Posted on 05/27/2011 9:01:05 PM PDT by smoothsailing
Published May 27, 2011 | FoxNews.com
Maybe Texas Gov. Rick Perry said hes decided to test the waters on a presidential run just because hes feels left out.
For all the attention paid to the presidential possibilities of two members of the House (Paul Ryan and Michele Bachmann) and a reality show host (you know who), youd never know that the Republicans had on their bench the three-term governor of the state with the nations best economy and the largest Republican population.
But for some reason, when Perry told people he wasnt running, reporters believed him. If Chris Christie even flies over Iowa, the blogosphere goes into meltdown mode, but the political press for some reason mostly took Perry at his word.
It seems strange that they would have.
Perry, who has been governor for more than a decade, is a favorite of the Tea Party movement for his tough stands on state sovereignty, border security, taxes and gun rights. Anybody who packs heat when he jogs so he can blow away coyotes that mess with his Labrador retriever and hangs out with Ted Nugent at a Tax Day rally is going to have serious street cred with the Republican base.
As the Perry talk heats up, these primary election positives will be reinforced by liberals who find his Texas-fried politics to be repellant. Every time Democratic cable news talkers remind viewers that Perry once warned that Texas might secede from the union if Washington kept piling on new federal powers, somewhere in Iowa or South Carolina a Republican primary voter thinks, Not bad. When Perry gets chided for declining photo-ops with President Obama on visits to the state, somewhere in New Hampshire a guy...
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
I’d take GWB or Perry over BO or any other candidate currently running. However, I really do wake up every day and pray that Sarah Palin is going to announce she’s running.
With that being said, I wonder if I will be zotted for this statement. Have the FR big wigs deemed Perry taboo yet?
With that being said, I wonder if I will be zotted for this statement. Have the FR big wigs deemed Perry taboo yet?
here here. Spot on comment.
Seems to me I lost interest in your opinion on an earlier thread.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2725825/posts?page=71#71
LOL!
I’m a Texas Freeper, and I concur with BobL. We’ve damn near got a Republican super-majority in the state House, but Perry’s done nothing to push them to send him the sort of legislation that Texans have demanded.
Another legislative session is about to close, and we still don’t have a bill that would close the door on illegal immigration. Perry could have (and should have) made that one of this session’s top priorities, but he didn’t.
Perry will talk the talk when it benefits him politically, but when it’s time to walk the walk, he’s got his feet kicked up. Disgusting....
GOP evidently doesn’t take this election seriously..... Yet.
Some folks may not think we do either. But we vote an most provide fiscal support to who we vote for before the elections.
My opinion....
Of course he’s not responsible for building an economy, no politician is. A politician should merely stay out of the way so that business can grow. So bottom-line, Perry managed not to screw up Texas’ economy with stupid laws. Whoever is elected President I would like the following: kill taxes, kill regulation, pave some roads, keep a strong defense and get the hell out of the way. As far as I can tell the tax and regulation burdens in Texas are far less burdensome than most other states. Does Perry get no credit for the business environment in Texas or he is just a worthless piece of slime?
I’m no expert, but I thought Perry admitted defeat long before this. Whatever the case, Romney has defended Romneycare for a while now. He hasn’t been Governor of Massachusetts for a few years.
Accurate description. Well stated.
It looks like they're on a shopping trip, every couple of days floating a new name, just to see Conservatives reactions, and maybe more importantly (to them) Media's reactions.
This Republican Establishment still doesn't get it. They figure we Conservatives are all dumb enough to buy whatever they sell. While their track record for pandering isn't too good, I believe things are different now. Out here in real America, we're paying attention as things stink and there not getting better. We now fully realize we've been sold out by a powerful entity which we're supposed to employ. In 2012, we will act as employers once again.
We now have a means of alternate representation known as the Tea Party. If the Republican Establishment continues on their current path, 2012 may be the end of the Republican Party as we know it, and the rise of another party. It wouldn't be pretty, but it might be a war which has to be fought.
Ball is in their court.
I have to say that Rick Perry is NOT a Conservative. I’ll be the first to admit that Texas has prospered under Perry, relative to the rest of the USA, but I can’t say whether that was because of him, or in spite of him. He’s way down on my list of preferred Republican candidates, although if he ever becomes the nominated Pubbie, I will then support him.
What if the other choice is Romney?
Dang, when folks could not see the choice was McCain or Romney, we ended up with McCain. As much as I hate Romney now, I loved him compared to McCain.
It is not that clear yet, but when it comes down to two names, don’t be wishing for some Huckabee. Either bite down & swallow the medicine, or go all the way... third party. All the way to nowhere.
Thanks for the ping! On balance Rick Perry is a good man and a competent governor. More conservative than not, he would be a good choice for president OR vice president. He can be fiery when he wants to be and is a cut or two above “W” in speechifying. All in all, we could do worse, a LOT worse.
Perry talks a good game and will support conservative principles when it’s the populist thing to do.
Back when Al Gore was running for president in 1988, Perry was a Democrat and Gore’s state campaign chairman. Gore was pretending to be a southern “conservative” Democrat.
Perry is along the same lines. He’s somewhere to the right of the Bush family (which doesn’t like him) but he’s not a conservative.
He is relatively tuned in to political winds though. If being conservative will get him elected, that’s what he will be. If he had been Governor of Massachusetts, his credentials would likely resemble RINO Romney. That wouldn’t fly in Texas so Perry has tilted right.
Would he be better than Obama as prez? Of course.
Is Perry politically astute enough to win the GOP nomination? Sure.
If he won, would he be more conservative than either Bush in the White House? Absolutely.
Would he be the best voice for conservatism in 2012? No.
Of those with a realistic chance of getting the GOP nomination, I’d rank Perry just behind Palin among the current field.
FWIW, a Palin/Perry ticket or a Perry/Rubio ticket would crush the Dems next year. Can’t say the same about any of the other potential combinations out there.
Yes, there are flaws (particularly immigration issues and the Trans-Texas corridor fiasco). But none of the candidates walk on water and the perfect should not become the enemy of the good.
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