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Is Mike Pence the big threat to Palin in the primaries?
Hotair ^ | 12/02/2010 | Allahpundit

Posted on 12/02/2010 7:47:53 PM PST by SeekAndFind

Matt Lewis wonders.

Though Pence says he won’t decide on whether or not to run for president until next year, conservative leaders I spoke to were equally as bullish on Pence.

Chris Chocola, president of the powerful fiscally conservative Club for Growth tells me Pence may benefit from being less well known, and less of a lighting rod than Palin. He also notes that “[Pence's] conservative credentials are really unquestionable.”

“[Pence] appeals to every group that Palin appeals to — and probably a little more,” says Chocola.

“Pence is Palin with gravitas. Pence is Palin with experience,” adds Brent Bozell, chairman of For America.

Regarding experience, FreedomWorks Chairman Dick Armey says of Pence: “He’s been a rock solid fiscal conservative, showing up not only for the high profile TARP and ObamaCare battles, but also championing issues that are maybe less glamorous politically, but are critically important for our country, such as fundamental tax reform, specifically the flat tax.”

I’ve written about this a bit before. The guy who’s usually mentioned as the threat to Palin is Huckabee, of course, because they’d compete for social conservatives. But establishment Republicans dislike Huck almost as much as they do Sarahcuda, as he’s ever eager to remind us. So imagine for a moment that you’re Karl Rove, nervously weighing the possibility that one of those two will be the nominee. You can try to head them off by pushing Romney or Daniels or Thune, but then you run the risk of a pure “centrists vs. the base” primary — and because the base tends to be more motivated to turn out, they’d have the upper hand. The alternative is to try to coopt part of the base by backing a compromise candidate instead, someone who might be more fiscally and/or socially conservative than the establishment would prefer but who would peel off base voters from Huck and Palin and would stand a better chance of appealing to centrists against Obama. That’s Pence. He’s got 10 years of legislative experience, he’s deeply respected by fiscal cons and social cons, he gives a good speech, and he’s less ostentatious about “values” than Huckabee is so he runs a smaller risk of alienating moderates in the general election.

What he doesn’t have is name recognition, and he’ll need to catch up on that in a hurry to have a serious chance against Palin and/or Huck. Which makes me wonder if, in the next few months, we aren’t about to see a serious public pro-Pence push among people like Rove and other GOP chieftains. I’ve been assuming that we’d see that on Daniels’s behalf, but between his gaffes about calling a truce on social issues and the calculus I described above about needing base voters to win, maybe Beltway types will give up on him as a lost cause and back Pence, the other Hoosier, instead. The big question is whether he’s willing to run for president now or if, as rumored, he’s thinking of running for governor first with an eye to 2016. He’d be a formidable candidate then too, especially with some executive experience under his belt: None of the obvious contenders — Christie, Rubio, Jindal — are especially closely identified with social conservatism, so Pence could clean up. Still, that’s a tougher field than 2012 would be, so maybe GOP insiders could persuade him to go for the big prize now by promising to back him. Honestly wouldn’t surprise me. Exit question: Would it work?

Update: A commenter reminds me that Palin said she won’t run if no other satisfactorily conservative candidate steps up. Well, by virtually any measure, Pence would qualify as satisfactory. Is that reason enough for the establishment to try to push him into the race — to call Palin’s bluff on that promise?


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: mikepence; president; primaries; sarahpalin
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To: rbmillerjr
What is relevant is that she has supported his position all along, and any statement that he doesn't or didn't support amnesty is a word game or a lie, and contradicts his statement that he only changed his position on sealing the border first. Based on your own logic, and her comments, she is as unprincipled as he is on the subject.

"John McCain wants us to now believe, in his own words, that he was never for amnesty," JD Hayworth said. "But the truth is in this ad. John was for amnesty yesterday, today and will be for it tomorrow."

161 posted on 12/03/2010 10:08:41 AM PST by FTJM
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To: FTJM

You are conflating what McCain says and believes to what Gov. Palin says and believes.

Nonsense. Palin says she doesn’t support amnesty.


162 posted on 12/03/2010 10:14:10 AM PST by rbmillerjr (I will not, under any circumstances, vote for Mitt Romney....none.)
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To: rbmillerjr
The premise of your comments is that she supports his immigration position, and because he says he changed his stance, so has she. You've now dug yourself into a hole by suggesting that she has no principles either, other than political gain.

You keep playing word games and it isn't helping her, "a path citizenship for undocumented immigrants" is amnesty, she is on record supporting it consistently. Do you seriously think calling it "not total amnesty" will work for anyone other than her blind supporters: she's not for total amnesty, she is for partial amnesty, but that's not amnesty because she wants people to have to pay for their amnesty and wait for it!

163 posted on 12/03/2010 10:36:28 AM PST by FTJM
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To: pissant

Do not forget she is a pork queen...


