential election.

Good luck with that.

In the interest of full disclosure, after Rick Perry dropped out, my support has returned to my 2008 choice, Mitt Romney. Frankly, I can’t quite fathom how he went from being the conservatives’ alternative to John McCain in 2008 to the most liberal Governor in the history of the entire world in 2012 – especially since he left the Governor’s office in 2006. Furthermore, I’m not convinced he’s just itching to get into the Oval Office to be a one-term President, especially considering the number of still youngish people with names like Christie, Sandoval, Martinez, Walker, Jindal, Haley, etc. that would be just about rounding out six (or more) years in Governor’s offices – which is right around the time Governors start feeling Presidential – by 2016. To paraphrase Milton Friedman, we’d have Mitt Romney in a position where it is politically profitable for the “wrong [person]” to do the right things.


Rick Perry for President: A Post-Mortem


Why is Rick Perry out of the race for the Republican nomination for President of the United States?

Because the man and his Campaign messed up. Bad. He had the opportunity to introduce himself to the nation that any candidate would give his right arm for and he flubbed it. It was like watching a slow-motion trainwreck. Worse is that it was not the media’s fault, it was not the so-called “Establishment’s” fault, it was not the fault of either Romney, Gingrich, Paul, Santorum, Cain, Huntsman or Bachmann, it’s not Obama’s fault , it’s not even the fault of those damn RiNOs in Iowa and New Hampshire – the fault was and is entirely in the hands of Rick Perry and his campaign.

Let’s not forget that Rick Perry entered the race to an incredible outpouring of support – he was clocking 40% in some polls and he was the immediate recipient of torrents of cash. That wasn’t some “Establishment” plot. He had it virtually sown up. All he needed to do was deliver a Bachmann-level performance at the debates or just simply tout and defend his record of service, and it would have been a two-man race between him and Romney – with Romney firmly on the bad side of the bet.

But, of course, the Perry Campaign entered the race with the odd (and fatally arrogant yet firmly held theory) that “Debates Don’t Matter” and decided to forgo any semblance of debate prep or wargaming to figure out his weakspots and most importantly, figure out a proper defense and counter-strategy to neutralize them and get them off the table. Whatever else you may think about the quality of the debates (and the moderators), the fact that millions of people (AKA voters) all across the nation were going to be watching them, and afterwards even more millions would be seeing snippets of them on the news broadcasts, and the fact that they’ll be on YouTube (gaffes, warts and all) for all eternity, made them matter.

That the Gardisil, instate-college tuition rates for long-resident illegal immigrants and Trans-Texas Corridor issues obviously caught the Perry Campaign by surprise had me scratching my head in confusion. How the #@ck could every single upper-echelon member of the campaign have failed to warn the Governor about these issues when they were front and center of almost every Perry “Will-He?-Won’t-He?” discussion online and on talk-radio for weeks? How could his only response, whenever statistics were called out by moderators to make Texas (the only reason he’s on anyone’s radar) sound like some Third World country was “… blah blah get America working again …”?

The truth of the matter is, with the sole exception of their fantastic handling of the infamous 53-Second Oops moment, no campaign team has so ill-served their candidate on the national stage, and I’m including Cain’s platoon of bumbling amateurs. But thanks to “Debates Don’t Matter” coupled with a cookie cutter campaign and utterly non-responsive devoid of any kind of innovation (seriously – just take a look at the farce that is rickperry.org), Rick Perry’s 11 year record of achievement in Texas – a record that has every other candidate on the stage green with envy – never became a (much less the) factor in the race that it was supposed to be.

Even worse, it seems the entirety of the Perry Campaign missed what everyone else (even a thorough non-professional like me) was worried about when we were still at the “Will-He?-Wont-He?” stage; will the voters be ready to send another Texas Governor to the White House so soon after the last one left under such a (largely self-inflicted) cloud?

Of course, every Republican candidate, to some extent during the general election campaign, would be forced, in some way, to disassociate themselves with George W. Bush. Even if the Obama Campaign neglects to mention it (highly unlikely) at every opportunity, his Amen Corner in the Press certainly would not i.e. “Willard Newt Perry, a Republican, like George W. Bush …” Perry would have had a much harder time of it of course, given that not only do Rick Perry and George W. Bush come from the same party, same state, and hold the same office in Texas before seeking the Presidency, they were even on the same ticket.

Nonetheless, being a Republican, a Texan and a Governor of Texas like Bush, even being George W. Bush’s Lt. Governor, all of which would be helpfully pointed out early and often by many journalists in breathless and ominous tones, is something any competent campaign can survive. Being also perceived as dumb – “like Bush” – in addition to the aforementioned things in common, is, I submit, something else entirely. It still stuns me that despite the Press telegraphing their intended narrative template when covering Rick Perry i.e. stupid, with multiple liberal columnists and talking heads all chiming in at the same time (Journolists in action) with articles bearing helpful tell-tales titles like “Is Rick Perry Too Stupid To Be President?”, the Perry Campaign still needed three debates to finally decide that debate prep was a worthwhile investment.

Of course, neither George W. Bush nor Rick Perry is dumb – the United States Air Force has never been in the habit of putting multi-million dollar pieces of equipment which can kill lots and lots of people in one single moment of carelessness in the hands of low IQ individuals. But this is politics, and in politics, perception trumps reality. Otherwise, how the heck could a first-term Senator, with no history of accomplishment, all sorts of questionable associations, virtually no paper trail, and certainly no executive experience of any sort, win the Presidency of the United States?

Because the simple fact of the matter is that the number of voters who go out of their way to research candidates’ records and scrutinize their every word and deed is actually very very small. What is at least a heavy plurality, if not a majority, of voters (even among the generally more engaged and knowledgeable Primary electorate) are political morons who vote based on gut feelings and impressions of the candidate that they get from watching coverage of the candidates on TV and from a quick glance at the headlines of newspapers and magazines at the checkout counter. For many Americans, that is the full extent of their research into who gets their vote to be the Leader of the Free World. And there’s not much to suggest that Republican Primary voters are really that much different.

