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Barbour not afraid to tackle tough issues, including farm subsidies
Cedar Rapids Gazette ^ | 21 February 2011 | James Q. Lynch

Posted on 02/21/2011 11:17:17 PM PST by iowamark

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour thinks Iowans want a presidential candidate who’s not afraid to tell them the truth.

One of the hard truths Barbour is willing to tell Iowans, he said during a visit to the Iowa Statehouse Feb. 21, is that farm subsidies have to be part of the discussion when it comes to reining in federal spending.

That’s part of the “plain-spoken, common sense” he believes Iowans want to hear, Barbour said after meeting the Gov. Terry Branstad Monday.

“Nothing can be off limits” when discussing how to bring federal spending under control, Barbour said. “Defense can’t be off limits. Farm subsidies can’t be off limits.”

Putting farm subsidies on the chopping block is not the political death wish that Barbour’s suggestion would have been in prior elections, said Rep. Dave Deyoe, R-Nevada, a farmer, who met with Barbour.

“For farmers, the Farm Bill is not as important as in the past,” he said. “A lot of farmers are more concerned with (Environmental Protection Administration) regulations and the energy bill because that has a bigger impact on prices and markets.”

It won’t have the same impact as Sen., John McCain’s opposition to ethanol subsidies, a position that dogged the Arizonan in the 2000 caucus campaign and again in 2008 – even after he softened his opposition.

“I think farmers want to be independent,” said Rep. Annette Sweeney, R-Alden, chairwoman of the House Ag Committee. Trade, and finding more trading partners, is probably more important than subsidies, she said. When prices are good for farmers, Sweeney said, they don’t need subsidies.

Also, Deyoe added, farmers don’t want to be held out as untouchable if all other federal spending is being cut.

Barbour, who doesn’t plan to make a decision non running for the GOP nomination in 2012 until April, was quick to emphasize his farmer bona fides.

“Iowans will see that I’m a farm-state boy who grew up and lives to this day on land my family has farmed for 140 years,” he said. “While our crop mix might be a little different than Iowa, increasingly it is corn and soybeans and wheat and a whole lot less cotton than when my grand-daddy was farming the place.

“I look to see Iowans on a one-to-one, family basis and they’ll be able to judge me on that,” he said.

Having served as political director of the Reagan White House, Barbour, 63, said he’s fully aware what he will be getting into should he join the race.

“This is a 10-year commitment,” he said.”If you run and get elected … you’ve got to be prepared for a 10-year commitment.

“That’s the majority of the rest of my productive life and I have to decide am I willing to take on the most consuming job in the world. I have to see whether I have the fire in the belly and the willingness, to the exclusion of all other things, to take that on. It’s a serious decision. This is a life commitment.”

Being governor, he said, is the job closest to being president.

“Not the same by any stretch of the imagination,” Barbour said. “There is no job like president.”

However, as governor, he’s had to deal with reducing entitlements spending – “something that has to be done nationally.”

“I’ve also had to deal with real crisis. Katrina,” Barbour said. About 100,000 houses in Mississippi were uninhabitable.

“We dealt with it very well. The country saw what we did,” he said. “That’s the experience that you don’t get many other jobs besides being governor.”

Barbour believes President Obama will be vulnerable in 2012 because of his policies.

“They’re bad. They’re unpopular. For good reason,” he said.

The 2010 election was the “most massive repudiation of a president’s policies in American political history,” Barbour said. Independents went for Republicans by a 20 percentage point margin – nearly the same margin they gave Obama two years earlier.

“Why? Not because they don’t like President Obama,” Barbour said. “It’s because his policies are bad policies, they’re are hurting the American economy and inhibiting job creation. And the American people get it.”

House Speaker Kraig Paulsen met with Barbour and said he offered him his standards advice to potential candidates: come to Iowa and get to know Iowans.

“There’s no one person or even small group of people who control the outcome of the caucus process or the straw poll,” Paulsen said.

