Posted on 06/09/2011 8:01:07 PM PDT by smoothsailing
Allen Blakemore
June 9, 2011
GOP primary voters across America are still looking for their presidential candidate but if Gov. Rick Perry jumps into the race, he would immediately be a leading contender for the party's nomination. He would appeal to all segments of the Republican electorate and would come armed with a record of economic success and a commitment to liberty that no other contender can match.
What Perry has to offer is still missing from the current field. He speaks not only to fiscal conservatives but also to Republicans more concerned with social and defense issues. For example, he successfully advocated legislation this year requiring sonograms prior to abortions. While not a priority to every voter, it is a core issue in a Republican primary.
On the stump he is a master campaigner who has developed an engaging stage presence. Unscripted, he is affable and witty while maintaining strict message discipline.
Given the current economic climate, Perry has a unique and compelling story to tell that America is ready to hear. As governor of Texas, he has presided over the most dynamic and successful economy in the nation.
Texas is dominating in job-creation and economic dynamism, even in a national recession. In the last 10 years, Texas has created 730,000 new private-sector jobs. The next best state mustered only 90,000 over the same period. California, the liberal antithesis to Texas, has lost 623,000 private-sector jobs the most in the country.
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Texas success has earned accolades from observers nationwide, and not just from conservatives. For seven straight years, CEOs surveyed by Chief Executive magazine have ranked Texas No. 1 in job growth and business development. Newsweek and TheWall Street Journal have pegged Texas as the best place to find a job. No other state is home to more Fortune 1000 companies. Even Californians like the liberal former San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, now serving as his states lieutenant governor, traveled to Texas trying to figure out why we're doing so well.
How did Texas do it? Perrys message is simple: low taxes, restrained spending, reasonable regulations and a fair legal system. This is a story he can deliver to the nation. It's a recipe for success that stands in stark contrast to the expensive, top-down policies of the Obama administration.
While any Republican candidate can talk about smaller government, Perrys story is truly unique in that Texas, under his leadership, has repeatedly and recently put these principles into action despite the tough choices involved. Texas has balanced the books each biennium, as required by its constitution. When necessary, Texas has slashed spending to reconcile the numbers. That line bears repeating. Texas has actually cut, in real terms, the dollars spent by government to balance the budget rather than stifling growth by raising taxes. That's not what we're accustomed to seeing in Washington. Perry has successfully led a legislative body in implementing these bedrock principles, even in the toughest of times, and real people are reaping the benefits.
Tea Party voters continue to exert significant influence and will be necessary for victory. Perry's success in balancing budgets and cutting spending has already endeared him to the Tea Party, but he is perhaps even more attractive to them for his consistent defense of liberty and constitutional principles.
On issue after issue, Perry has demonstrated the courage of his convictions in resisting federal overreach. He has refused federal funding for unemployment and education because he recognized that the carrot was not worth the stick that followed. Texas, he insisted, would set its own standards and protect its fiscal health by refusing to swallow another expansion of a federal program for which funding would never be provided. He has pointed out that the federal government has proven a failure at running the entitlement programs, which are busting federal and state budgets.
Perry has gone further than others in honestly acknowledging the unsustainability of the entitlement status quo and has begun a conversation about alternatives. In his book Fed Up!, he cites the success of the three Texas counties that were bold enough to opt out of Social Security in favor of a private option. Those counties are now running their own retirement programs, and returns to county workers are better than they would get under Social Security.
Perry offers the voters a compelling alternative to current national policies. President Barack Obama had a sizable legislative majority during his first two years in office, and the Democrats unleashed a massive experiment in liberal government. It has failed to work. Even traditionally progressive states like Wisconsin have begun to emulate the type of pro-growth policies favored by Texas a right-to-work state, at least in the realm of government pensions and labor regulation.
Critics will be surprised at how receptive voters of all stripes can be to a story about more freedom and demonstrated economic growth. Perry doesnt just understand that story he wrote the book. And the nation is primed to listen.
Allen Blakemore is a Houston-based Republican strategist and the founder of Blakemore & Associates, a full-service political consulting firm. He served U.S. Sens. John Tower and Phil Gramm as regional director for West Texas operations.
Just in case anybody is interested in the opining of a native Texan who is a Conservative Republican: The only reason I would vote for Rick Perry is because he is not Barack Obama.
Texas Conservatives don’t really care for him.
No. Perry is not a RINO. Different breed. Former dem who is conservative on most issues and wrong on several issues including illegal immigration. I have a problem with him and don’t intend to support him thus far. But I also have a problem with the clumsy application of the term RINO by some people.
No
Neither do Texas Liberals.
Who keeps re-electing him, the Mexicans?
Im from Texas and the previous post IS correct. Perry IS NOT LIKED by conservatives in Texas. He would not be govenor if we would have had a better choice. He was the lesser of the evils.
He keeps getting reelected because:
#1. He is the incumbent,
#2. Texas is a very Red State and
#3. No strong Democrat will run against him. (Thank God for that.)
See my Post #27 tallyhoe
How would I know who voted for him?
But I would guess “moderates” and the uninformed.
Ok, that makes sense.
How come Kay Bailey Hutchinson did so poorly against him. She’d obviously won statewide campaigns before. Was that the incumbency thing or were folks just tired of her?
>>The girls didn’t have to take said vaccine if the parents didn’t want them to.<<
Parents should not have to get permission from the govt. to exempt their very young daughters from this vaccine.
Also, some background:
“Texas Gov. Issues Executive Order Approving Mandatory HPV Vaccines for Girls 9-11
by LifeSiteNews.com
Mon Feb 05, 2007
snip
AUSTEN, Texas, February 5, 2007 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Girls as young as nine years old will be required to undergo vaccination for the sexually-transmitted Human Papilloma Virus, after Texas Governor Rick Perry issued an executive order last Friday mandating immunization for school girls.
Perry bypassed the State Legislature to issue the order, directing the Health and Human Services Commission to adopt rules for the administration of the vaccine ..”
more http://www.lifesitenews.com/news/archive/ldn/2007/feb/07020505
Ref. your Post #22: I think you are exactly right.
>>He was the lesser of the evils.<<
That sums it up, Texas.
Hey BereanBrain, the Guardasil mandate is a complaint I keep seeing pop up on these Perry threads. Just how mandatory was it?
Is this an accurate statement from back then?....
“Perry’s order directs the Health and Human Services Commission to adopt rules for the requirement, which is effective in September 2008.
Parents would be allowed to opt their daughters out for medical, philosophical, religious or moral reasons, as they can do now for other required vaccines.”
Read more: http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/4523211.html#ixzz1OhAb6v2z
My short list is the people you named: Palin, Bachmann, Santorum and Cain. Pawlenty is a good man, too, but the people on my short list are more conservative, imo.
Al Gore's 1988 Texas Chairman?
2008 Rudy Giuliani supporter?
Someone who thinks it's okay to kill some of the babies?
Shirley, you jest.
SCREW YOU!
Don't call me Shirley.
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