The problem here is that the Primary voter who casts her vote for Mitt Romney because “he looks Presidential” counts just as much as the politics junkie voter who decided to give her vote to Rick Perry after her careful objective line-by-line scrutiny of every candidate’s record. A successful candidate needs to figure out how to appeal to the bulk of voters between these two extremes. In other words, a candidate needs to figure out that combination of style and substance to get the voters’ attention, win them over and keep them on side. Think of it like running a successful restaurant, taste (substance) matters above all but so does presentation (style).

Instead the Perry Campaign came up with “Debates Don’t Matter” and of course that came along with the bone-headed resulting lack of preparation over not one, not two, but three debates. Then they decided that debates may matter but only in the service of repeating the same campaign buzzphrases (i.e. “Get America Working Again”) and talking point of the day irrespective of the question asked. By the time they figured out that the debates (no matter what you may think of them) were actually quite important, Rick Perry – with a record in executive office any Presidential candidate would envy – had been tuned out by most voters as a dud, and is now basically seen as either just another dumb Governor from Texas who just happened to be around when Texas was doing good.

This – that a Presidential Campaign needs to appeal to more than its base of support and tailor its messaging and delivery to suit its intended audience – is something many Perry supporters online seemed incapable of understanding. So when anyone pointed out, at least here on RedState, that Perry was not doing a good job on the media and communications front (especially at the debates) with fence-sitters, the typical Perry devotee response was that Perry had them convinced so anyone thinking Perry should make any adjustments should go pound sand. One particular lady thought it was good idea to repeatedly tell people who (no matter how politely and/or carefully) expressed any concern about Perry dropping the ball at the debates, or simply mentioning his precipitously dropping poll numbers, to shut up and “vote for someone else!”

Well, a lot of people obviously took her advice in IA, NH and apparently were going to do so in SC. I’m still not quite so sure how telling people to “vote for someone else” helps your candidate but I dont’t doubt there was a lot of passion but not quite as much logic involved.

Speaking of which, and again, focusing on RedState and its more passionate Perry supporters, Perry won every single debate, every (usually non-responsive) answer was a home run, every move his campaign made was a distillation of brilliance in its purest form. And of course, the drop in his poll numbers was a sign of some vast Left-Wing Media and GOP Establishment conspiracy to get Romney elected – the debates (which didn’t matter because “Debates Don’t Matter”) themselves were a part of the conspiracy to bring him down because “everyone” apparently knew he would flub them and stubbornly refuse to change course until it was too late.

Of course, the reality is rather more mundane; his campaign – quite apart from its boneheaded approach to the debates – sucked. A competent campaign, upon seeing that their candidate is not good at debates, would have flooded the zone with videos of Perry in other forensic formats (i.e. one-on-one interviews, townhalls, etc.) that he’s obviously more comfortable with. A competent campaign would have had a better website than the plain sad one that was rickperry.org. A competent campaign would have responded more aggressively to the Washington Post’s “N#$%erhead Rock” hit-piece.

A competent campaign would not have failed the simple task of securing enough signatures to get on the Primary ballot in Virginia.

There are many knowledgable Primary voters in IA and NH, who went out to research his record and genuinely would have loved to vote for Rick Perry. But they ended up voting for other people because just simply observing his campaign, it was clear that there was no way he could beat Obama’s billion dollar machine.

That’s why Rick Perry is back in Texas today.


It’s 2016, and President Willard Mitt Romney …


I’m curious.

There’s a lot of people who are absolutely discombobulated at the thought of Mitt Romney winning the nomination (as it looks like he’s going to do). Some are distressed at the thought because they’re positively convinced that Romney simply cannot win against Obama, and others are even more distraught because they are convinced that he could actually win and end up being inaugurated as the 45th President of the United States.

Suffice it to say, both sides are convinced that Romney is a no-good scumbag who would be almost as bad and perhaps even worse than Obama – to the extent that we have more than one or two swearing that they would sooner vote a thousand times for Barack Obama than ever consider voting for Romney.

Cool.

But I’m curious … for those who are absolutely convinced that a Romney Presidency would be a thoroughgoing disaster, what exactly is it that you think he’ll do?

Do you believe he’ll introduce Gun Control?
Raise taxes?
Surrender the United States to the Taliban?
Force all states to legalize gay marriage?


TO: Gov. John Kasich & The Ohio Republican Party – WATCH THIS.


The Baroness Margaret Thatcher had a saying; “First you win the argument, then you win the vote.

This is how you win the argument.

 

Let me spell it out; get a bunch of your statisticians and Think Tank (e.g. The Buckeye Institute) folks, have them sit down with a bunch of Adobe Flash animators (heck, hire the same folks the MacIver Institute and AFP folks did in Wisconsin) and get something like this explaining the facts and figures, and the hows, whys, whats, wheres and whens. Cut it down to five minutes (if at all possible). This really should take no more than two days, three days at the max.

Remember Obama’s informercial? Who says the same tactic can’t work for Republicans? Spend all the money necessary (don’t flinch) to have it put on Ohioans TV screens for the last three to five days before the referendum – can you honestly say defeating the unions would not be worth a few million dollars, even tens of millions of dollars? I’d also recommend putting it on a web page with a nice big PayPal logo right beside it.

And, oh yeah, put it online as well all over your websites – every Republican elected official in Ohio should have it embedded on the front page of his or her website.

End point; you win. The voters in the “middle” need things thoroughly spelled out for them otherwise they go with what they see on their TV screens. This does exactly that.


Rick Perry: Some Debate Advice …


Rick Perry needs to figure out that his problem is not Mitt Romney. If all he’s going to do from now at the debates is attack one particular individual (and that individual is not Obama but a fellow Republican), then it’s all smooth-sailing to also-ran status no matter how many excellent plans he rolls out or how often he makes his fan swoon by raining fire and brimstone down on Mitt Romney for flip-flopping on A, B and C.

His problem is the fact that his campaign up till now remains enamored of ridiculous notions like “debates don’t matter” (which may have been valid in Texas but never on the national stage), but also the fact that both he and his campaign have been hideously amateurish and apparently completely at a loss competing at this level. The fact that Dave Carney’s last two Presidential campaigns were Bush-Quayle ’92 and Dole-Kemp ’96 is not particularly confidence-inspiring.

Even more confidence-sapping is the fact that no member of the Perry campaign’s upper echelons was able to figure out that running for President of the United States (where debates – no matter what you think of these ones in particular – do matter) is very different in both degree and kind from running for Governor of Texas. It took not one, not two, but three profoundly underwhelming debates (not to mention poll numbers steadily crashing like Obama-era economic growth numbers) before Dave Carney, Rob Johnson & co. realized “Oh s***! Hey Rick! Let’s try something different … Let’s prepare this time!