“I told him that as people get to know him, I think Iowans will warm up to him,” Paulsen said, explaining Barbour’s “down-to-earth, regular guy” demeanor will appeal to Iowans.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Iowa
KEYWORDS: haleybarbour; hasbeen; neverwas; oldguard

1 posted on 02/21/2011 11:17:23 PM PST by iowamark
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To: iowamark

Mississippi itself is no stranger to the vicissitudes of farming. It has many hog farms. I also remember it as having shockingly high dairy prices compared to, say, Kentucky. Barbour apparently didn’t mention another biggie on the fright list of family farms — the death tax. (Though I think he would oppose it.)


2 posted on 02/21/2011 11:26:09 PM PST by HiTech RedNeck (Hawk)
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To: iowamark

When someone like Barbour has the common sense to say that subsidies have to go, that should be a wake up call to all the GOP candidates, but unfortunately, its unlikely, they will do anything to chop that farm bill...


3 posted on 02/21/2011 11:36:32 PM PST by Sonny M ("oderint dum metuant")
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To: Sonny M

There would be quite a shock, as farmed goods prices would suddenly skyrocket. This would be more than offset by the credit to the US national budget (redistribution is always a lossy way of channeling money) but it would invite chaos in the short term. A long, multi-year phase-out would be the only politically possible thing. So many WWII wartime provisions have vastly outlived the war.


4 posted on 02/21/2011 11:49:30 PM PST by HiTech RedNeck (Hawk)
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To: iowamark; HiTech RedNeck; Sonny M

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2673511/posts

What Haley Barbour didn’t tell Fox News: he lobbied for Mexico on ‘amnesty’

According to a State Department filing by Barbour’s former lobbying firm, The Embassy of Mexico decided to retain Barbour’s services on August 15, 2001, to work on, among other things, legislation that would provide a path to citizenship for foreigners living illegally in the United States—what opponents of immigration reform call “amnesty.”


5 posted on 02/22/2011 12:06:00 AM PST by LucyT
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To: LucyT

That plan isn’t going to fly with the new conservative movement feeling its oats, and Barbour would be stupid to press it. The give-a-damn factor is going through the roof now. (Factoid: 40% of Americans who could have voted for a presidential candidate in 2008 did not vote for any.)


6 posted on 02/22/2011 12:10:35 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck (Hawk)
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To: iowamark

The idea of Mississippi creating licence plates that honor a former KKK member has, also, ended the chances of Governor Haley Barbour ever being elected POTUS.


7 posted on 02/22/2011 12:28:12 AM PST by johnthebaptistmoore (If leftist legislation that's already in place really can't be ended by non-leftists, then what?)
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To: johnthebaptistmoore

Did Barbour ask for this?

Also, if this ever becomes a live issue, it would be helpful to know the KKK honoree also left a mark in history of having quit the infamous organization over... you guessed it... the issue of racism. He believed that the KKK should have been founded as a multi-racial organization!


8 posted on 02/22/2011 1:07:10 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck (Hawk)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

The MSM will make sure that it’s tied to Haley Barbour, and that’s all that will matter to the majority of primary voters and the majority of general election voters. The unfair double standard that the MSM FULLY APPLIES to the Republican Party and to the Democratic Party, as well as to the political left and to the political right, is, still, very powerful and very believable, to the politically ignorant and to the politically stupid.


9 posted on 02/22/2011 1:20:15 AM PST by johnthebaptistmoore (If leftist legislation that's already in place really can't be ended by non-leftists, then what?)
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To: johnthebaptistmoore

The future isn’t what it used to be.

Anyhow, the give-a-damn factor is higher than it has been in centuries, not just decades. After the dust falls from the first salvo, the sentiment about Barbour will be “what’s the big deal these Rat maniacs are making about a Civil War figure who quit the KKK?”


10 posted on 02/22/2011 1:25:31 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck (Hawk)
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To: iowamark

Barbour, where do you stand on amnesty?


11 posted on 02/22/2011 3:50:29 AM PST by ViLaLuz (2 Chronicles 7:14)
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To: ViLaLuz

Why is Boss Hogg wasting everyone's time. He will never be President.


12 posted on 02/22/2011 8:12:05 AM PST by RED SOUTH (Follow me on twitter @redsouth72)
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To: RED SOUTH

It’s a shame he caved on or supports amnesty. I actually used to like him a lot until I found about about that.


13 posted on 02/22/2011 3:56:17 PM PST by ViLaLuz (2 Chronicles 7:14)
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