164 posted on 12/03/2010 10:51:20 AM PST by Gipper08 (www.travishankins.com...a real CONSERVATIVE)
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To: rbmillerjr; FTJM

you poor little retard. McCain, Kennedy, Bush, Graham, etc, ALL SAY THEY DO NOT SUPPORT AMNESTY. It is because, like Palin, they do not define amnesty as allowing people to stay here legally. They believe, like your Precious, that once comprehensive immigration reform is passed and they are legalized to work here, that that is not amnesty. It is. It is the battle we fought in 2007. Where the hell were you??


165 posted on 12/03/2010 12:54:31 PM PST by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: napscoordinator

What is McCain’s position on immigration? Or does he have his usual several opinions depending on the circumstances?


166 posted on 12/03/2010 1:08:57 PM PST by altura
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To: WalterSkinner

Sarah is Sarah. She is a net positive for the GOP, without a doubt. She’s a star, she’s attractive, she has some good conservative instincts. But what she isn’t at this stage in her life is the person who has what is required to fix what’s broken. The Reagan revolution was aborted prematurely by the stupid party and it will take someone with that type of wisdom and steel to get us out of the freefall America finds herself in now. Not only to stop the freefall, but to chart a new course of constitution-abiding governance. No one can fill Reagan’s shoes completely, but we better start getting folks in who come damn close.


167 posted on 12/03/2010 2:07:13 PM PST by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: campaignPete R-CT; who knows what evil?
DEMS are not allowed to vote in the GOP open primary in New Hampshire.

who knows what evil? told me the exact opposite.

One example:post #9

168 posted on 12/03/2010 2:13:56 PM PST by onyx (If you truly support Sarah Palin and want on her busy ping list, let me know!)
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To: onyx

That is correct...it is a deliberate strategy of the dems to cross over to vote for the weakest of the GOP candidates in the NH primary in order to provide momentum for that candidate; making the pubbie candidate easier to defeat in November. They pull the same stunt in Vermont, although it is not as effective at the Presidential level because the Vermont primary has little effect on the national primary race.


169 posted on 12/03/2010 2:28:20 PM PST by who knows what evil? (G-d saved more animals than people on the ark...www.siameserescue.org.)
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To: pissant
It's a form of Absurdist Theater at this point. Don't believe your lyin' eyes, it what we say it is.

As to where Jr. was in 2007, my guess is that he was looking for a village.

170 posted on 12/03/2010 2:35:20 PM PST by FTJM
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To: onyx

In 2008, Romney won the NH GOP Primary among registered Republicans...but when you include the ‘crossovers’ (independents, many of whom are really democrats), the victory went to McCain. The ‘independents’ voting for McCain in the GOP primary returned to their true colors in November and voted for Obama.


171 posted on 12/03/2010 2:41:47 PM PST by who knows what evil? (G-d saved more animals than people on the ark...www.siameserescue.org.)
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To: jessduntno
You are obviously in the disdainful crowd which leaves you blind to her positive qualities while you search for her flaws. Some are blind to her flaws because they search for even more proof of her character being genuine. And finding such a pearl thrown before the usual swine in politics is so hard to believe that it drives a powerful need to destroy or protect her; to allow the hope that she is genuine in, without either constant validation or constant affirmation, would be difficult to do.

Not necessrily so. I can and do see her positive qualities. And frankly, those positive qualities almost made me pull the lever for McCain, which is saying something. I see her positives differently now than I did 2 years ago, because I know more. That said, she worked her tail off for the midterms, she punches hard at the dems - sometimes scoring knockdown blows. She pisses off the liberals, always a good thing. And she is unbowed by the fire she receives from the media. And finally, most of her positions are in line with conservatism.

Despite all the battles I have with her fan club here, I don't hate her. I tend to like genuinely nice and patriotic Americans. She seems to be both. But I can say the same thing about Mitt (at least the latest version of him), Huck, Daniels, Pawlenty, etc. They all (today) promote mostly conservative postitions and I don't doubt for a minute that they are patriots.

As freepers who are interested in more than general leanings and platitudes, we tend to evaluate folks for president (moreso than senator or congressman)with a fine tooth comb. And as such, when we individually decide on who to support, it is natural (and FR tradition) to amplify the negatives of the competitors.

That is why someone like Huckabee, whose 2A, pro-life, anti-homo, anti-bailout, and pro-military postitions are rock solid, is still painted as a RINO here. His record as governor was too much nanny & taxes & pardons, and despite his Road to Des Moines conversion on taxes, illegal aliens and amnesty, few are willing to offer him the benefit of the doubt.

Same with Mitt. With just a few exceptions, Mitt ran (and continues to run) as right winger. But regardless, his record as governor had way too much liberal nonsense for his non-supporters to trust him.