I’m no expert, but if I were advising Perry, I’d tell him that the solution is for him is not to carry on with this obsession with Mitt Romney, and it’s certainly not to ape Sir Robin and bravely run away from the debates, but to shift the cross-hairs away from Mitt Romney and firmly settle them on Newt Gingrich.

Not as a target for destruction, but emulation.

So far the only person who looks wholly better after these debates than before them is Newt Gingrich.

So why not study what obviously works and try and modify it to work for you?

To me, the first thing to notice about Newt’s debate performances is that, by and large, he answers the question asked. Once you realize that, it’s really no mystery why he always comes off well from these things. His answers are always topical to the question – which means he’s not always returning to the same buzz-phrases and slogans e.g. “get America working again” when the question was about America’s relationship with the EU or restarting the NASA shuttle program. It really does grate on the ear.

So here’s my strange new idea for Governor Perry; answer the question. You may challenge the premise, force the moderator to ask it differently, or restate it yourself so you can answer it the way you want, but you must at least be seen to engage with the question and provide an answer to it. You can’t just respond to a question on, for example, stem cell research with “get America working again.”

Second, and just as important, Newt obviously knows who the real enemy is, and its not any one of the men or the woman on the stage with him. His sharp refusal to allow himself to be led into attacking his fellow Republicans when the real enemy is Obama and his passionately loyal support staff in the supposedly non-partisan objective media (who are clearly using these debates to make the Republican candidates bloody themselves and create divisions within the GOP’s activist base), probably won him more hearts and minds among the GOP Primary electorate than the entirety of his campaign prior to then.

The GOP base may despise the DC Republican establishment and harbor a deep intense dislike for Barack Obama, but it absolutely, positively, white-hot hates the mainstream media.

So here’s a novel idea; tap into that. Pull a Gingrich, with some Perry thrown in.

If I were advising Rick Perry, I’d advise him to take the first opportunity he has, look into the camera at the next debate and say something like this;

Over the past few months, we’ve had several of these debates and with the exception of one or two of us on this stage, we’ve all fallen into the news media trap of just beating up on each other instead of focusing on the big picture – how to get America working again. The first step of getting America working again is making sure that Barack Obama is a one-term President, that his continued assault on the American economy with job-killing taxes and regulations, on business, on our industries and job creation and job creators stop. And the only way that will happen is if we make sure that come the end of January 2013, Barack Obama would be referred to as the former President of the United States.

And you know what? Every single person on this stage, any one of them here, would be a better President than the man we have in the White House today. So I’m making a promise right now, that whoever wins our great party’s nomination, I’m going to support him, or her, 100%. Because we absolutely cannot afford another four years of Barack Obama. So I’m going to make a promise right now, that I’m not going to be attacking anyone on this stage again. You don’t build yourself up by tearing someone down. Instead, I’m going to be talking about how we can get our fiscal house in order, how we can make America energy independent, how we can get our investors to start investing again, so our economy can start growing again, and we can get America working again.

If Perry can successfully pull something like this off, he’s going to make millions of Republicans who have already written him off sit up and take notice. Better yet, he will take the elder statesman role and make anyone who attacks him look like an ******e.

If he can then make sure he does the following …


  1. Defend Texas: Don’t (let anyone) mess with Texas. This means no longer letting moderators or his fellow candidates get away with talking smack about Texas’ wages, health insurance, unemployment rate, education, etc. In Nevada, Perry was asked about the “high” number of uninsured in Texas and he only spends about ten seconds pointing out that most of the uninsured are illegal aliens and instead of going deeper into the havoc caused by illegal immigration to Texas’ statistics – thereby neutralizing the issue, he then turns around and spends the remaining time attacking Romney on his former landscaping company.

  2. Explain and defend his Policies: His energy and tax reform plans are certainly going to come under fire, from Romney, Santorum, et al. and certainly from the moderator who may or may not be repeating Obama campaign talking points. He needs to get his facts and figures right, he needs to get his delivery and word choices right so the average viewer would be able to understand how it all works. This means taking the time to research and anticipate where the attacks are going to come from and how he’s going to respond to them in his own voice. This means practice.

  3. Defend himself: The Gardasil Executive Order, Trans-Texas Corridor, the so-called Texas DREAM Act, etc. He needs to work with his people and come up with the best way to explain his position and close the door on them. I’ve found that explaining exactly how the instate-tuition program works i.e. 1 year for citizens versus 3 years for non-citizens, no taxpayer funding for tuition, apply for citizenship and the fact that only 1% of Texas college students are under the programs tends to make a difference in how the program is perceived even in the most conservative circles – not necessarily good, but not a deal breaker either.
    The N*****head Rock issue hasn’t come up yet – I’m not betting against anyone who says it will. Perry needs to very carefully repeat the salient fact that neither he nor his parents actually owned the place and that they immediately painted over the sign as soon as it was brought to their attention and that they ultimately turned it over so it would not be seen. Then he needs to go all medieval on the Washington Post – call it a partisan hit-piece based on the hearsay of conveniently anonymous sources with its only aim being character assassination. Last but not least, state the belief that Stephanie McCrummen, with the knowledge of her editors, made up most of her anonymous sources.
    Another issue that is certain to come up is Perry’s unfortunate decision to mess around with the Obama Birth Certificate issue. My advice to Perry; put this to bed immediately. Say again that you were messing with the interviewer and poking fun at Obama – then, without any equivocation, clearly state that you believe that Barack Obama was born in Hawaii to an American mother, making him the legitimately elected President of United States … until January 2013.

  4. Attack the Media: In my idea of an ideal debate performance (or interview) where Perry has to deal with the Birther issue, he’d shut the issue down as described above and then immediately segue into noting that the news media didn’t seem quite so exercised when Sarah Palin was being accused of not being the mother of her own son. Segue from that to noting that the media was also not so concerned when so many people on the Left, including many celebrities were accusing George W. Bush of bringing down the World Trade Center …
    My advice for any of the candidates, not just Perry, when they’re asked about the Occupy Wall Street protests is to acknowledge their right to free speech, and immediately start noting the difference in coverage when it was the Tea Party that was exercising their own right to peacefully assemble and protest.
    In other words, make the news media’s many instances of ideological hypocrisy the focus of your answer whenever you can. When they ask about your religious views, start talking about Jeremiah Wright and the news media’s curious lack of curiosity when it came to 23 years of Barack Obama sitting in his church.
    Bottom line? There’s nothing quite as effective for capturing the hearts and minds of Republicans as making an open enemy of the news media.

