Posted on 11/21/2012 7:36:46 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Tired of presidential politics? Get over it: Upwards of 15 prominent Republicans are privately contemplating 2016 campaigns for the presidency and the most serious and ambitious of the bunch are already plunging in, some quite publicly.
Dont expect them to officially announce or even officially decide for many months. But Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) are doing nothing to disguise their presidential ambitions.
Jindal, the Rhodes scholar and new chairman of the Republican Governors Association, is making a very public case for a more intellectual approach to conservatism, accusing the GOP of being, in his words, the stupid party.
He offered a similar premeditated critique to reporters at the RGA, on Fox and in an opinion piece.
Rubio and Ryan, both arguably better positioned than Jindal, are also competing for the mantle of the high-energy, forward-thinking conservative. POLITICO has learned both will unveil new policy plans at an awards dinner of the Jack Kemp Foundation in early December: Ryan will begin a new push on a more modern approach to alleviating poverty, focused on education; Rubio will lift the curtain on an economic empowerment message, heavy on college affordability and workforce training.
That upcoming duet is one of the clearest signs that this presidential race is beginning as early as any in history.
Not to be outdone, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), son of Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) and heir to his fathers libertarian following, is now on the record exploring a run that will focus heavily on returning power to the states. In a post-election interview with POLITICO, Paul said he wants to find common ground with liberal Democrats on softer marijuana laws and help create an eventual pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
These 40-something rising stars are hardly alone. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, despite party grumbling about his embrace of President Barack Obama during the recent hurricane, has made plain that he plans to make the case that he has cracked the code on winning on Democratic turf. Christie has the perfect chance to take the temperature of big donors as he raises money for his 2013 reelection race for governor. He will do just that, friends say.
POLITICO has also learned that Rick Santorum is telling friends he wants to run again. Texas Gov. Rick Perry has said publicly that he might, too, and has begun talking to donors and other top supporters like he means it. And Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor with strong credentials on education and winning back Hispanics, has told advisers he will sit back to see how things unfold over the next year before deciding whether to finally give it a go.
Jeb Bush Jr., the former governors younger son, said Tuesday when asked on CNNs Starting Point whether his father would run: I certainly hope so.
You have this young crop, of attractive, successful, proven problem-solvers, former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour said. Old guys like me have to get out of the way. Barbour said the way to stand out in the field will be to help with the partys 2013 and 2014 races. Were not going to wait till 2016 to set a strong new course, he added.
This all might seem premature and a possible big-time distraction for a party that lost the presidency and Senate and House seats this time around. But top Republican officials are encouraging the never-ending presidential campaign in hopes of creating influential national voices beyond Fox News and Rush Limbaugh. On every conference call, the message is the same, one top official said. Were going to push out our new generation of leadership. Were not going to sit back and let the extreme voices define what it means to be a conservative.
Republicans are still haunted by the post-election chaos of 2008, when, with John McCain diminished by defeat and few clear future leaders with national juice on the scene, Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin filled the void and dominated news coverage. This time feels different: Unlike 2008, when Republicans chalked up their defeat to a bad GOP ticket in a terrible post-Bush environment for the party, many of the most influential voices are calling for substantial rethinking of the conservative approach to politics. They are reckoning with demographic trends that favor Democrats as well as with exit polling suggesting the assumption this is a center-right country might be wrong, or was at least wrong on Nov. 6, when a center-left electorate showed up.
The danger, of course, is that Republicans get pulled into a bitter fight over the direction of the party, especially as more traditional and hard-edged conservatives jump into the race.
Republican sources said Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) might want to fill the void on the religious right now and that Mike Pence, who just won the gubernatorial race in Indiana, has expressed interest in running, too.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who unlike Ryan won statewide in a state Obama won twice, also harbors national ambitions and remains a favorite of tea party conservatives.
For now, most of the media attention is on Republicans who can help the party adapt to the changing demographics, weeks after the party lost African-Americans by 90 points, Asian-Americas by 50 points, Hispanics by more than 40 points and women by just over 10. This will put a lot of emphasis on the small minority of minority leaders inside the GOP. Condoleezza Rice, one of the few stars of this summers Republican convention in Tampa, has told Republicans she will continue speaking out on the future of the party, which will fuel 2016 speculation. A Rice runs strikes many Republicans as unlikely, given her previous resistance.
Others known to be openly thinking about a run include New Hampshire Sen. Kelly Ayotte; two Western governors who are Hispanic, Susana Martinez of New Mexico and Brian Sandoval of Nevada; and South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.
Finally, there are the elected officials who are perpetually looking for something bigger: Sens. John Thune of South Dakota and Rob Portman of Ohio; Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, whose term ends in 2014; and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who like so many others on this list has made his ambitions known in private conversations with donors and activists.