And guys with better reputations, such as Barbour and Daniels, they too are already getting put through the wringer. Haley for his idiotic stance on eminent domain and illegals, Daniels for his foreign toll roads and his soft peddling of so-called social issues. Once a person decides that one of these guys is the best, that person will downplay these flaws and beat the drum against the other candidates' flaws. It's politics, amplified here on FR because of our passion for the country and conservatism.

I don't think you will see the day come anytime soon when the majority of freepers say - "yeah they all got their strengths and weaknesses and I'll be happy with any one of them except candidate X." So the dynamic now with Palin is that you have a large group of people that insist she is the best we've got to offer. And many in that group are painting her as not only the best we've got, but a new Reagan, a homerun, a no-brainer choice - proven by the large nationwide following she has gained, ratings , etc. Another group, myself included, see her in the same group of republican politicos as most of those others mentioned. And because we do, we are going to amplify that. There are certain positions I refuse to accept anymore, and Palin has some of them, as do the others mentioned above. So I will support the candidates, and only the candidates, that come closest to my positions. And like most others here, it will be at the expense of the competition.

172 posted on 12/03/2010 3:08:44 PM PST by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: pissant

Thanks for the answer.


173 posted on 12/03/2010 3:29:58 PM PST by jessduntno (TSA: "Because screwing you with your pants ON just wasn't enough.")
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To: onyx

i’ve been involved in 6 New Hampshire presidential primaries going back to 1980. Unenrolled voters (independents) can vote in either DEM or GOP primary. DEMs can only vote in the DEM primary. I don’t know where ‘wkw evil’ is from.


174 posted on 12/03/2010 4:02:15 PM PST by campaignPete R-CT ("pray without ceasing" - Paul of Tarsus)
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To: campaignPete R-CT; who knows what evil?
i’ve been involved in 6 New Hampshire presidential primaries going back to 1980. Unenrolled voters (independents) can vote in either DEM or GOP primary. DEMs can only vote in the DEM primary. I don’t know where ‘wkw evil’ is from.

I think who know what evil?'s post number 171 explains the confusion. The GOP primary *is* open to self-described Independents (democrats) and that's terribly wrong.

175 posted on 12/03/2010 4:28:27 PM PST by onyx (If you truly support Sarah Palin and want on her busy ping list, let me know!)
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To: pissant
..I liked her better in '08 when I called her the Princess from the North, thinking she was going to pull McCain over the finish line.

The American electorate is too lazy to think long enough to research candidates, they just react to feelings and media produced impressions

and oh yeah

DH is still my guy

176 posted on 12/03/2010 4:38:04 PM PST by WalterSkinner ( In Memory of My Father--WWII Vet and Patriot 1926-2007)
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To: onyx

I am in NH...I see what the problem is...he is talking about REGISTERED Democrats; whereas I am talking about Democrats who mask themselves as ‘independents’ so they can deliberately screw with the GOP primary. The other poster is correct...REGISTERED Dems have to vote in their own primary...the ‘independent’ ones (and there are LOTS of them) vote for the GOP ‘sad sack’ (last time it was McCain); then reverse course to vote Democrat in the general. It is a very effective strategy. That is why I am CONVINCED that if Sarah runs; she will LOSE NH; and the media will shred her alive. That is why I hope South Carolina has their primary before NH. Closing the primaries would certainly help...


177 posted on 12/03/2010 4:40:18 PM PST by who knows what evil? (G-d saved more animals than people on the ark...www.siameserescue.org.)
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To: who knows what evil?

I know you live in NH and I’m now completely clear on the open primary in your state and I agree with you about the Independents playing games: masking themselves as Indy’s when they’re really democrats. It’s a game played in states that permit Indy’s to vote in either primary and that sux big time. The two parties ought to put a stop to the practice.

Sarah has one chance of winning NH and that chance is if the so-called INDYs decide to vote for her thinking she’s the weakest to go against Obama, but I think they’d get more of a kick out of handing her a colossal loss.


178 posted on 12/03/2010 4:57:32 PM PST by onyx (If you truly support Sarah Palin and want on her busy ping list, let me know!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Pence held firm against TARP. Sarah’s running mate helped run it through. I’d vote for either one but prefer Pence.


179 posted on 12/03/2010 5:09:26 PM PST by Stymee
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To: onyx

I apologize for not clarifying...I lump all dems into one big stinking pile. Sarah might have a chance in NH IF they would close the primary and let actual registered Republicans choose their candidate without outside shenanigans. Let registered party voters choose their candidates in the primaries, and the independents can make up their minds in the general. (I have actually been at the table while ‘independent dems’ decide which of the weakest GOP candidates they should support in the GOP primary. They get the biggest kick out of sticking it to the pubbies...means more to them than voting in their own primary. Sad.)


180 posted on 12/03/2010 5:09:29 PM PST by who knows what evil? (G-d saved more animals than people on the ark...www.siameserescue.org.)
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