… then I would bet anything that he would be rocketing back to the top of the polls.

After the debates, Perry’s major problem is convincing the GOP Primary electorate that he is good enough, that he’s the better bet -  not that Mitt Romney (as if it’s news) is a flip-flopper.

 

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Rick Perry: The Problem …


Not even Rick Perry’s most passionate supporters can deny that his performance in the last three debates were anything but triumphs – and even if they refuse to admit it, the entire world is seeing it in the polls. The fact of the matter is that he got progressively worse during each debate and from one debate to the next. Frankly, he needs to get that fixed – it has nothing to do with attacking Romney, and everything to do with the deer in the headlights act when he was hit with the most embarrassingly predictable attacks on his record. One more bad debate performance, and people would start tuning him out and chances are 50-50 he’s out of the race by year’s end. Even if he does succeed in securing the nomination, we can’t afford to have him turn in the same performance when he’s on stage with Obama.

As it stands, he was given the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to introduce himself to the American people that every other person on the stage would have killed for, and he not only botched it, he gave ammunition to his detractors, both from within and outside the party to help them solidify the memes they had been spreading about him – yet another dim-bulb from Texas who was just lucky enough to be around when his state was doing well.

I’ve seen all sorts of interesting (often contradictory) excuses for Perry’s poor debate performances – his back (surgery, y’know?) must’ve hurt (what about painkillers and sitting down during the commercial breaks?), he just doesn’t debate well (so?), he wasn’t prepared (wasn’t he an Eagle Scout? “Be Prepared”?), he must have been tired (Red Bull?), he was overcoached (not a comforting thought), and so on. Well, color me unsympathetic – he’s running for President of the United States; did he think it was going to be an easy mosey on down to the Oval Office?

The bulk of the punditocracy seems to have settled on Perry simply not preparing for the debates – and his campaign’s patently absurd “Debate-prep is for sissies!” stand sorta gives weight to this conclusion. But I happen to think Perry and his campaign did prepare. The reason I think this is because seven years ago, I watched another Texan deliver a virtually identical performance – the same non-responsive answers, the same repeating of the same tired old talking points, the same retreats to shallow poll-tested pabulum. Which is ironic, considering that reminding anyone of George W. Bush is clearly something Perry campaign really wants to avoid – it’s bad enough the poster to the right (and others like it) is going to be all over 2012 if Perry actually does secure the nomination.

September 30th 2004, I was in the UK and five hours ahead of EST, so I had to be up at 0200 the next day to watch the live broadcast of President Bush squaring off against John Kerry in the first Presidential Debate at the University of Miami. The next day, still livid, I posted a comment on (I think) Bryan Preston former blogging digs, (junkyardblog.net – if I’m not mistaken) wondering why anyone who had invested any time, effort and money to make sure America returns President Bush to the Oval Office would feel in any way encouraged to continue anything beyond the bare minimum when the President himself very obviously could not be bothered to offer his supporters the courtesy to prepare for a debate.

I discovered this was the consensus view of the blogosphere on the Right – Bush (providing us with a preview of the next four years) simply let Kerry get away with murder, and wasted numerous opportunities restating the same tired old talking points instead of forcefully defending his administration and aggressively challenging Kerry’s barely masked allegations about “letting” Bin Laden “escape” at Tora Bora and (over the course of the campaign) lying the nation into the War in Iraq with falsified intelligence data.

The sole exception was one commenter who claimed to be an employee of one of the “top Republican political consultancies” in the country. And in his “professional” opinion, the President’s performance was right on target. By shoe-horning his campaign talking points into practically every answer, even when that was at best only tangentially related to the question, the President was “reinforcing” his message. By refusing to challenge Kerry’s allegations about Iraq, he was showing viewers that he was above such petty bickering and “looked like a statesman.” By avoiding any specifics or even the smallest amount of complexity in his answers, he was avoiding getting the viewers “lost in the weeds”.

The sad thing about it is the realization over the next four years of the Bush Administration that this wasn’t some guy who was going off-script – his view actually represented the current thinking of the Republican Party’s top thinkers and strategists on campaigning and political communication – a view designed (and not very well even then) for the media environment of the 20th Century – with the same conventional wisdom and polite fictions that, given modern technology, simply don’t work anymore. It is blind to the concepts of narrative, meme, public perception or the need to influence them to your advantage. The decision by the Bush Administration to not counter the increasingly accepted narrative that Bush lied the nation into the War in Iraq is a direct offshoot of this view.

Another perfect example is the 2008 McCain campaign (much like the Huntsman campaign of 2012), which continued to operate as if the endorsements of the Washington Post and New York Times were actually up for grabs – a key part of this view is the polite fiction that the mainstream media plays it straight down the middle. To show just how blind to narratives and public perception this view is, the McCain campaign decided that instead of John McCain pointing at the Community Reinvestment Act and recounting the Bush Administration’s multiple attempts to rein in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that were all were blocked by Congressional Democrats, McCain’s answer, when asked the cause of the sub-prime mortgage crisis, should be “Wall Street greed.”

The loud groaning sound emanating from Massachusetts’ 4th District was Barney Frank heaving a sigh of relief, and the clapping sounds from Hope & Change Central was Obama’s Campaign staff high-fiving each other; once again, John McCain had stupidly jumped up to redirect ordnance to fall on his own side. No campaign with any awareness of narrative and public perception would have failed to realize that the flag bearer of the party most commonly perceived to be friendly to Wall Street is not going to be helped by that talking point. If the problem is “Wall Street greed”, then the obvious solution is to vote for the party that is more likely to place shackles on Wall Street; the Democrats.

Here’s another boneheaded blind-to-narrative move – in response to the spreading narrative that Sarah Palin is too dumb to be Vice-President, thanks in part to an interview stupidly arranged with a hostile interviewer, what do you do? Do you (a) arrange more interviews and press opportunities in both friendly and hostile venues and prepare Palin to combat the narrative or …(b) hide Palin and give the narrative all the space it needs to grow? The answer is obvious to a typical Republican campaign consultant, (b)!

