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Posts Tagged ‘Niki Haley’

Nikki Haley sells out and endorses Mitt Romney

by Phantom Ace ( 14 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, Headlines, Mitt Romney, Republican Party at December 16th, 2011 - 9:56 am

I am very disappointed in Nikki Haley. She is a true Fiscal/Economic Conservative. In a shocking move, she endorses Tranzi Progressive Mitt Romney.

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley threw her support behind Mitt Romney Friday, touting the former Massachusetts governor as “someone who is not a part of the chaos that is Washington.”

“When I look at the focus of what every family cares about, it’s jobs, the economy and spending. And what I want is someone who is not a part of the chaos that is Washington,” Haley said on Fox News. “What I wanted was someone who knew what it was like to turn broken companies around, someone who had proven results by improving a failed Olympics and ended up being a great success story and someone that knows what it’s like to make a decision and lead, not just make a vote. And Mitt Romney is that person.”

The fix is in and the GOP is being exposed for what it is. The Republican Party is Internationalist/Globalist Progressives. After 2012, I will have nothing to do with these Leftists.

The GOP has lousy starters but a great bench

by Phantom Ace ( 189 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Elections 2010, Elections 2012, Progressives, Republican Party at March 15th, 2011 - 8:30 am

The Republican class of 2010 was probably the single greatest amount of political talent ever elected at the same time. People like Marco Rubio, Allen West, Pat Toomey, Rand Paul, Kristin Noem, Niki Haley, Raul Labrador, Scott Walker and many others are the new face of the GOP. They come from a generation that influenced by Ronald Reagan style Conservatism in the 1980’s. The regime of Barack Hussein Obama opened the way for this flood of fresh blood. They have joined liked minded Conservatives like Paul Ryan and Eric Cantor. The sad part is, this talented pool was not elected a few cycles ago and are not ready for 2012. Instead the possible GOP Presidential candidates for next year are retreads and damaged goods.

It’s not just that the starting lineup is weak.  Their backups are incredibly strong.  The names bandied about as attractive vice presidential options impress more than the presidential candidates who might select them.  Might the party be better served by a sort of political double-promotion?

Republicans won in 2010 not by carting out retreads, but by infusing fresh blood into the party.  Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal—to name just four from a deep Republican bench—exhibit charisma, vigor, and likeability largely absent from those visibly seeking the presidency.  Of greater importance, they have shown fidelity to the limited-government principles currently animating the Republican Party.

They are flawed.  They lack experience.  But remember that Romney served just one term as governor, Palin, not even that.  And, as evidenced by the thin curriculum vitae of the 2008 Democratic nominee, voters, at least outside of GOP primaries, don’t cast ballots on experience.  What the new bloods truly lack is familiarity.  But even familiarity isn’t an unmitigated blessing.  To know Newt or Sarah, particularly after the New York Times gets through with them, isn’t necessarily to love them.

Read the rest: Republicans Need New Blood to Win the Presidency

The Republicans are in a dilemma. Any of the newly elected new bloods, would clobber Obama in an election. However, they promised to serve their constituents and they just were elected. The current crop might be able to beat Obama, but it will be tough. I have said that I might sit 2012 out. I’m talking junk any way, I despise the Obama regime. I just want to vote for someone I like and not against I don’t like. None of the current front runners are offering anything different than the Post Reagan era GOP. Most of them are Rockefeller Republicans or would be manipulated by advisers with agendas.

Obama must be defeated, but I want it to be someone who will turn this nation around. Let’s keep our fingers cross that someone arises who can bring back the Reagan era optimistic Conservatism. The future of our nation depends on it.

Lessons from the Landslide

by Mojambo ( 106 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections 2010, Republican Party at November 12th, 2010 - 9:16 am

I agree that Nikki Haley’s campaign should be a model for future GOP candidates on what to do – while the Angle/Buck/O’Donnell/Miller  fiascos are textbook examples on how not to run a campaign.  Haley was smeared by the GOP Establishment with claims of adultery, yet she was experienced enough to stick to the issues and not get dragged down int0 the mud and you would never see her in a commercial declaring “I am not a witch”.  We should not  be surprised that populist campaigns are often rife with amateur mistakes, however we need to draw the right lessons from them.  South Carolina  is a good example  of a dilemma – on the one hand you have Lindsey Graham who is an obstructionist and a pseudo liberal who follows the John McCain playbook, on the  other hand you have Jim De Mint who made the outrageous comment that you cannot be a fiscal conservative without being a social conservative thereby telling Independents and libertarians to take a hike, he also said he would rather have only 30 Republican Senators as long as they thought like him – a prefect game plan for permanent minority status.

by J.R. Dunn

It’s taken a good part of the past week for the breadth of the conservative achievement in the midterms to sink in. Over sixty new House seats, six Senate seats (we can safely say, no matter what occurs in Alaska, since Murkowski is a member of the Murkowski Party representing only Murkowski), thirty-plus statehouses, and no fewer than twenty “trifectas” — that is, states in which the GOP owns the House, Senate, and governorship. The 2010 election was a victory both broad and deep, one that will be paying dividends for years to come.

