Posted on 12/22/2010 7:09:21 AM PST by StatenIsland
As a 2008 primary front-runner, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani tanked. But as a 2012 dark horse, he could do surprisingly well.
Its not because Giuliani has shifted; its because the Republican Party has. The 2010 election was less about social conservatism than it was fiscal conservatism, and that aligns with Giulianis socially moderate and fiscally conservative ideology.
There is another promising wind of change blowing Giulianis way, one thats less ideological. This isnt the era of kinder, gentler politicians. This is the age of former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie three politicians whose appeal lives, partly, in their aggressive rhetoric.
But, according to Giuliani, he started the political fad. When explaining Christies appeal to the New York Post, Giuliani said: Whats making him popular is that hes not afraid to be called a bully. I used to be proud to be called a bully, and Christie would call me and tell me, Im going to do it just the way you did.' "
Thus, both the national ideology and aesthetics of these political times are more favorable to Giuliani than, perhaps, at any time in his political career.
So whats he been up to?
Leg work:
While Giuliani maintained his visibility at a national level this year through frequent appearances on cable political shows, he also showed the GOP that he was willing to do the less glamorous work of crossing the country on behalf of Republican candidates.
In the run-up to the midterm elections, Giuliani made high-profile visits on behalf of Pennsylvania Republican Senate candidate Pat Toomey, Illinois gubernatorial candidate Bill Brady, Illinois senatorial candidate Mark Kirk, West Virginia senatorial candidate John Raese and many more, garnering significant media attention along the way.
Skeptics often claim that Giulianis political activity is simply good business, since it keeps him relevant. For example, Auburn University shelled out $85,000 earlier this year for a Giuliani speech on leadership an amount that might be less if he werent flirting with a bid. But that obscures the fact that his success, financially, is a good sign of his continuing appeal, politically.
Rhetoric:
The question for any presidential aspirant is whether he or she is building a broad case for the presidency. At the very least, Giuliani has built a broad one against the current president, slamming Barack Obama on everything from foreign policy to being, well, too New York.
Earlier this year, he questioned the presidents philosophical approach to foreign policy, not to mention his actual record, which hes frequently criticized on missile defense, terrorism and Middle East relationships.
President Obama thinks we can all hold hands, sing songs and have peace symbols. North Korea and Iran are not singing along with the president.
And while Gingrich literally wrote a book, christening the Obama administration a secular-socialist machine, Giuliani has been similarly critical of the presidents economic policy, telling conservative bloggers that Obama is trying to turn the United States into a European social democracy.
Then theres the ironic and primary-friendly charge that Obama has too much of the mayors hometown blood in him.
The president may be suffering from the inability to see the rest of America from having a warped view in New York, Giuliani told ABCs The View last month.
Fire in the belly:
Giuliani has refused several times this year to close the door on a bid. Most recently, he told The Wall Street Journal that its been difficult to give up the dream.
Its always in your mind when youve done something like this, he said.
And its possible that his poor showing in 2008 hasnt done much to diminish his confidence in another bid. Earlier this year, Giuliani told The Washington Post that his failure could have been as simple as bad timing.
You know, I was conflicted about running when I did ... I dont think any Republican could have won in 2008, he said.
That being said, if he did do it again, its not likely hed take any chances and stake the race on Florida, as he did in 2008.
If youre going to run for president and get nominated, you better win Iowa [or] New Hampshire. By then, its probably over. If it isnt over by then, its over by South Carolina, he told the Post.
What lies ahead:
In the end, its perhaps smartest to appeal to a former New York state representative, Guy Molinari, who once told reporters of Giuliani: Rudy is Rudy. Rudy is either going to run or not based on how he feels. Hes not a guy who looks at statistics and worries about the fact that ... maybe he could win, maybe he cant win.
And that makes him a wildcard, a dark horse and a worthy figure to watch in 2012.
No.
Nice to see him sitting in his box at Yankee Stadium...he should stay there and not be running for POTUS...
Nice to see him sitting in his box at Yankee Stadium...he should stay there and not be running for POTUS...
No, of course not. He has no chance of winning the nomination, and even if he did, he would just quit in the middle of the race anyway because he loves New York too much and doesn’t really want to spend all of his time in Washington.
Absolutely not!
The GOP and conservatives in particular (which are the backbone of the GOP) have not walked away from Social Conservatism one little bit.
They have, however, woken up to the fiscal conservative issues, primarily smaller, limited governance.
This is just the left-wing press, and the left-wing leadership of the GOP and the GOP elites trying to pick our candidate for us again.
But Rudy still has some splainin to do with Bernie Kerik and his Daddy going to Sing Sing and all.
I still LOL when I think about the way Hannity acted like a puppy trying to hump Rudy’s leg during the ‘08 primaries.
If he’d won the GOP nomination in 2008 - RG could have won the election.
I hope he decides to give it another whirl.
There are three people that you could mix and match that would be deadly, Giuliani is not one of them
NO. I would not vote for him.
Rudy is light years better than Romney, Newt, McCain or Huckabee but he is not in my top 5. His chickening out repeatedly for running for the NY Senate is also an issue.
I stopped listening to Hannity because of his dishonorable pant discharge over Rudy.
I LIKE Rudy...he was the best thing for NYC that came along in around 50 years....
....but he is NOT, repeat NOT presidential timber. His methods are facist and anti-individual. NYC at the time needed a facist....and seeing as how the dims had made NYC a cross between Marxism and Facism already, it was no great shakes to have him clean the city in his own inimitable style.
He is not right for America....period. Let him run for either Putzhead Schumers or Gillibrands seat in the Senate...he can only improve the senate in comparison to those two pear-shaped loosers.....
I will not vote for Rudy for president ...period...and I will do what I can to defeat him for that position.
The author of the piece is either being disingenuous, or has absolutely no understanding of the Republican primary.
Day in, day out, flaming pro-abort pro-sodomy Giuliani will get the same 3% outside of the NE and Florida as he did in 2008. Actually, he’ll get less if Gingrich and/or Bolton are in. Both are just as tough on foreign policy, have the credentials, and are smart, without the Giuliani baggage (Gingrich has some) and social liberalism.
Giuiliani may offer more to the country in a security related cabinet position or other similar post.
Hopefully Conservatives and Republicans will be able to keep things in perspective in 2012.
The complaints and misgivings we may have about any of the 2008 candidates, or possible candidates in 2012, pale in comparison with what we have in the White House today.
The shortcomings of the worst republican candidate are miniscule when we look at the ongoing destruction of the nation taking place under Obama and his socialist, racist Czars and cabinet.
Of course we all want the perfect social and fiscal conservative to replace Obama. But isn’t in our best interest to consider compromise rather than face 4 more years of the Obama onslaught against the Constitution and middle America?
Of course it is.
A win by any of the likely republican candidates will be a giant step forward forward for freedom and preservation of the nation.
On the list of our top 100 objectives, the first 99 must be to boot Obama out of the White House. Once that is accomplished we can negotiate the details.
If Giuliani is acceptable to the republicans then it is time to rev up the third party movement.
Yea yea third parties can’t win. But if Giuliani is the candidate we’ve already lost.
No. Ex-Democrat RINO’s need not apply.
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