Perry (and probably every other Republican candidate) has the same problem – staffers who come to work in the morning and first of all reach for their copy of the New York Times, who never read blogs, see no utility beyond fundraising in social media, and still think “Never quarrel with someone who buys ink by the barrel” is still a valid aphorism to live by. Given a choice between hiring Erick Erickson or David Frum to help them reach out to the GOP Primary electorate and beyond, most of these people would go with David Frum. Newt Gingrich’s oft-expressed contempt for (particularly Republican) political consultants as unimaginative pencil pushers isn’t entirely due to his recent troubles with staffers, he’s been launching broadsides at them since Barack Obama was just some weirdly named unknown State Senator in Springfield.

How is it possible that the Perry campaign could be caught by surprise on the Gardasil issue? It was all over the blogosphere even before his formal announcement at the RedState Gathering – worse; it was all over RedState. His problematic stance on illegal immigration and in-state tuition is another obvious flashpoint they seem to have missed as issue that would come up.

The worst moment for me in the first debate with Perry on the stage was when Brian Williams painted Texas to be some sort of Third World country and Perry went to the tired old “get America working again” bromide instead of challenging Williams on his portrayal of Texas. That was a missed opportunity to put up a stirring defense of Texas’ record on education, wages (and the low cost of living), healthcare and highlight the massive number of people immigrating to Texas and the unique problems presented by having the longest border of all Southern states with Mexico and how those impact on Texas’ unemployment numbers despite massive job growth. In other words, Perry allowed Brian Williams to mess with Texas and get away with it. Worse is that it was entirely predictable that an NBC moderator would try to undercut a record so threatening to Obama’s re-election efforts.

The perception the viewer is left with is that Texas’ job growth numbers came at the price of starving, sick and illiterate children naked and dying on the streets because their illiterate burger flipping parents can’t afford to buy food or aspirin on their microscopically low wages, let alone health insurance. Of course, it would have been easy for Perry to have blasted this perception to tattered pieces. The information is out there – this infamous blog post on “Rick Perry And Texas Job Numbers” by Matthias Shapiro over at PoliticalMath should have earned him a personal thank you call from Rick Perry (even if Shapiro has explicitly stated that he’s not a Perry supporter) – but I’d bet you all anything that not one top Perry campaign staffer has even heard of it.

That’s the problem Perry’s got on his hands. Priority one; he needs to do whatever it takes to get his debating skills up to par – and then, take a good hard look at his media and communications team …

… to be continued.


Why Rick Perry should be our guy for 2012.


This is not to say that none of the folks currently running have no chance of winning; if you run a good enough campaign – if your campaign is flexible, aggressive, focused, disciplined, anyone can win. One of the many lessons I’ve learned from the fiasco of 2008 is that the a priori declaration that Candidate X and only Candidate X can win an election is an act of stupidity and worse, is self-defeating.

But the reality is that some would be a harder sell than others.

I’m hoping Rick Perry leaps in because of this – among the people running now, and granted that he is not perfect (who the hell is?) he would be the GOP’s “easiest sell” to the voters by far.

He has the executive experience and the record to prove it – Governor for 10 years of the nation’s second largest state with the best record on job growth and development in the nation. Another cool fact is that the Democrats would have a hard time throwing the credit to the last Democrat Governor – especially since his predecessor was not only not a Democrat, but actually George W. Bush.

And even if “critics” point out that the Lt. Governor is more powerful in TX (which is arguable), he can point to the fact that he was Lt. Governor for a while – so he’s got that covered too. Going further, he’s got military experience – a 5 year veteran of the USAF and he’s got significantly more communications skills than W.

Which brings us to the main chink in his armor – TX and the aforementioned George W. Bush. Will the American people be ready to give the Presidency to another Texan so soon after the last Texan left with approval ratings in the toilet? Again, I think his record in TX can take care of that … and again, he can very firmly and respectfully say; “My name is James Richard Perry, not George Walker Bush.”

Add all that to the fact that it’s no secret that the Bush clan openly despises him (witness the endorsements of Kay Bailey Hutchison last year by so many Bushes and Bushies) and he can shake off the attachment quite easily.

And last, but not least, and note that this is extremely important to “moderate” (especially moderate female) voters, he “looks” Presidential.

To complete the ticket; if he can find a socially and fiscally conservative (important) African American or Hispanic running mate – ideally a veteran who’s held flag rank with no skeletons in his (or her) closet, I think it’ll be a ticket that’ll keep the Left up at night. Does anyone know if General Kip Ward a Republican?

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Why I’d Pick Michael Williams Over Ted Cruz


Making The NAACP Cry

First of all, both Ted Cruz and Michael Williams would make wonderful Senators and I’ll just as enthusiastically back either one if he wins the nod when the (Primary) votes are counted.

That said, and maybe my reasoning for this is not “Conservatively Correct” but I would recommend Michael Williams for everyone’s consideration before Ted Cruz – who is still young enough to go for the seat Rick Perry is vacating in 2015.

My logic is this; since both Cruz and Williams are equally conservative and electable (especially Williams who has been elected three times statewide), we need to look at other factors – and the most salient is race, and what it would symbolize when a Republican stronghold, a Southern Republican stronghold at that – the state of George W. Bush, sends an African American to the Senate.

The truth is that the election of any minority as a Republican is an utterly painful event for the Left. But the GOP having a black man as a member of the US Senate caucus, sent there by conservative voters from a conservative state, would be nothing short of excruciating.

Let’s be clear, electing Williams to the Senate serves two purposes – getting a great conservative to the Senate and shooting a below-the-waterline hole into the “Republicans are Racists!” meme in a way electing Ted Cruz simply would not. The fact of the matter is that racism in America is inextricably tied to the African American community by history itself in a way that matches no other group, including Hispanics.

That said, this may not win the GOP any major inroads into the black community – in fact, the likelihood is that he would become the target of a full blown hate-campaign of character-assassination and calumny by the entire plethora of “civil rights” organizations. But for those who are persuadable in and out of the black community it will help us win votes. It’s an undeniable symbol that the GOP truly practices what it preaches about being color-blind … and I need not tell anyone here that symbols are important in politics.

