Posted on 12/05/2006 8:47:32 AM PST by meg88
Brownback seeks 08 conservative mantle By Alexander Bolton
Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) yesterday established a presidential exploratory committee, seeking to fill what conservatives say is an absence of strong conservative leadership among top-tier Republican White House candidates.
Brownback immediately sought to position himself as the leading social conservative of the 2008 field.
I have decided, after much prayerful consideration, to consider a bid for the Republican nomination for the presidency, Brownback said in a statement. There is a real need in our country to rebuild the family and renew our culture and there is a need for genuine conservatism and real compassion in the national discussion.
Brownback, along with outgoing Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), has in recent years been the Senates most vocal advocate of social conservatives agenda on abortion and related issues.
Brownbacks appeal to social conservatives could help him become the leading alternative to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the perceived frontrunner.
The way I see the race shaping up is that its going to be McCain against someone whos not McCain, said David Keene, chairman of the American Conservative Union. McCain has a lot of people in the party who dont like him.
McCain has opposed his party on key issues such as tax cuts, campaign finance reform, gun control and global warming stances that won the admiration of the nations media elite, whom conservatives distrust.
Brownback is the third Republican member of Congress to create an exploratory committee. McCain and House Armed Services Committee Chairman Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) have both established such panels, as has former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani.
McCain, Giuliani and Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who is expected to set up an exploratory committee soon, are considered by Republican insiders and political analysts as the top tier. Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, an ordained Baptist minister popular with social conservatives, is also among the upper echelon of GOP candidates.
The two Republican officials who were thought to have the best chance of becoming the conservatives choice candidate, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) and Sen. George Allen (R-Va.), have both dropped out of contention. Frist announced last week that he would not run, and Allen lost his reelection bid in an upset after a dismal campaign that did much damage to his long-term appeal.
Social conservatives are wary of McCain for his stance on campaign finance, of Romney for his views on abortion, and of Giuliani because of his beliefs on both abortion and homosexual rights.
Many are gravitating toward Huckabee because of his experience as a minister, but Huckabee has alienated small-government fiscal conservatives because he raised taxes as governor.
The three most prominent aspirants, McCain, Giuliani, and Romney, are expected to run as centrists, even though they are all now working hard to court conservative support.
Each of those three is going to run toward the center of the Reagan coalition, said Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, a leader of libertarian small-government conservatives, who hosts a weekly meeting of prominent activists. McCain despite his apostasy is trying to get in the right place on guns and taxes; Romney is trying to run as a more conservative candidate [and] Giuliani I assume will do the same thing when he gets in the race.
Norquist criticized Huckabees record on fiscal issues.
He keeps raising taxes, Norquist said, then alluded to Huckabees authorship of a book on his personal weight loss. He has raised taxes more than once. The one thing Huckabee is known for is that hes lost lots of weight. I would prefer a fat guy with a skinny budget.
Tom McClusky, vice president of government affairs for the Family Research Council, one of the most influential conservative advocacy groups in Washington, said Giuliani has been historically pro-gay rights and pro-abortion.
McCain, he said, has been moderately pro-life and supported issues adamantly opposed by social conservatives, such as embryonic stem-cell research and fetal- tissue research.
Romney, who declared his support for abortion rights during an unsuccessful 1994 Senate race, has a spotty record on life, said McCluskey, who said Romney is now certainly coming around on the issue, which we hope he will, and he has good people working for him.
McClusky said Brownback might be able to fill a conservative leadership void among top-tier candidates. But even if he does not win the nomination, Brownback could have a major impact on the Republican primary by defining the debate on abortion and other related life issues, he said.
Paul Weyrich, chairman of the Free Congress Foundation, who hosts a weekly meeting of influential social conservatives, acknowledged the perceived weakness of conservative credentials among the GOPs presidential frontrunners. He said Brownback or Huckabee could fill the role of a strong socially conservative candidate.
