Posted on 01/27/2008 1:04:05 PM PST by RDTF
Even with their candidate out of the race, Fred Thompsons supporters can make a big impact in Florida. They should do so by supporting Rudy Giuliani.
More than any other candidate, Rudy matches Thompsons conservative credentials in the three most important areas: he offers a conservative economic policy, an explicit promise to nominate only strict constructionist judges, and a strong dedication to national security. On the economy, social issues, and defense, a Giuliani presidency will take the nation in a clearly conservative directionand he can actually beat Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama in November. With a winor a strong showingin Florida, Rudy will be positioned to do very well on Super Tuesday a week later, when New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and California (all strong states for Rudy) all vote. And Thompson supporters can greatly enhance Rudys chances in Florida.
Republican presidential hopeful, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, greets supporters as he arrives at a campaign rally at a restaurant in Sarasota, Fla., Saturday, Jan. 26, 2008. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Related Media: VIDEO: Giuliani Wades Into Romney and McCain Spat It may be surprising to think of Giuliani as the candidate who is closest to Thompson, given their disagreement over abortion. But the Supreme Court long ago took this issue out of representative legislatures handsin a plainly unconstitutional ruling. So a candidates position on this issue is now dwarfed in importance by his commitment to appointing judges who will abide by the Constitution and thereby return this issues to legislatures. And Rudy, more than John McCain or Mitt Romney, has firmly committed to appointing law-abiding judges. That is why prudent, pro-life conservatives, like Dennis Prager, have endorsed Rudy.
For all of his noble qualities and his commitment to reform, McCain is a maverick whose breaks from conservativeson campaign finance, illegal immigration, etc.are almost always in a left-leaning direction. No Thompson supporter could truly feel confident about the judicial nominees McCain would present to his former Senate colleagues. Romney is less of a maverick than McCain, but he is every bit as unpredictable. Without being unfair, one thing that can surely be said about Romney is this: one can rarely quite pin down what he thinks or what hell do. Giuliani, meanwhile, is committed to nominating a particular type of judgethe law-abiding rather than the law-making kindand Rudy is a man true to his word. If he werent, he would have changed his position on abortion before the campaign.
On national security, no one can question Rudys credentials. No one can question his proven record of executive leadership in arguably the second-toughest executive position in Americaa city whose metropolitan-area population is greater than all but three states (New York included). Rudy took on crime, he took on Democrats, and he transformed a crime-ridden metropolis into the safest large city in America. His record of successful executive leadership is something no other candidate can match. George Will called his tenure in New York the most successful episode of conservative governance in the past 50 years.
On the economy, there can be no doubt Rudy is the most conservative candidate. In New York, he consistently cut taxes and balanced budgets. Romney raised taxes 8% during the span of his tenure in Massachusetts,[1] imposed a government-mandated healthcare plan, and received a C from the small-government-minded Cato Institute. McCain voted against the recent Bush tax cuts, and he seems to have a limited commitment to limited government. Mike Huckabee increased taxes 19% during the span of his tenure in Arkansas, increased spending 65%more than Bill Clinton didand received an F from Cato.[2]
On the other hand, Rudys tax cut would be the largest in American history. His Fair and Simple Tax (FAST) formsimilar to Thompsons proposalwould allow Americans to complete their taxes on one page. He would cut corporate taxes from 35% to 25%, capital gains from 15% to 10%, and allow tax-free private savings accounts for general savings, retirement, education, and access to affordable, portable, private healthcare.
