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Republican Voters' Choices (Thomas Sowell)
Creators Syndicate ^ | December 28, 2011 | Thomas Sowell

Posted on 12/28/2011 2:49:56 PM PST by jazusamo

No one seems to be really happy with this year's field of Republican candidates for that party's presidential nomination — except perhaps the Democrats.

The sudden rise, and equally sudden fall, of a succession of Republican front-runners is just one sign of the dissatisfaction of the Republican voters with this field of candidates.

In this, as in many other aspects of life, we can only make our choice among the options actually available. So Republican voters who want to be realistic need to understand that they are going to end up with qualms and nagging doubts about whomever they pick this time.

Not all voters want to be realistic, of course. Some voters, whether Democrats, Republicans or independents, treat elections as occasions to vent their emotions, rather than as a process to pick someone into whose hands to place the fate of the nation.

People who think this way tend to vote for someone they just happen to like, whether for personal or ideological reasons, and regardless of whether that candidate has any realistic chance of being elected.

The surprising support in the polls for Congressman Ron Paul seems to be of this sort. But does anyone seriously want to put the fate of this nation in the hands of a man who can casually brush aside the danger of nuclear weapons in the hands of Iran, the world's leading sponsor of international terrorism?

Barring some astonishing surprise, the contest for the Republican nomination for president boils down to Mitt Romney versus Newt Gingrich. It is doubtful whether either of them is anyone's idea of an ideal candidate or a model of consistency.

The fact that each of the short-lived front-runners in the Republican field gained that position by presenting themselves as staunch conservatives suggests that Republican voters may have been trying to avoid having to accept Mitt Romney, whose record as governor of Massachusetts produced nothing that would be regarded as a serious conservative achievement.

Romney's own talking point that he has been a successful businessman is no reason to put him into a political office, however much it may be a reason for him to become a successful businessman again.

Perhaps the strongest reason for some voters to support Governor Romney is that the smart money says he is more "electable" than the other candidates in general and Newt Gingrich in particular. But there was a time when even some conservative smart money types were saying that Ronald Reagan was too old to run for president, and that he should step aside for someone younger.

Washington Post editor Meg Greenfield said that the people in the Carter White House were "ecstatic" when the Republicans nominated Reagan, because they were convinced that they could clobber him.

Today, it is said that the Obama administration fears Romney, but would relish the opportunity to clobber Gingrich because of his "baggage." CNN has already started digging into Gingrich's most recent divorce.

Much depends on whether you think the voting public is going to be more interested in Newt Gingrich's personal past than in the country's future. Most of the things for which Gingrich has been criticized are things he did either in his personal life or when he was out of office. But, if we are serious, we are more concerned with his ability to perform when in office.

Even some of those who believe that Gingrich would devastate Obama in head-to-head debates on substantive issues nevertheless claim that all Obama has to do is come back with questions about Newt's work for failed mortgage finance giant Freddie Mac.

But, even at the personal, point-scoring level, Barack Obama can open up a can of worms by going that route, since Freddie Mac at least never planted bombs in public places, like some of Obama's political allies.

There are no guarantees, no matter whom the Republicans vote for in the primaries. Why not vote for the candidate who has shown the best track record of accomplishments, both in office and in the debates? That is Newt Gingrich. With all his shortcomings, his record shows that he knows how to get the job done in Washington.



TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2012; sowell; thomassowell
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To: jazusamo

Ya, I guess the Doc has got me convinced.


21 posted on 12/28/2011 4:27:29 PM PST by NurdlyPeon (Gingrich in 2012, the least bad of the lot so far.)
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To: onyx
Thomas Sowell endorses Newt Gingrich!

Amen!

Ann Coulter ping. :-)

22 posted on 12/28/2011 4:36:50 PM PST by jazusamo (If you don't like growing older, don't worry. You may not be growing older much longer: T. Sowell)
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To: onyx

It kinda sounded like he was going to in a recent article..... I consider it good news from a true conservative.


23 posted on 12/28/2011 4:46:33 PM PST by Gator113 (~Just livin' life, my way~.. Newt/Palin-West-2012."got a lot swirling around in my head.")
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To: jazusamo
"Why not vote for the candidate who has shown the best track record of accomplishments, both in office and in the debates?"