It could have been better. Anything, in this imperfect world, can be better. The failings, needless to say, have drawn the attention of the media and the left, along with renegades such as David Frum, who have crowed over them as triumphs, as if retaining Harry Reid is something to be proud of. This has convinced the Democrats to continue banging their collective head against that same leftward stretch of wall. Evidently, both Reid and the most successful speaker since Cicero, Nancy Pelosi, are to be retained as party leaders. That too is a product of victory.

It’s quite true that Sharron Angle should have beaten Reid and that Joe Miller should have beaten the repellent Murkowski (with Specter and  Grayson gone, certainly the most odious politician of either party) in a walk. Neither came anywhere near. In Colorado, Ken Buck was barely edged out, which can happen under any circumstances. As for Christine O’Donnell, she never really had a chance in hyper-liberal Delaware, quite apart from the fact that “endearingly odd” is not a compelling senatorial persona.

Could these defeats have been avoided? With the exception of Christine O., I think so. What we’re dealing with is the type of error that comes with lack of experience. The failings in the cases of both Angle and Miller were self-inflicted, involving gaffes that an experienced candidate would have known to avoid. This is something that future Tea Party candidates — that is to say, candidates emerging from outside the traditional political class, and lacking the experience of that class — will need to consider and overcome.

Most of these difficulties involved presentation. A number of TP candidates made remarks that they came to regret. Rand Paul’s notorious comment on the unconstitutionality of the 1964 civil rights act might have sunk him if he’d followed it with anything similar. Luckily, he seems to have realized this (or perhaps Dad straightened him out), and he sailed through with no more such errors, praise be to Aqua Buddha.

Not so with Sharron Angle, who made an entire series of obtuse blurts culminating in a remark to a classroom of Hispanic children that she “didn’t know what country they were from,” a comment unworthy of her and one which helped seal her defeat by the obnoxious Harry Reid. This has been widely attributed to personality flaws on Angle’s part, but I don’t think that’s entirely fair. There’s a tradition among populist movements, of which the Tea Parties are the latest example, to speak forthrightly without self-censorship as a contrast to the euphemisms and verbal formulae of the political establishment. While there is nothing intrinsically wrong with this, it can lead to problems. It is often abused, as is constantly seen in public meetings where someone gets up and starts bellowing about “wetbacks” or the like, embarrassing the entire assembly and enabling the media to label all present Neanderthals. Or, as we saw in this recent campaign, populist candidates forget that the general public is not familiar with populist usage and may mistake straightforward comments for something else, which is precisely what happened with both Paul and Angle. We need to keep in mind that discretion is not an evil in and of itself and that forthrightness is a tactic not suitable to all circumstances.

[…]

Consider Nikki Haley in contrast. Haley was badgered even more consistently and vilely by her establishment Republican opponents. She scarcely acknowledged the attacks and ran a classy campaign, so doubts never crystallized around her despite the best attempts of the media to run with the adultery stories. Future Tea Party candidates should closely study the Haley campaign, which in many ways can serve as a model on how to prevail in a universally hostile political environment.

They should also pay close attention to experienced politicians and operatives, whether they fully share their views or not. These people possess a universe of irreplaceable knowledge that must not be thrown away. Tea Party candidates are in the position of amateurs who must develop professional capabilities without losing their amateur virtues. Professional political figures can aid immensely in this task. While the GOP handled many TP candidacies poorly, in the wake of 2010, this is not likely to recur. There has been a lot of loose talk since the election calling for open warfare on GOP figures for trivial reasons or none at all. This is asinine — nothing can save the left at this point other than a civil war on the right. Much of this chatter appears to be coming from provocateurs, mixing as it does sheer vituperation with obvious ignorance of conservative politics. It would be best to simply ignore it.

[…]

And yet this ultraconservative state features one of the most ultra-liberal political establishments in the country, typified by the RINO sisters, Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe. Nobody foresaw this as changing anytime soon, and certainly not as early as 2010. But changed it has with the gubernatorial victory of Paul LePage, a Tea Party man, along with the conquest of both legislative houses. The state of Maine has come under Republican control for the first time in fifty years.