Republican National Committee Chair Reince Priebus said in an email to POLITICO: While the RNC engages in a serious post-election analysis of what worked well and what needs to be improved upon, one area that gives me great optimism is the caliber and quantity of potential 2016 candidates on the GOP side. The top names on the GOP side are talking about serious solutions and reforms to the major issues facing the country which will put the Republican field in a solid position.
With all this activity, Jindal, Rubio and Ryan know there is little time to waste in trying to position themselves to be the one, the candidate who can lead the party back with conservative thinking calibrated to appeal to a changing America. Jindal has been the most aggressive, hitting his party hard in his post-election interview with POLITICO, posting an op-ed on CNN and offering a sharp critique of his party during last weeks RGA meetings. In the interview, Jindal urged an end to dumbed-down conservatism. We need to stop being simplistic. Weve got to make sure that we are not the party of big business, big banks, big Wall Street bailouts, big corporate loopholes, big anything, he said.
Ryan allies believe that although his vice presidential run ended in a disappointing rout (with Obama winning his home state of Wisconsin), he has more celebrity, credibility and clout after the race. With his expertise and power in the upcoming budget fights, Ryan will be a central figure in the policy and political debates of 2013.
Rubio plays up his working-class roots and values as part of an appeal to voters making $30,000 to $50,000 a year a group Romney lost badly but with whom Republicans used to be very competitive. That, combined with his connection with Hispanic voters, would make him a bit of an anti-Romney the one card nearly every one of these candidates will try to play, however subtly. Rubio planted the flag in Iowa last weekend, setting a record at a Republican fundraising event. Look for him to flex his muscles in coming months in the other early states: New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada.
Sarah Palin is mentioned, but as an observer.
Scratch that otherwise interesting article.
:D
I will respectfully differ with you on this.
In my opinion it is not BS. The fact that people question it makes it a legitimate issue to be considered. And you can bet that if conservatives are questioning it, then liberals will attack it.
Saying that it didn’t matter for Zero doesn’t mean it’s ok for us. I have a hard time believing that either Jindal or Rubio is absolutely the #1 best possible conservative candidate we could run even if without eligibility questions. (I have a similar attitude toward Jeb Bush or any Bush running. Isn’t there anyone else??? It’s not because I hate Bush. It’s because I don’t like political dynasties and I believe there are other, much more qualified candidates.)
Oh Yeah Bobby, That’s just what we need a more intellectual approach to Conservatism.
I know that the Democrats elected an unqualified Muslim, but that doe not mean the Republicans want to cross that line and elect a non-Natural bor to the job.
>> That man is Scott Walker.
I like Scott Walker.
Two problems with Scott Walker, though:
a) No college degree. You don’t care; I don’t care. But it WILL be an obstacle to his getting elected.
b) He and his party couldn’t deliver WI to Romney, even with boots on the ground fresh from his overwhelming victory in the recall. WFT is up with that?
Romney could not deliver Wisconsin, what did Walker have to do?
I still think that reflects more on the weakness of Romney as a candidate more than anything.
I’m not very certain that we’ll have a presidential election in 2016.
It will be very interesting to see how the MSM handles Rubio and Jindal in regards to eligibility as this moves forward.
I have to wonder if that is part of the reason Romney didn’t pick them...they didn’t want to get into it.
“The fix is in. Jeb Bush will be the GOP candidate and will win the presidency... whether we like it or not.”
Many times reality hurts. You are correct about Jeb being the next RINO nomination.
It is a done deal as we speak.
“How ‘bout the fact that he hasn’t yet served a single day in the US Senate? Geeez....’
Such inconvenient facts didn’t hinder the current Occupier in Chief.
Well then the GOP is done.
Because Cruz has zero days of experience so far. Great potential. Will still have great potential in 2024. The GOP is not Obama’s Democrat Party.
Might not be any elections in 2016. Communists are trying to turn us into a dictatorship. Half way there now with elections that will resemble communists Countries. No term limit and the communists dictator always seem to win. Even if he looses.
just because Walker won WI as governor doesn’t mean he’d win on the Presidential level. Under your logic we should noimnate a Rick Scott/Tom Corbett ticket, lock down FL and PA and we’d be all set.
not saying Walker wouldn’t be good, but just not for that reason
>> what did Walker have to do?
“more than he DID do”, apparently. Or does the buck stop nowhere at the state level vis a vis organizing to win?
Not looking for an argument, but I got slapped hard upside the head with a cold fish a couple weeks ago. I’m tired of playing the rah-rah Freeper Fantasyland game. No more patience for it. Sorry.
Get a grip. We're not Democrats.
Ted Cruz (who hasn't even been sworn in yet) is not going to run for president, and few on our side would support him if he did.
“The danger, of course, is that Republicans get pulled into a bitter fight over the direction of the party”
Out of this nettle danger we pluck this flower safety.
The bitter fight can’t come soon enough.
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