Never would we be able to improve on Dr. Sowell's reasoning, but one additional word adds another significant point to the above sentence: how about inserting the word "conservative" just before the word "accomplishments"?

Even before we began to see the truly tragic consequences of 40 years of liberal Democrat Congressses, Newt Gingrich was leading a charge toward conservatism and a new direction for Congress, called the "Contract with America." For the first time in decades, a President who was a Democrat had to take into account a conservative Republican force in the Congress.

Where was Romney's effort being directed then? Was he, as a businessman, doing what James R. Evans in Illinois, Eddie Chiles in Texas, and W. David Stedman in North Carolina were doing? They were dedicating much of their time and significant amounts of their earnings in the private sector warning their fellow businessmen and women, and the public at large, that government intervention in the marketplace, its big spending and taxation, and its violations of constitutional principle were going to destroy the private enterprise system and bankrupt America!

Evans wrote an outstanding book, "America's Choice: Twilight's Last Gleaming or Dawn's Early Light." He did public speaking and challeneged his fellow business leaders to educate others.

Eddie Chiles was an outspoken advocate for liberty and famous for his radio messages, using the phrase, "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take it any more."

Stedman combined the radio message idea with speeches to industry and trade groups, monthly full-page free enterprise messages in the business publication, North Carolina Magazine. He, like Evans, published a Bicentennial of the Constitution (1987) volume on America's founding principles, titled "Our Ageless Constitution." That 292-page work highlighted the Founders' constitutional protections for individuals through their Constitution's strict limitations on coercive government power.

Did Mitt Romney do any of these things as a private citizen/businessman? How far back does his commitment to conservative constitutional principles go?

Now, America has been led so far away from the Constitution's intended limits on government power and toward the kind of socialist doctrines and policies of Europe that only a person who has studied the founding period, its heroes and their ideas, can possibly understand enough of their ideas to rebut and rebuke the counterfeit ideas which will be laid out in the presidential debates. A person who has studied history may be the best candidate in 2012.

24 posted on 12/28/2011 5:41:18 PM PST by loveliberty2
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To: loveliberty2
how about inserting the word "conservative" just before the word "accomplishments"?

Totally agree. There are many who forget the conservative accomplishments Newt was responsible for.

Excellent post.

25 posted on 12/28/2011 5:50:40 PM PST by jazusamo (If you don't like growing older, don't worry. You may not be growing older much longer: T. Sowell)
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To: jazusamo

What about Gingrich’s position on border crashing?

I think Coulter was correct in saying that a failure to seal the border and deport illegals will fundamentally change my beloved country.

She was also correct in saying that the refusal to seal the border is pandering to business and not to fifth columnists of Mexican extraction.

That makes those business leaders, as individuals, domestic enemies of the constitution.

People who should never be in charge of anything are in charge of practically everything.


26 posted on 12/28/2011 7:05:12 PM PST by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
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To: jazusamo

Yes, agree with Dr. Sowell. Thanks for the ping jaz.


27 posted on 12/28/2011 7:42:57 PM PST by rockinqsranch (Dems, Libs, Socialists, call 'em what you will, they ALL have fairies livin' in their trees.)
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To: jazusamo
Not all voters want to be realistic, of course. Some voters, whether Democrats, Republicans or independents, treat elections as occasions to vent their emotions, rather than as a process to pick someone into whose hands to place the fate of the nation.

Well, that's true. And the unrealistic ones are the loudest, especially Ron Paul's supporters.



Where there's a shell, there's a way.

25 years ago, we had Ronald Reagan, Johnny Cash, and Bob Hope.
Today we have Obama, no cash, and no hope!

If you can't appreciate the pure beauty of the violin after hearing this, something's wrong with your ears.

Or you can get raw with these strings.

How about this gamechanger from America's Got Talent (which they SHOULD have won).

Either way, the violin is sweet yet LETHAL.

Do it!

28 posted on 12/28/2011 8:13:47 PM PST by rdb3 (><>The mouth is the exhaust pipe of the heart. <><)
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