Posted on 01/13/2008 8:40:43 AM PST by pissant
EAST COUNTY Even in East County, where they still love Rep. Duncan Hunter, voters are a bit mystified about why he's hanging onto his unlikely quest for the presidency.
With the conservative Republican coming in last place with less than 1 percent of the vote in Iowa and New Hampshire, the prospects of his moving into the White House appear nearly impossible.
Some wonder whether he's running to highlight national defense and border security his steadfast issues as a congressman or in hopes of getting a job in a Republican administration.
In an interview while campaigning in Michigan last week, Hunter said he has no plans to drop out of what has become a wide-open race for the Republican candidacy.
It's easy to quit. It's hard to win, Hunter said. We're moving ahead full-throttle.
Beth Taormini, who owns a bookstore in Hunter's hometown of Alpine, said she has supported Hunter for Congress, but isn't sure who she'll vote for in California's presidential primary Feb. 5. She hasn't heard much about Hunter in campaign coverage and doubts he can win.
But I wonder whether that's important to him? she said.
Hunter's supporters bemoan that the national media has largely ignored his campaign in favor of Republican front-runners Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee.
If the rest of the country knew him as well as we did, he'd have a fighting chance, said Matt Schumsky, a Republican party activist who lives in Alpine.
Elected in 1980, Hunter has since represented the 52nd Congressional District, which cuts a wide diagonal swath from Miramar Marine Corps Air Station to the county's northeastern corner. He has usually beena shoo-in for re-election, often getting two-thirds of the vote or more.
But he has struggled for attention the past year on the presidential campaign trail, and he's raised only $1.9 million, tens of millions of dollars less than the front-runners.
Gary Jacobson, a political science professor at the University of California San Diego, said Hunter hasn't attracted notice because he isn't nationally well-known.
He starts out totally obscure to most of the world, Jacobson said. Hunter is not an especially charismatic character. He doesn't have the charm of a Huckabee. He doesn't play bass in a rock 'n' roll band.
Hunter's biggest victories so far were in Wyoming, where he won one of 12 delegates in the state caucuses, and in Nevada, where he was endorsed by the state's Republican Assembly.
When Hunter's campaign issued a press release Monday morning saying he had a major announcement, several news organizations predicted he was dropping out of the race. Instead, Hunter used the press conference to complain about being excluded from the most recent presidential debates.
Hunter's family physician, Paul Ver Hoeve of El Cajon, said his relatives in New Jersey hadn't heard of Hunter.
When I mentioned Hunter's name, they said, 'Who?' Ver Hoeve said.
Ver Hoeve said Hunter is running to spread his conservative message.
He loves his country, Ver Hoeve said. He's kind of carrying on the Reagan ideal.
Signs of support for Hunter's presidential campaign are rare in East County, although one of his neighbors near his home on Peutz Valley Road has a 6-foot-high Hunter for President sign in his front yard.
Among Hunter's most fervent supporters are two other neighbors, Lu Ann Slay, 54, and her husband, Ed Roczey, 67. They've spent the past eight months traveling to 23 states to hold up Hunter banners along highways and cheer at his campaign events.
Slay said she admires Hunter and wants to spread the word about him to others.
I feel like I'm going to war, except I don't have a uniform, she said. I feel like I'm fighting for something with a purpose.
At El Cajon's Parkway Plaza, 67-year-old retiree Burley Dodson said he is supporting Fred Thompson, another struggling Republican candidate, because he feels Thompson is more personable than Hunter.
Dodson said he has little interest in the issues that Hunter has focused on.
The main thing that concerns me is the economy right here the food that I buy, the gas that I buy, he said.
Hunter decided not to seek re-election to his congressional seat as he focused on the presidential bid. His son, Duncan D. Hunter, is among the candidates running for the seat.
Hunter last week denied a persistent rumor that his son is serving only as a placeholder candidate so that he can re-enter the race for his seat. It's not true, Hunter said. You've got my word on that.
Former La Mesa councilman Barry Jantz, who follows local politics in a Republican blog, said Hunter might be seeking an administration post if a Republican is elected president.
I can't think of anyone better qualified to be defense secretary or national security adviser, Jantz said.
Just practicing. ;*)
Good idea and thank you for the link!
E-mail Focus on the Family here!
.
D’nada
Ain't that the truth.
The Pubbies need to make internet access available to all. It would destroy the old media overnight.
1. It is not the job of the federal government to make anything but conditions for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness available and protecting the citizenry and our national sovereignty.
2. Not only do they not want to destroy the old media, most of the alternative media folks are working overtime to help save them.
And it would prevent disasters like this years primary by preventing the MSM from promoting the most liberal candidates, and squashing the good conservatives.
Ya think? Have you checked out the polls on the internet? Pajamas Media and here?
LOL!
Is #122 what you wanted?
Yes. I think it is very important that we focus on DH’s positives and not other candidate’s negatives. He states he is a Christian, a conservative and a Baptist and his actions seem to support that. The “ brother” needs some support.
Yes, thanks. Whew! I was wondering what kind of typo I had made in #122:’)
Hey! I just received an amazing phone call...it was like they were reading this thread. Watch for a FRmail.
“Why not have Fred Thompson bow out and endorse Duncan Hunter?”
Why not have Guliani, McCain, Romeny etc bow out and endorse Hunter? I see no reason to vote for any of them.
I support DUNCAN HUNTER. Bump!
Contact AFA, too, to ask them to include Duncan Hunter in their so-called Voter’s Guide.
http://www.afa.net/contact.asp
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