Posted on 11/12/2014 11:59:58 PM PST by afraidfortherepublic
The elephant in the room, now that Scott Walker has won a remarkable third election as governor of Wisconsin in only four years, is the presidential election in 2016. Well before the 2014 midterms, speculation was rife about Walkers possible presidential ambitions, and his several trips to neighboring Iowa did nothing to quell it. It is widely assumed that Walkers possible presidential ambitions are a major reason the national Democratic Party and its various third-party interest groups expended enormous resources in the unsuccessful attempts to defeat him.
There are many reasons for the Democrats to be terrified of a possible Walker candidacy for president. Most of those reasons can be summarized with two words: Ronald Reagan.
In 1980, Reagan ran against a wildly unpopular and discredited incumbent, Jimmy Carter (widely regarded as the worst president of the 20th century and, before Obama, a popular contender for the worst of all time). Reagan had been a successful two-term governor of the most populous state in the country. He was a well-known advocate for conservative values ever since his famous A Time for Choosing speech in the early 60s, hardly the Hollywood lightweight the Democrats tried to portray. In the 1980 election he carried 44 states with a positive, undeniably conservative message.
As an incumbent, Reagan bettered that performance in his second term, carrying 49 states against Minnesota Senator Fritz Mondale.
Though Walker is not the communicator Reagan was, neither are any of the other likely candidates, Republican or Democrat. Yet Walker does have several similar advantages.
Walker has political executive experience. He is now embarking on a second term as governor of a midsize state (Wisconsin has ten electoral votes, reflecting its two senators and eight federal representatives). Prior to that, he had been elected to two terms as county executive of Wisconsins largest and most populous county; his seat was in Milwaukee, the states largest city.
His first term was wildly successful by any rational measure.
The previous Democratic administration had left an unconstitutional $3.6B hole in the state budget. Walkers administration was able to balance it without raising taxes. On the contrary, taxes were reduced three times in his term without harming any core functions of state or local government.
Tuition at all branches of the University of Wisconsin has been frozen. Previously, it had been rising faster than the rate of inflation. Local and county governments have been given back control of their budgets, which previously had been held hostage to collective bargaining agreements with public employee unions that held a major influence on the Democratic Party and its politicians.
A number of other legislative initiatives moved Wisconsin from its dismal position near the bottom in job creation to fourth among the ten states of the upper Midwest.
Further, emphasis can be placed on political in the phrase political executive experience. Wisconsin is a deeply divided state, in some ways a microcosm of the United States as a whole. The last time Wisconsin electors voted for a Republican president was 1988. The administration replaced in the 2010 election was one in which Democrats held all but one statewide office, had control of both houses of the state legislature, and held five of the eight seats in the state delegation to the House of Representatives. The Wisconsin revolution led by Walker has almost completely reversed this. The Democrats still hold three statewide offices (secretary of State, sirector of Public Instruction, and one Senate seat), but everything else is Republican. And Walker did it with a positive conservative message all three times.
Walker has been vetted by the opposition as few politicians have been. The never-ending John Doe probes launched by sharply partisan Democratic Milwaukee District Attorney John Chisholm, with full malice aforethought, turned up exactly nothing to blemish Walkers record of upright probity.
Walker himself has emphasized most recently on Sundays Meet the Press a preference for presidential contenders with actual executive experience in the wake of the disastrous performance of Obama. Obama had never run anything prior to his election in 2008. However, Walker did name one exception whom he found to be an acceptable candidate despite lacking executive experience: Paul Ryan.
Ryan is a national figure due to his confrontations with Obama over budgetary issues as chairman of the House Budget Committee, and of course due to his run as Mitt Romneys vice presidential candidate. If Ryan decides to run in 2016, Scott Walker will likely not want to split the state party by opposing him in the primaries. Assume there will be some intense conversations between Walkers people and Ryans people in the coming months.
Longest serving Solicitor General in Texas history. “Off the carts brilliant” according to Alan Dershowitz. Beat the GOP-e candidate like a rented mule to win his senate seat. What executive experience did Abraham Lincoln have? Or John Kennedy? Or Jerry Ford?
Nor will I. That’s part of why I’m interested in the possibility of OK’s two-time governor Mary Fallin—she’s not only very qualified, having also served in Congress, but she’s strong on illegal immigration.
2016 is going to be a pretty amazing year, I think. All the party’s “young guns” who weren’t quite ready to run in 2008 and 2012 are now coming into their primes.
Now, I’m sure we’ll have the usual FR rough-and-tumble about who’s the real deal and who’s a RINO, etc. (that’s part of the fun, LOL). But the sheer number of talented potential GOP choices out there compared to the last couple of turns will be something to behold. Cruz, Walker, Scott, Jindal, Rubio, Paul, Pence, etc.
or NH
If only he would drop his amnesty “Pathway to Citizenship” treasonous stupidity.
I wouldn’t trust for a minute a Rubio or Walker changing their impassioned support for amnesty. At least we know who they are on the issue.
Since amnesty by any name would guarantee a permanent socialist/communist govt, those traitors cannot defend their amnesty plans.
Are they stupid or just traitors who have been bought...or both?
“If/when you start a Walker 2016 list, add me”
ditto me
Ditto. He is my choice too.
That’s my dream ticket too!
Walker/Cruz will be too volatile for the "middle" to take this time around. If we can get two good guys in now, and show the "independents" how it is done, they may warm up to Cruz in 2020.
I meant 2024.
I think Walker is by far the most tested and qualified GOP candidate...
Ditto. Add me too, please, if/when.
I love Ted Cruz, but this nation does not want another Senator....they want a leader.
As a political junkie, I can cite Cruz’s leadership abilities as far surpassing Obama, but to the average voter, he is just another Senator.
Cruz has not been vetted. He comes from safe Texas where he did not have the opposition that Walker had.
Walker cannot be destroyed anymore. The left threw everything they had at him and they are now shooting blanks.
Walker is the idea leader at the top of the ticket. Put Cruz, Lee or someone else as VP.
Cruz is young. He can wait and run for governor of Texas. Then, he will be ready for the White House.
Jonathan Gruber knocked out Romney.....he’s finished.
>>I think Walker is by far the most tested and qualified GOP candidate...<<
I’ve no problems with his conservatism and his qualifications, except that he is almost the anti-Reagan when it comes to his on-screen presence. He’s just not a dynamic speaker, at least on screen, and that counts heavily in a Presidential race. Reagan had it; Walker doesn’t.
However, he has been vetted. There’s no question of that. If there was a shred of scandal lurking the Wisconsin Democrats would have certainly found it by now.
My choice is another Senator, Rand Paul. When you can get support from the GOPe (McConnell) while being a pain in their side, and from Libertarians, and are welcomed at Berkeley, and want to mend fences with blacks and Hispanics, and can still retain and defend Conservative values and positions, you’re doing something that very few politicians are capable of doing today.
I doubt Senator Paul and Governor Walker would differ on very many issues, but Paul is way ahead of Walker when it comes to gathering a coalition broad enough to establish a solid GOP majority in this country that can be sustained for years.
Walker > Cruz. I believe the GOP primary electorate will agree in 2016.
Never will I vote for someone who values American citizenship so lightly that they are eager to give it away to criminals who don’t respect our country.
ewww! I guess you live so close to the border that you are thinking it’s ok to give the country away to criminals??
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