So I ask you to imagine having the only African American member of the Senate being a Republican. From Texas.

Better yet, imagine Jennifer Carroll in Florida throwing her hat into the ring against Bill Nelson in 2012. Now imagine again the absolute nightmare it would be for the Left if the only *two* African American members of the Senate, and both from the South, are Republicans.

What’s not to like about that?

PS: Just to remind everyone, both Ted Cruz and Michael Williams are good guys. Let’s not allow what happened with the primaries in NV last year happen here. The fact that you prefer one over the other should not in any way be taken as license to launch a campaign of destruction on the other just to get your guy to win. This is what happened with Nevada last year – some people took their preference for Sharron Angle as a reason to attack the integrity and commitment to principle of Sue Lowden and Danny Tarkanian. That was unnecessary.

Here, especially when we have such an embarrassment of riches in these two guys, we should be future-oriented – the fact that at least one of them is not going to be the next United States Senator from Texas does not mean that same guy is not going to be the next Governor of Texas. Let’s do our best to keep this particular contest civil in preparation for the next fight after it’s done.


The Proper Response To Liberal “Blood-Libel” Faux-Outrage UPDATE: Note to Erick


There is an unfortunate tendency by Conservatives, particularly on TV, to acquiesce – sometimes without really being conscious of it – to false premises put to them by liberals, either simply for the sake of argument so they can move on or just simply because they want to get along. An example is Michael Steele nodding along to D.L. Hughley saying the GOP Convention looked like a Klan meeting.

Anyway, sometimes this is harmless.

Other times – like now – it is giving them the proverbial inch that gives them the wherewithal to take a mile.

For example, every single time a Republican or Conservative went along with a liberal host who claimed that Jared Loughner’s murder spree in Tucson in any way reflects something or other about the “political climate” or “tone” (anymore so than CAFE standards or Hurrican Katrina) just conceded the argument. From there, it is no difficult thing to start claiming that the Right somehow made it more likely that some deranged idiot would open fire on a Congresswoman.

In this case, the transparently contrived “controversy” about “blood libel” – anyone who, in a bid to appear “reasonable”, concedes that Sarah Palin’s use of the phrase “blood libel” is “inappropriate” or “over the top” is doing the exact same thing. Accepting a blatantly false liberal premise and essentially conceding the argument.

And besides, who, after the way this woman has been treated since 2008, actually failed to predict that the Left – desperate after the backfiring of their ghoulish attempt to blame her for a deranged man’s murder spree – would pick on something no matter what it was Palin said?

And just to be clear; the idea that prior to Sarah Palin, the use of the phrase “blood libel” had always been exclusively used to denote the smear against Jews of using children’s blood in rituals is so blatantly false it borders on the ridiculous. So ridiculous and blatantly unfair that an arch-liberal like Alan Dershowitz had to jump in …

The term “blood libel” has taken on a broad metaphorical meaning in public discourse. Although its historical origins were in theologically based false accusations against the Jews and the Jewish People,its current usage is far broader. I myself have used it to describe false accusations against the State of Israel by the Goldstone Report. There is nothing improper and certainly nothing anti-Semitic in Sarah Palin using the term to characterize what she reasonably believes are false accusations that her words or images may have caused a mentally disturbed individual to kill and maim. The fact that two of the victims are Jewish is utterly irrelevant to the propriety of using this widely used term.

As Jim Geraghty is all-too-easily demonstrating – and it shocks me that it actually needs to be pointed out – it’s been used as a metaphor in every major news outlet from the AP to the New York Times to the Wall Street Journal by people ranging from Mark Levin (this morning) to steaming brown puddles of mendacity like Frank Rich and Andrew Sullivan in their columns.

So the proper response to any liberal hemming and hawing and huffing and puffing about the supposed hitherto unprecedented use of “blood libel” by Sarah Palin, whether on TV, radio, on the phone, in the streets, etc.?

“Are you &%@! kidding me?!! First you try to pin a murder on her and now this …?!! Are you idiots really that &@#! desperate …?!!”

NOTE TO ERICK:
Here’s an idea – if you are on air and some Lefty starts bloviating about the supposedly unprecedented use of “blood libel” by Sarah Palin, you should immediately challenge the guy to put his money where his mouth is.

Challenge him to a bet; if you can find more than five metaphorical uses of the phrase “blood libel” in any mainstream media outlet prior to today, then he must give ten thousand dollars to charity.


What Does Jared Lee Loughner Say About The State Of American Politics?


Don't Fall For The Trick ...

It must be really frustrating being a liberal journalist and/or blogger today. Increasingly, they’re seeing their chance to politically profit from the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords fade away.

First of all, after spending all that time and energy to plant the idea in the minds of the American people that Jared Lee Loughner was specifically instructed by Sarah Palin to pick up a gun and assassinate Gabrielle Giffords, the facts coming out simply refuse to cooperate. They even had the luck of Giffords’ father and the County Sheriff point the finger at the Tea Party. But that hasn’t worked out either.

So now what?

Well, from former Senator Bob Kerrey to the New York Times editorial page, the liberal hive mind seems to have decided on another approach; they’re now grudgingly admitting that perhaps Sarah Palin did not personally arm and direct Loughner to go kill a Democratic Congressman … but she’s still responsible because Loughner would never have done what he did if he were influenced by the “political climate” she created by opposing Barack Obama’s agenda i.e. ObamaCare.

Of course, they’re not very eager to have anyone examine the premise of this argument, especially given that Loughner, without doubt a deeply deeply mentally disturbed human being, seems to have gotten negatively fixated on Giffords after meeting with her at a similar constituent event sometime in 2007 – well before Sarah Palin became a household name, well before the advent of the TEA Party.

What they do want is for everyone to accept that Loughner’s actions have something to do with the “political climate” and thereafter use that acceptance to silence conservative opposition by ruling hitherto perfectly acceptable and effective political arguments as out-of-bounds – as contributing to a “climate” of violence. This is Paul Krugman with fingers crossed;

It’s true that the shooter in Arizona appears to have been mentally troubled. But that doesn’t mean that his act can or should be treated as an isolated event, having nothing to do with the national climate.

Actually, Paul, of course it can, and of course it should.

