Posted on 02/27/2015 7:27:08 AM PST by SeekAndFind
The first instinct of many upon reading this headline will be to dismiss it. Presumably, Republican powerbrokers can be understood to mean Jeb Bushs stable of handwringers for whom nothing is more frightening than an outspoken conservative who governs like one. But if we step back and suspend disbelief, it is not hard to see where Walkers critics have a point.
First off, who are Walkers critics? Well, outside of the political press and the nations editorial boards, which have determined that the Wisconsin governor is a panderer of the first order because the media is not the target of his pandering, Walkers detractors are largely anonymous.
Theres an emerging sense in the early states that Scott Walker is not ready for primetime, Politico reported on Friday.
One open-ended question this week asked early-state insiders to pick which candidate of either party has made the biggest mistake this year. Scott Walker was the most common response.
Though a plurality of insiders still believe that the Wisconsin governor would win the Iowa caucuses if they were this week, several uncommitted Republicans marveled at what they described as rookie mistakes.
Theres a pervasive feeling that Walker erred by refusing to distance himself from former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, after Giuliani said at an event Walker was also attending that President Barack Obama does not love America. He also wouldnt say whether he believes Obama is a Christian.
Clear-eyed conservatives should perhaps take a critical look at Walkers level of preparedness. Take, for example, the twin controversies involving Walker that dominated the news cycle last week.
Those in the media who continue to scold Walker for his refusal to vigorously denounce Rudy Giuliani after the former mayor had the temerity to call into question Barack Obamas patriotism (formerly a time-honored practice when George W. Bush occupied the Oval Office) are not exposing a weakness in Walker so much as they are revealing their own biases. Walker called Giulianis comments “aggressive, and that should have satisfied reporters.
But Walkers response to a silly question about Obamas devotion to Christianity is a different story. Go back and re-read it. The Wisconsin governors response was rambling and improvised. While he eventually settled on a fine retort in which he called into question the political medias sensibilities, he did open himself up to criticism by pontificating at length on the imperfect nature of truly knowing another human being. He was winging it until he found his footing. Walker said five sentences when one declarative statement would have served his purposes.
Without the conservative blogosphere to call out the media for its silly attachment to cornering Republicans with gotcha questions, would that controversy have taken a greater toll on the Wisconsin governors presidential stature? And just how many times are conservative bloggers expected to rush to the governors defense in the coming months? Surely, their time would be better spent on offense rather than defending their hapless 2016 nominee.
Walker is not entirely the victim of an overzealous reporting culture that is seeking to throttle the governors infant presidential campaign in its crib. A fair appraisal of the governor would concede that he has a tendencey to invite controversy. Scott Walker stumbled into what National Reviews Jim Geraghty called a genuine unforced error at CPAC on Thursday when he insisted that his national security bona fides were established when he successfully faced down the Badger States progressive protesters.
If I can take on 100,000 protesters, I can do the same across the globe, Walker said of ISIS.
That is a terrible response, Geraghty wrote.
First, taking on a bunch of protesters is not comparably difficult to taking on a Caliphate with sympathizers and terrorists around the globe, and saying so suggests Walker doesnt quite understand the complexity of the challenge from ISIS and its allied groups.
Secondly, it is insulting to the protesters, a group I take no pleasure in defending. The protesters in Wisconsin, so furiously angry over Walkers reforms and disruptive to the procedures of passing laws, earned plenty of legitimate criticism. But theyre not ISIS. Theyre not beheading innocent people. Theyre Americans, and as much as we may find their ideas, worldview, and perspective spectacularly wrongheaded, they dont deserve to be compared to murderous terrorists.
Thats fair. If a Democratic officeholder had compared the tea party protesters to ISIS terrorists, Republicans would be consumed with righteous indignation. Its only honest to acknowledge that liberals have a justifiable claim to feel slighted.