This naturally leads us to ask: if Maine, why not West Virginia and Arkansas? The GOP has for far too long followed a policy of leaving liberal control of such states unchallenged. Why, I’m not sure. Perhaps out of judicious husbanding of resources, perhaps out of fear that the Dems would retaliate. Whatever the case, the recovery of Maine proves any such policy to be mistaken and shortsighted. Arkansas and West Virginia should be targeted as soon as 2012 and remain on the list until they are flipped at last. The Tea Parties are the perfect vehicle for carrying out such a strategy. Nonpartisan, impeccably middle-class, untainted by Republican flaws, capable of persuading where career pols would fail, the TPs can go where formal political parties cannot. The Maine example must not be ignored. There should be no privileged sanctuaries where the likes of Robert Byrd can set themselves up as state Grand Kleagle in perpetuity.

[…]

Read the rest: Learning from the Landslide

Nikki Haley gives an example of how to debate

by Mojambo ( 169 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2010, Tea Parties at October 26th, 2010 - 2:30 pm

I could not imagine Nikki Haley (unlike Sarah Palin) not being able to handle questions from lightweights such as Katie Couric and Charles Gibson, or starting a political commercial with a “I am not a witch” statement. There are some real good tea party candidates out there and some  who the less said the better.  By aggressively  emphasizing that she is pro business, for lowering taxes, and budget cutting – she makes her opponent play defense.

by Walter Shapiro

Watching “Mama Grizzly” Nikki Haley Monday night during the only statewide TV debate in the South Carolina gubernatorial race underscored how different stylistically she is than her mentor Sarah Palin. Unlike Palin in her 2008 vice-presidential debate, Haley exuded no deer-in-the-headlights uncertainty, nor did she play to the politics of class resentment. Instead, the fast-talking Haley came across as poised, supremely confident and very conservative, even by South Carolina standards.

Leading in the polls against hard-charging Democrat Vincent Sheheen, a state senator, the 38-year-old Haley did not need to turn pirouettes or figure-8’s to skate through the debate. While there was never the breakthrough moment that reporters (and, I suspect, most voters) crave, the debate did allow Haley to hammer home her less-government mantra.
At times, it was impressive how many conservative catch phrases Haley could cram into a single debate answer. A question about whether South Carolina should adopt statewide pre-kindergarten classes prompted Haley to declare, “Sen. Sheheen has never seen a spending bill that he didn’t like . . . We don’t need stimulus programs, we don’t need any bailouts. What we need to do is to take our faith-based community . . .” Any second I expected Haley to utter the name “Nancy Pelosi” to punctuate her argument about allowing the churches to take charge of early education.
[….]
Haley is unequivocally pro-business in outlook: “We’re very fortunate that we’re a right-to-work state and we keep unions out,” she said. But it is Sheheen who has the support of the state Chamber of Commerce and has cross-over appeal to traditional Republicans who worry that Haley may be too inflexibly ideological. Former GOP state senator Greg Gregory, who represented Lancaster County (closer to Charlotte, N.C., than Columbia) until 2008, said, “Vince Sheheen is swimming upstream, but he’s the most capable person that the Democrats could have nominated.” While Gregory also had kind words for Haley (“she has a magnetism about her”), he tellingly refused to say for whom he was voting.
But trailing by roughly a 10-percent margin in recent polls (even though anecdotally he seems to be stronger), Sheheen needs an external event or gotcha moment to transform the race. The final debate with Haley Tuesday night in Florence provides him with a frail hope. But then Democrats traditionally struggle to get above 45 percent of the vote in South Carolina.
[….]
In their closing statements, both candidates finally got to frame the debate in the way that each had hoped. For Shaheen, it was to remind voters that Haley represents the same uncompromising philosophy as Mark Sanford (“After the last eight years, we’ve been embarrassed by this state”). For Haley, who has been running as an outsider since she defeated a long-serving state legislator in the 2004 Republican primary, it was to label Sheheen as a (gasp!) “career politician.” (In truth, Sheheen has only served four more years in the state legislature than Haley).
Like Senate candidates Sharron Angle and Christine O’Donnell, Nikki Haley boasts sterling-silver tea party credentials. But my guess is that Nikki Haley will be a political force to reckon with long after most Americans forget the names of the tea party candidate who warned about “Second Amendment remedies” and the one who had to announce, “I am not a witch.”