Republican and conservative pundits and talking heads especially need to keep this mind before they go on television and nod along to something stupid because it sounds “reasonable”; Jared Loughner’s attack had nothing to do with the “political climate” in Washington DC, nothing to do with Democrats, Republicans, partisanship, DADT, Healthcare, Sarah Palin, Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, John Boehner, SB1070, etc.

Loughner was neither concerned nor influenced by any of those things.

The only thing influencing Loughner was the fact that he was marinating in his personal climate of crazy.

So, in the end, what does the tragedy in Tucson say about the state of American politics, the rhetoric, partisanship and civility in Washington DC?

Absolutely nothing.


Are Liberal Journalists And Bloggers Trying To Have Sarah Palin Assassinated? In A Word, Yes.


By Their Own Standard, Liberals Are Deliberately Trying To Get Sarah Palin Killed

From the moment John McCain unveiled her as his choice of running mate in 2008, Sarah Palin has become a hate-figure to vast swathes – and all evidence points to – a significant majority, of the Left. Her very existence inarguably sends liberals, from the tonier and sophisticated precincts where New York Times journalists congregate to the scatological feverswamps of the DailyKos, into paroxysms of near-homicidal rage. They don’t just hate her, they hate her husband (who has been accused of impregnating his own daughter), her children, her parents and any and all of her associates and supporters.

Frankly, it is beyond question that the vast overwhelming majority of liberals wish the woman had never been born, and, to be even more candid, it is also inarguable that should there be an incident, whether accidental or deliberate, where the lady were to lose her life, there would be celebrating and glasses raised in toasts to whatever (or whoever) brought it about from the comments sections of the Huffington Post to the newsrooms of MSNBC.

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Message to GOV. Mitch Daniels: Man The @#%! Up.


Make IN A Right-to-Work State

H/T: fmaidment.

Maybe I’m the only one, but my impression from everything that’s been said and written about Governor Mitch Daniels (R) of Indiana from the time he was George W. Bush’s OMB Director has always been that of a steel-spined budgetary genius with mad cost-benefit analyzing skillz.

So, one could imagine my surprise when I read this;

INDIANAPOLIS | Bills filed in the Indiana House that would ban workers from being required to pay union dues could spark a debate so divisive that Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels wants to avoid the issue.

The so-called right-to-work legislation has been filed by Republicans who gained a House majority in the November election.

I must say I’m baffled at this.

Why would Daniels want to “avoid” the issue? I’m no professional political operative where Indiana is concerned but I really cannot see how making Indiana a Right-to-Work state (and abolishing public sector unions while they’re at it) could be anything other than a philosophical, policy and political win-win-win.

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DADT Repeal is just the beginning …


Everyone acknowledges that gays have served and are serving today in the Armed Services. The fact that they have had to keep their sexual preferences to themselves made the difference – i.e. two gay male soldiers serving in close proximity with each other – who might even find themselves attracted to each other – would likely not even know that the other is gay, so nothing would happen between them.

But now they will know that the other guy is on the “team”, so to speak. And then things would change. The idea that a new change in rules will not lead to a change in behavior is one of the reasons liberals are always shocked by unintended consequences, from welfare to tax hikes.

Where the rubber will meet the road is when the armed services are forced to deal with gay servicemen and women in the same unit and/or command chain entering into relationships with each other. This is not just a gay thing – notwithstanding rules against sexual relationships, females are quartered separately from males precisely to prevent this from happening. This is not going to be possible where homosexuals are concerned.

I’m very curious to see the policies the different armed services are going to come up with to deal with the issues that are going to come up. i.e. If (male) SGT A and (male) CPL B serving in the same unit are discovered to be an “item”, how should that be dealt with? Should it just be allowed? Should they be separated – SGT A or CPL B moved to another unit – with all the chaos that would entail? Punished? Discharged?

Here’s a prediction; there’s going to be a jump in the number of disciplinary actions with regard to improper social relationships between grades i.e. “fraternization”, and gay servicemen and women are going to be in the dock in numbers far exceeding their proportions in the armed services.

Two possible outcomes;

Mindful of the politics, someone in the Pentagon (civilian or military) is going to advocate turning a blind eye to it. At which point, cases of heterosexual fraternization are going to go up – I simply don’t see how CPT Alan and SGT Alice are going to stand for being drummed out of the Army for being a couple when CPT Matt and SGT Mike are walking around holding hands on base.

The other outcome is that the military come down hard and politics would again come into play. The New York Times would eventually notice that 70% of the fraternization cases brought to court-martial involve gay servicemen and women. This would be taken as prima facie evidence of homophobia and discrimination and it would be all over the news.

Liberals are going to react the way they have always have – demand a change in the rules. e.g. African American kids failing math tests? The Conservative would say get better teachers and spend more class time on math. The liberal would call the test racist and demand that it be eliminated because it “discriminates” against African American kids.

Likewise, gay activists are going to launch a new campaign to force the military to drastically soften or eliminate the rules and regulations against fraternization because it “discriminates” against homosexual sailors, soldiers, Marines and airmen.

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CT GOV: Bag of Uncounted Ballots “Found”


Why Do We Let Them Do This?

UPDATE [H/T: Ace]: CT voter fraud caught on video …

… Mayor Jason McCoy has obtained a video that was taken inside a polling place in Bridgeport and shows a poll watcher warning a poll worker not to mix unofficial ballots with official ballots. She ignores him and he is escorted away.

There are additional charges:

  • Some voters were given more than one ballot
  • Other voters were not checked off on the registration list
  • Some voters were never asked for IDs

By the way, that bag of uncounted ballots was found where? In Bridgeport. What a coincidence, eh?


.
Well, this turn of events was completely totally gobsmackingly unexpected

PS: Just to be clear, that was sarcasm.

Democrats have apparently been uniquely blessed by Providence in being able to “find” just that right amount of extra uncounted ballots to upend a close race in their direction – amazing isn’t it? And interestingly enough, they always find them in the most innocent and miraculous of places, like union boss car trunks and Democrat operative closets.

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Democrats and Union Officials Miraculously “Finding” Lost “Ballot Boxes In Their Car Trunks


Defend the Vote

This happens in every close election. It happened in Washington State in the 2002 Gubernatorial Rossi-Gregoire race – Rossi won the first and second recounts, with King County Democrats finding more and more votes until Gregoire finally won – on the third recount. At which point, WA newspapers began calling on Rossi to accept the “results” and concede.