More importantly, as Geraghty said, this does not convey confidence that Walker either is prepared to serve as commander-in-chief or understands the nature of the threat posed by ISIS. Some conservatives, like MSNBCs Joe Scarborough and Daily Caller columnist Matt Lewis, have cited Ronald Reagans mass firing of the nations striking air traffic controllers as an example of how a presidents approach to domestic affairs can reshape the geopolitical landscape. The Soviets were taken aback by Reagans fearlessness in putting down by air traffic controllers strike in 1981, but the Islamic State is not the Soviet Union. The Kremlin wanted nothing more than to avoid direct conflict with Washington and recalibrated their approach to foreign affairs accordingly in response to Reagans forcefulness. By contrast, ISIS is most desirous of drawing America into a fight inside the nascent caliphate. They want confrontation, preferably the direct kind, and they would likely welcome a more pugnacious president.
With all this having been said, Scott Walker remains an impressive candidate. He has proven he can talk over the heads of the media, he is thoroughly vetted, and he unites two increasingly fractious wings of the Republican Party. Commanders-in-chief are made, not born, and Walker has plenty of time to reframe his message on foreign policy.
Those who are casting a sideways glance at Walker today are, however, legitimately concerned about his readiness, and it behooves the conservative movement to seriously consider whether those apprehensions are well-founded.
No. He's more qualified than any other Candidate except perhaps for Ted Cruz.
Both these men fight. We need fighters, not sissy "yes" men.
What does “ready” mean?
“Of the GOPe”?
What did Jeb Bush accomplish as Governer the comes close to Walker’s accomplishments?
It means able to be influenced with bribery.
That is how I understood it too.
Could it be that the GOPe’s philosophy is “A little more for you and a lot more for me?”
Those ‘power brokers’ do have not had a very good history of brokering winners:
1992
1996
2008
2012
Those ‘power brokers’ are looking at the presidential race as insiders. They see what is good for DC and, thus, good for them and their K Street buddies.
Stupid question. A totally inexperienced Leftist has ruled the nation with an iron fist for six years, “transforming” America without a shot being fired. Do you really think one of the “moderate” GOP moss-backs will roll back all the power Obama has accumulated? I don’t. We cannot trust Jeb Bush to do anything but extend the reach of the federal government, just as his brother did (Medicare Drug entitlement, the terrible damage to liberty under his DHS, No Child Left Behind, etc).
These hypocrites - journalists and politicians from both parties - can eat dog poop.
The GOP elites don’t want any reformers like Walker breaking up their game and sweatheart relationships.
He’s not ready in their eyes because he’s not ready to bow to them and join their good-old-boys-club.
Republican power brokers McCain/Lindsey thought a candidate was ‘ready’ that we knew nothing about, only voted preset whenever any controversial issues came up and spent very little time in the Senate,
“Theres a pervasive feeling that Walker erred by refusing to distance himself from former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, after Giuliani said at an event Walker was also attending that President Barack Obama does not love America. He also wouldnt say whether he believes Obama is a Christian.”
So he should have jumped on the media bandwagon and said something he doesn’t believe just to avoid a little name calling by the LSM? Fear of name calling has paralyzed the GOP in Congress. We need a president who isn’t afraid of the LSM’s name calling.
Sophisticated bribery... wonder why voting in new guys never seems to matter?
http://definingthemachine.com/
As opposed to Jeb Bush, Lindsey Graham, and Mike Huckabee. < /sarcasm>
That's my thought too. Yet another reason to support Walker.
When we’re talking about “emerging sense” in “early states”, you’re talking about events that are twelve months away.
But, MY emerging sense from frozen NH is that I like the hell out of the guy, and when I look at his enemies, I wish he was President right now.
The big problem with Walker is whether or not he is going to have an operation that will successfully control the narrative, fend off the leftist activist press, and put his opponent on the defensive.
No, this is not answered by “look at how he is driving the unions crazy in Wisconsin”. Bunch of middle-aged factory workers that are a throw-back to the 70s Democrats are not the same as the 24/7/365 media machine that the left of today has that can run attacks from multiple vectors almost at will. Where narratives can be launched from Tumblr, amplified on Reddit, spread through Twitter/Facebook/HuffPo, echoed on MSNBC and the NY Times, and then solidified on the Daily Show, and then given “royal assent” on NPR.
All without his Dem opponent ever having to say anything.
THAT is a sample of the machine he is going to have to combat. Not with a sly smile and a warm shrug either.
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