Posted on 01/20/2010 1:39:13 PM PST by Biggirl
Newly elected to the US Senate Scott Brown has not even left to go to Washington D.C. and yet this question was asked over at Drudge. Why is he asking the question? I dont think the Republican party is actively out there looking for candidates, and I have not even considered if Senator-elect Scott Brown would be qualified for the position.
(Excerpt) Read more at radioviceonline.com ...
He's, now, as qualified as Obama, and that's not saying much.
I don’t think Brown is going to pull an Obama.
Let's not get carried away with this...
Being Mass. , don't count this guy "in" for long.
A two-term state senator who hasn’t even served a full term in the U.S. Senate becoming president? That would never happen.
Oh, wait...
Accdg to Rush this morning, SB will have accomplished more than Obama because Kenyan only served 160 DAYS in TOTAL in the Senate.
I thought the requirements for President were:
Young
Good-Looking
Clean
Articulate
Reads a teleprompter
Gives good speaches
He needs a few more things, especially a couple of autobiographies ghostwritten by a conservative ideologue, someone who will scrub his past of service to our country and add some drug use.
He also needs to seal every personal record of his so that no one can examine them.
Oh hell NO.
Talk about jumping the gun onto a messiah bandwagon!
He is NOT enough of a conservative to be our nominee. He is fine for a Senator from Mass.
I love Drudge (in a manly way) but my guess is that Brown dropped a boatload of money advertising on his site during the campaign and Matt is greatful.
He is more qualified than the current usurper of the office, and I'm willing to bet he won't hide his birth certificate.
We need his ‘nudie’ picture .....
LOL
Great Scott! Isn’t that a little...premature?
No.
At least not until he has finished a full term. Otherwise, he will be perceived as selfishly using the people of MA to further his political ambitions.
[Of course, I don’t think ANY senator should ever be elected president. They are professional bloviators, not executives. They are like Obama in the Oval Office — too much of a deliberator, rather than a problem solver.]
And state senate experience! Brown’s ready...
No, he is only in office until January 2011, unless he wins re-election November 2, 2010.
We have a shortage of interesting young up-and-coming Republicans. He is one of them.
I don’t know what the problem is.
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