They tried to get car trunk ballots added to the tally in Ohio in 2004. They successfully got them added multiple times in the Minnesota 2008 Coleman-Franken race and a myriad of races in between.

Each time, the Democrats, their special interest groups, and their friends in the Press, from local newspapers up to the alphabet soup networks have shrieked that Republican objections to the counting of votes from “lost” ballot boxes miraculously found by Democratic activists in their closets and car trunks a week after the election which – “shockingly” – always overturn Republican leads, is because Republicans want to “suppress” the vote.

Each time, Republicans have allowed themselves to be browbeaten into silence and defeat.

What to do about it?

First is VOTE. Vote, and then get your friends and family to vote. Volunteer to GOTV by phonebanking for a favored candidate or walking your precinct. As Hugh Hewitt puts it; If It’s Not Close, They Can’t Cheat. If you’re a poll watcher, do not be shy or in any reticent about demanding ID – demand it of everyone. Inform any idiot who would shriek that it is “racist” or “anti-Hispanic” to ask for ID that Mexico demands a picture ID before allowing people to vote in their elections – if it is not “racist” in Mexico, it’s certainly not racist in America.

Let’s get our guys above the margin of the car trunk and George Soros.

But what happens if it is close? First, get on the phone to the Republican’s campaign HQ and offer to do what you can to help. But just as importantly, make clear your concern about voter fraud and car trunk ballot boxes and demand that they make as much noise about it as possible. The candidate should not do the “Bipartisan” thing and mince words – he should be on stage calling it as it is – fraud, and the people engaging in it – and their enablers in the Press Corps – as thieves and frauds.

Get on the phone to the NRCC (202-479-7000), NRSC (202-675-6000) and make it clear in no uncertain terms that they defend your vote. Tell them you expect to see ads on TV and Press Conferences. Tell them you expect to see lawyers by the planeloads and scorched earth tactics to rival the Mongols.

Let them know this time, unlike the Coleman campaign, you want a fight and will accept nothing short of victory.

Let Al Franken in 2008 be the last time Democrat fraud stole an election.

Now go VOTE.


Message of the Day


We Win, They Lose.
VOTE

No matter how Dark Blue or Deep Crimson your district and state – Vote.

No matter how far ahead or behind the Republican is in the polls – Vote.

It’s really simple; we win, they lose.

Ain’t no shame in running up the score. We’re aiming for EVERY SINGLE SEAT.

Vote.


Important Update: If you’ve voted already – either absentee or early voting – excellent. It means you’re available to volunteer for GOTV, phone-banking, driving folks to the polls, poll-watching, wave a banner at a street corner, etc.
Get out and do something.
Well … what’re you still doing here?
Category:

No More (Norm) Colemans.


Message to Republican Candidates, the NRSC, NRCC, RNC, etc.

Senator Al Franken.

Senator. Al. Franken.

If that doesn’t grate or demonstrate just how badly the GOP screwed up during the Bush Administration then I don’t know what else in politics does. But, thankfully, after just four years, voters have apparently seen just how bad a miscalculation it was to put all the levers of power in Democratic hands, and the GOP looks set to be given another chance to live up to its principles.

Here is where I digress to remind us all;

We’ve won nothing yet. Harry Reid is still the Senate Majority Leader, Nancy Pelosi is still the Speaker of the House. Whether or not they would remain in those offices after January is entirely still dependent on you.

Vote. Vote and get all your family, friends, neighbors, work colleagues to vote, and make sure they all vote GOP from the US Senate to local school board.

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Message for Meg Whitman: Go on Offense. Now.


The best way past a “scandal” for a Republican is through it. Take a day or two – no more, no less – to think it through, find a line of attack and go on offense. If George Allen had done that instead of trying to plead, ignore and then cower his way past the “macaca” incident, we’d not have the tragedy of both Senators from the Commonwealth of Virginia being Democrats.

On the latest so-called “scandal!” and “controversy” that has all the political talking heads in California running around screaming at the top of their lungs i.e. Meg Whitman’s illegal alien former housekeeper; if I were advising Whitman I’d tell her, apart from her offer to take a polygraph test, to call a Press Conference, and go on offense. I’d tell her to pound on the following points;

  1. The writing on the letter is not her husband’s. Period. He says he didn’t write it because he never saw the letter. If he had, and gone as far as to write instructions on it for Santilla, he would have discussed it with her.
  2. Obviously then, Whitman’s husband’s handwriting was forged. As a nine year employee, Santilla would certainly be familiar with it and may even have legitimate correspondence from Dr. Griffith Harsh (Meg Whitman’s husband) as a baseline for the forgery.
  3. The Whitman campaign demands the original copy of the letter for forensic dating to determine the time when the letter was actually printed and the time the supposed note by Whitman’s husband was written.
  4. Since neither Whitman nor her husband saw the letter, how did Santilla get a hold of a letter from the SSA to Meg Whitman and her family? This suggests a crime on the part of Santilla (intercepting mail) and Allred aiding and abetting after the fact.
  5. Gloria Allred has made a disgusting habit of popping up in the last weeks of a campaign to level false allegations against Republican candidates in a bid to torpedo their campaigns. She did this back in 2002 when she tried to derail Arnold’s election bid with false sexual harassment charges and she’s doing the exact same thing now. Why is she being granted any form of legitimacy knowing that this is what she does?
  6. To the Press; is she supposed to employ illegal aliens? Is that not illegal? What exactly is Allred and the press corps’ complaint? Are they really complaining that Whitman failed to do something that went against the law? Furthermore, an employee lied to her about her immigration status with false papers, obviously intercepted mail between her and the SSA – when she discovered it, she let the employee go; where’s the “scandal” here?

I repeat; for Republicans, the best way past a ginned up “scandal” or “controversy” is to plow straight through it – not trying to move on past it or hoping it goes away. Democrats can do that. Republicans can’t. Republicans have to up the ante and go on offense.

Force the partisan hacks calling themselves journalists and trying to make it a “scandal” defend why it is a “scandal.” Attack their decisions on the legitimacy of the issue. I guarantee that by the end of the week it’s on page B53 on its way to an ignoble death before it ends up torpedoing the Democrat’s chances.