Rudy was recently praised by the Wall Street Journal, which asserted that he and Thompson have proposed the best tax plans and are the best at explaining how taxes affect the economy.[3] Steve Forbes writes that, With Fred Thompson now having dropped out there can no longer be any question which candidate is offering the best tax plan.[4] Americans for Tax Reform president Grover Nordquist calls Rudys plan a monumental leap forward for the American taxpayer and the U.S. economy, and the Club for Growth calls it a bold and innovative proposal that will promote economic growth for Americans across the economic spectrum.[5]
Theres a reason the New York Times, the nations liberal paper of record, just eschewed Giuliani and endorsed McCain. The Times could instead have endorsed Romney, but the Times, like everyone else, presumably cant really tell where Romney stands. So they decided to go with the candidate who sometimes breaks with conservatives, rather than the one who consistently avoids taking positions. (If a candidate is to be characterized by slipperiness, the Times prefers that the candidate be named Clinton.) Thompsons supporters should migrate to the man the Times wants nothing to do with, the man who ran New York as a conservative, is true to his word, and will clearly lead America in a conservative direction on social, defense, and economic issues: Rudy Giuliani.
Romney has the backing of all Fred’s lawyers/judges. Nice try.
at least you know where he stands vs still being for all those liberal things but trying to pretend he’s not.
Yes, I’m definitely supporting Rudy Giuliani...
Oh HELL no.
Um sure.....I’ll get right on it.
Not this one.
Not even!!!
“at least you know where he stands vs still being for all those liberal things but trying to pretend hes not.”
Thanks. I hope everyone does their research BEFORE they vote in the primaries. Which reminds me, I’m going to write an editor’s letter exposing Giuliani’s and McCain’s liberalism.
Rudy’s strategy of “sitting it out until Florida” is, I think, the stupidest campaign strategy I have ever seen. He frittered away all of that free advertising he was getting on FOX News & the lead that he formerly held in the polls.
And the difference between someone who tells what he believes and someone who flip-flops to say what he thinks you want to hear is??????? Neither RINO deserves my vote. I will write in Fred,
Did anyone take time to actually read the article? or just give knee-jerk responses?
Theres a reason the New York Times, the nations liberal paper of record, just eschewed Giuliani and endorsed McCain. The Times could instead have endorsed Romney, but the Times, like everyone else, presumably cant really tell where Romney stands. So they decided to go with the candidate who sometimes breaks with conservatives, rather than the one who consistently avoids taking positions. (If a candidate is to be characterized by slipperiness, the Times prefers that the candidate be named Clinton.) Thompsons supporters should migrate to the man the Times wants nothing to do with, the man who ran New York as a conservative, is true to his word, and will clearly lead America in a conservative direction on social, defense, and economic issues: Rudy Giuliani.
ROFLOL... WHAT free advertising on Fox? They have bent over backwards for candidates like Fred, Romney and McCain and hardly even mention, much less have Rudy on. Rudy has been on Fox News Sunday exactly one time.... how many times was Fred on? Huckabee? McCain? Romney? Count em...
I wouldn’t even vote for Ghouliani if you paid me. He makes my skin crawl
Admittedly, since Rudy’s numbers have plummeted like a rock - FOX hasn’t shilled for him like they were at the beginning - but you have got to be kidding me - until then, you couldn’t watch FOX without hearing them talk about Rudy.
I think even they are embarassed by how badly he’s doing now.
Please fix the headline — the actual headline does not have “Townhall:” in it. The inclusion of “Townhall” falsely suggests this is an official town hall endorsement of Giuliani, when it is just the opinion of a writer on the townhall blog.
Thanks.
As a Thompson supporter, I find this post to be extremely offensive.
This Jeffrey Anderson guy is on crack.
“And the difference between someone who tells what he believes and someone who flip-flops to say what he thinks you want to hear is??????? Neither RINO deserves my vote.”
That’s why I’m leaning toward pro-life, pro-2nd amendment, and seems to get the Red China threats Huckabee;
but at least if a candidate (Romney) SAYS he has turned conservative on many issues, he will have to deliver, if he wants to be reelected.
I’m very upset with the choices we have, but my aim is to vote for the candidate who will do the LEAST amount of damage to our country, until hopefully someone better comes along.
I’m still deciding between Huckabee and Romney, and will continue to research until it’s my turn to vote.
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