Posted on 12/31/2014 4:23:04 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
As governments scope expands, voters see the advantages of a candidate from inside the Beltway.
In 1947, U.S. historian Wilfred E. Binkley took stock of the 13 men who had been president since the end of the Civil War and reached a stark conclusion: Governorship was a training school for successful presidents. The seven ex-governors on the list including both Roosevelts, Theodore and Franklin were far more effective chief executives than the six others.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said pretty much the same thing during the Republican Governors Association meeting last month. Were better at it, Christie told his fellow state leaders. The American people are done with the experiment of having somebody (as president) whos never run anything before. He was preaching to the choir. The list of potential 2016 Republican presidential candidates is dominated by governors. Alongside Christie, theres John Kasich (Ohio), Scott Walker (Wisconsin), Bobby Jindal (Louisiana), Mike Pence (Indiana) and Rick Scott (Florida). And dont forget Floridas former Gov. Jeb Bush and Arkansas ex-Gov. Mike Huckabee, who are considering presidential runs as well.
But if you look across our nations whole history, its hardly clear that former governors make the best presidents. The ranks of governor-turned-presidents include not just the Roosevelts, after all, but also Grover Cleveland, Calvin Coolidge and Jimmy Carter.
Governors fates during presidential elections have ebbed and flowed, reflecting shifts in how Americans think about government itself. Before the American Revolution, Colonial governors were appointed by the British crown. Americans in the early republic continued to view them with suspicion: In seven of the original 13 states, governors were elected for just one-year terms.
The job was certainly no steppingstone toward the White House. After George Washington, the next five presidents were vice presidents or secretaries of state when they ran. When Alexis de Tocqueville came to America in the 1830s to study its nascent democracy, one politician told him, The governor counts for absolutely nothing and is only paid $1,200!
After the Civil War, governors started to come into popular favor. In 1876, both parties nominated a governor for president. Although New York Gov. Samuel Tilden won the popular vote, Ohio Gov. Rutherford B. Hayes received the majority in the Electoral College. (It was the Bush v. Gore election of its day.)
For 52 of the next 68 years, the Oval Office was occupied by former governors. State governments in the early 1900s became laboratories of democracy, as future Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis called them, experimenting with workplace safety regulation and a host of other reforms. That made state governors like Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson into much more prominent figures, who moved easily onto the national stage.
But after World War II, experience in Washington came into vogue. All of our chief executives from Truman to Ford were former members of Congress, with the notable exception of ex-Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. Amid the national security concerns of the Cold War, voters wanted their commander in chief to be someone who knew his way around the federal government.
Writing in 1959, pollster Louis Harris wondered whether an ex-governor could ever win the presidency again. In a cosmic, atomic, mass-media age, governors have shrunk to local figures, Harris wrote.
But the tide would turn again in the 1970s, when the Watergate scandal soured Americans on Washington pols. At the same time the rise of modern conservatism devolved many powers to the states and made Washington, D.C. a term of derision and scorn. Starting with Carter in 1976, four of the next five presidents were former governors.
Then came a U.S. senator, Barack Obama, who beat the trend. He defeated a fellow senator (John McCain) the first time around and an ex-governor (Mitt Romney) the next. His party appears likely to select another ex-senator, Hillary Rodham Clinton, to run in 2016.
So despite all the Republican governors lining up to be the presidential nominee, dont be surprised if Republicans choose a senator with a national profile say, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio or Rand Paul.
The scope of the federal government has greatly expanded during the Obama years, including health care, the National Security Agency and the presidential order on immigration. And the more influence that the federal government exerts on voters, the more they see the advantages of a candidate from inside the Beltway. Like it or not, that makes Congress not the statehouse the more likely training school for our next president.
2DV: I hear you. I know California wasn’t AS liberal as now, but it was still more leftist than the average state.
Nice read, thanks Vet.
I dig history
No it wasn’t. How would a Ronald Reagan win the governorship if it had been? Southern California, especially, was quite conservative back then. Much has changed.
Christie hasn’t damaged the Republican Party in NJ; he’s more like the only reason we have one. He has all the right enemies to prove his conservative credentials; I don’t think he is presidential material, but in comparison to the Dem governors we have (and even the last Republican - Whitman), he is a solid conservative. Tax-cutting, pro-life, anti-teachers’ unions...
Christie won twice in NJ, and we’ve laid off many public employees in response to his stabilization of property taxes here. He isn’t perfect, but our property tax bills don’t increase as much as they had in the past. He knows we have to keep NJ attractive to companies and individual taxpayers.
Mudbro works too.
Everything you say about Walker is true -
but I think so many omit from consideration the intense, seething anger held toward 0bamacare, amnesty, etc.
Walker doesn’t show that he has that bulldog in him to remove it. He doesn’t talk about repeal. He’s just... there... albeit getting stuff done as you say.
Someone like Cruz though IS a bulldog about wrong-headed, America-destroying policies. He DOES say what people want to have done. He gets us going.
So, no disagreement - just amendment ;)
“2. On Right to Work, we saw that Ohio Governor Kasich over-reached and got nothing in Ohio for his efforts. Walker had to twist arms for the original Act 10, and he likely wouldn’t have won his first term if he didn’t exempt Police/fire/emergency services from it. If the State Legislator passes it he, may well sign off on it.”
Michigan passed RTW but exempted police and fire from it. The unions rolled over and played dead, they didn’t attempt to fight it once it passed.
You apparently have not being paying attention. The man is ferocious and has severely bitten his opposition to the point of drawing blood
You apparently, haven’t read my post. Try reading it slower.
I have no argument with Walker’s cred. But just as soon as he gets popular, he’ll be demonized too.
That Cruz knows us well enough to recognize the seething anger over 0bamacare and amnesty and is able to articulate what needs to be done is a strength that Walker lacks - and that strength is what attracts the demon attacks... you know, flak and over the target.... and Cruz lacks the track record of getting things done.
Each has a strength the other lacks - Maybe they’ll end up fixing America as a team?
Pure propaganda. The Democrats have only senators to run, so now senators “have an edge”.
bttt!
O’Malley is a senator?
I think after the Obama experience, voters are going to be loathe to elect another Senator as POTUS for a LOOOOOONG time.
I think we’ve decided it.
Walker/Cruz for 8, Cruz/Haley for 8, ... ...
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