Brownbacks candidacy potentially gives us a vehicle and there may be others, like Gov. Huckabee of Arkansas, who many favor because hes a former preacher and is mesmerizing in his speaking ability.
Weyrich said that he and other conservative leaders would meet with and question leading presidential candidates to understand their views.
If we can, were gong to try to get behind one of them, said Weyrich. If we do, we can give one of the candidates a considerable boost and could kick one of them to the top tier.
Conservative leaders uniting behind Brownback could push him to the final stages of the GOP primary or perhaps to the nomination.
But Keene, who is also columnist for The Hill, said Brownbacks strength is also his weakness. He may appeal to social conservatives but faces the challenge of having to win over a broader spectrum of Republicans.
His reach doesnt go much beyond the social conservative base, said Keene. To run a viable candidacy you have to do more than that. At least Brownback has a claim that none of the others have on that segment of the movement. His challenge will be to get other conservatives, [such as] anti-tax people.
Keene said Brownback is better known by conservative voters than other Republicans positioning themselves as alternatives to McCain. He cited former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson and former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore as examples.
Keene said conservatives are afraid of McCain because of his past stances on tax cuts and campaign finance reform, and because he has a reputation for doling out political retribution.
Conservatives are afraid of him because they think he doesnt like them and goes after most people he doesnt like, said Keene.
>>He should be focusing on 2012 or 2016.
Truth be told, he probably is. Sam Brownback is politically astute enough to know that he is an extreme longshot for 2008.
Fine. Good idea. Just be sure you assess your standard across the board and honestly, not by believing what the politician says but by observing what he does and what he proposes. Rare is the candidate who claims to be for less government who doesn't simultaneously have a long list of stuff he thinks the government should be funding. Take Bush for example. If we had all been honest with ourselves we would have known he was a big spender.
To be more specific, I am talking about Brownback's big AIDS funding push and stuff like that. I read a quote from him about how we need to help this big list of people around the world and it caused me to question his government fundamentals. He used to be better but Bush's compassionate conservatism has led him astray. Maybe he will get back on track. I remember when he was big on closing down a bunch of gov't agencies and all of that. So taking the long view, Brownback has promise. We just have to get him away from the Bush people.
"Take Bush for example. If we had all been honest with ourselves we would have known he was a big spender."
You are right, that much was clear in the 2000 primaries. I never have been much of a Bush fan.
I definitely plan to vote for him, and I'm in Iowa. Come on, Iowa Freepers -- we can't let McCain or Giuliani win! They're more like Bill Clinton than mainstream Republicans.
If we don't get a *real* Republican nominated, we'll never get the turnout we need to win the presidency.
Giving amnesty and giveaways to illegals....
S. 2611 (Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006 )
Brownback (R-KS), Yea
Beats the heck out of taking action against illegals?
Romney: Give Troopers Power to Arrest Illegals
(Sure, Romney is pandering to Republican primary voters, but at least he is actually doing something besides voting for a Kennedy Amnesty plan).
Any Senator that voted for the 2006 Amnesty bill has no business trying coming around now pretending be a conservative.
He has said that he is another "compassionate conservative." A man that uses that term for himself is no conservative. He is, almost by definition, a spender.
"Beats the heck out of Giuliani, Romney and McCain."
Giuliani and McCain can beat Hillary/Obama and Romney could probably give them a good run at it and have a chance. Brownback can't.
>>He should be focusing on 2012 or 2016.
"Truth be told, he probably is. Sam Brownback is politically astute enough to know that he is an extreme longshot for 2008."
Or the VP spot in 2008.
Which will probably occur in December of 2008
this man has been overly friendly with FATASS hillary-how can he be trusted just on a pro-life platform??-he probably would lie down for a north american union,which would be the end of this country as we know it
I think the candidates may have already been narrowed to two: Giuliani and McCain, and there may be nothing we can do about it but bow to the party masters.
He sounds like Santorum Lite. Thanks but no thanks.
We're losing GOP governors with each election cycle. Our stable is getting thin.
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