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Posts Tagged ‘Rick Perry’

Who Does The Obama Team Really Fear? Here’s A Clue, No Less Than A Dozen Articles Yesterday Positing The Perry Is An Idiot Theme.

by Flyovercountry ( 190 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Barack Obama, Elections 2012, Politics at August 10th, 2011 - 8:00 pm

The more things change, the more they stay the same. In 1979, when our great nation faced down an economic disaster which gave birth to the misery index, several news sources were feverishly churning out news stories assuring all of us that Jimmy Carter was indeed the single most intellectually gifted President we had ever been graced with. When in 1980, it became clear that Ronald Reagan would be the GOP nominee, the Reagan is a dolt theme was born. How could we let our nation be led by a man who attended Eureka College, and not some Ivy League institution. We were treated to, “Ron is Stupid,” columns masquerading as serious news pieces for an solid 9 year time frame. Never mind the fact that Reagan was plenty smart. By the end of his 8 year turn at bat, he had successfully won the Cold War, by ignoring the genius nuanced idiocy of the political left. He had started America down the path to unprecedented economic prosperity, by eliminating much of the genius central planning lunacy put into place by the smart economic moronic directives of Johnson, Nixon, Carter who preceded him. So, for all of you leftists out there, you’ll please excuse me if I do not take your analysis as to who is smart and who is dumb as the gospel truth.

Flash forward to today. Perry’s college transcripts have been made public. Having not actually seen them myself, I don’t care. Academia has its place I guess, but so does real world success. What kind of a student Perry was or was not three decades ago is much less important to me than his obvious success as the Governor of Texas. I want that kind of success for my country. How smart Barack Obama is of little help to me facing life in a soup line. This is where we are in America today, ivory tower theory has replaced real world results in too many minds. There is nothing wrong with academic pursuits, but at some point those pursuits must include a correlation to the results from practical experience to the theory being taught. When the Keynesian model being inflicted upon us in a government gone wild video produce the complete destruction of our national economy, and the results are greater hardships for every victim class being touted in debate worthy anecdotal stories, then at some point, if you truly do care, you must change your policies. Not doing so would be, dare I say it, stupid.

I have been assured by any leftist with a pen or a microphone how smart Barack Obama is. He is a, “Constitutional Scholar.” Never mind that in every interpretation of the Constitution I have heard him make has been at best juvenile. My favorite example is this little quote from an NPR interview in 2002, “I believe the founding fathers missed their historic opportunity to instill the Constitution with re-distributive justice.” The irony of course, redistribution of anything was completely at odds with the principle upon which this nation was founded. Never mind that in any speech when he has given an historical perspective, it would not have been accepted by even the dimmest of junior high school history teachers. My favorite example, “People of the world – look at Berlin, where a wall came down, a continent came together, and history proved that there is no challenge too great for a world that stands as one.” The irony here, the Berlin wall fell precisely as the result in a conflict being won specifically by the Western World. The Socialist system, which Obama touts as the entire basis for everything he does collapsed, and the wall was torn down by the starving imprisoned people being held hostage by that form of governance. No wonder, that with all of Obama’s genius, we are scared by the terrible results that follow any rule of Socialism. Our economy is poised on the brink of a disastrous abyss, and it is there as a direct result of President Obama’s centralized planning approach, and not in spite of it. The failure of the, “smart diplomacy,” is even more stark. Around the globe, our allies no longer trust us to be supportive when they need support. Our enemies consider us to be a paper tiger which displays a startling lack of resolve. The ravages of the so called, “Arab spring,” will cause untold hardships for millions of people decades from now.

Contrast that with the unbridled success of Texas. During the last 3 years, only 6 States in the country have had positive job growth. Texas of course, with its dolt Governor leads the pack. As a matter of fact, if you take Texas out of the mix, the nation as a whole would be negative. The debates between Obama and Perry should be fun to say the least. Obama will no doubt tout his job creation record, as though it is not dismal, and then his intellectual junior will tout the Texas number for job creation, which will in fact be a larger number than the national number Obama can state. It is no secret that new and established businesses are breaking all sorts of records to relocate to Texas, one of the last bastions of the free market system left in the country. Obama’s approach of course has been to sick the EPA and other regulators on Texas in an all out effort to destroy their economy as well.

Just as an aside, I am still waiting for Obama’s college transcripts. He remains, even as President currently, the least vetted man in America. While I have always maintained the entire birth certificate thing to be foolish, it is still understandable to me how it took on a life of its own. Rick Perry has not even announced himself as a candidate for the Presidency. His college transcripts and private emails have already been dumped into the public arena for scrutiny. We still now very little about Barack Obama. No college transcripts, no familiarity with anyone who ever knew him at all has been shared with the American Electorate. We knew more about Bristol Palin’s boyfriend than we did about the President of the United States on inauguration day in 2009. Here we are 3 years later, and that has not changed. I once heard a member of MSNBC claim that Barack Obama was the most vetted President in history. He was not even the most vetted person at the $38,000 a plate fundraiser he attended last night.

I do share the sentiment that I would like someone smart for President, I would just like to expand the definition of smart to include those capable of learning from their personal experiences, and the results of the failed social experiments of the past. Good grades from the Ivy League, while nice, have never been a reliable predictor of useful success. Rick Perry is plenty smart enough to lead this country.

Cross Posted at Musings of a Mad Conservative.

Rick Perry is the simplistic one?; if Perry wins – then Karl Rove is out!

by Mojambo ( 86 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012 at August 9th, 2011 - 11:30 am

All Republicans and conservatives have to deal with the condescending put downs by the liberal elites that their ideas  and plans are “simplistic”. Ronald Reagan in particular was said to be naive and simplistic whether dealing with the Soviet Union (he was denounced as being provocative for calling the USSR “The Evil Empire”) or with the ideas of tax cuts. Our betters at The Washington Post have decreed that Gov. Rick Perry’s ideas on higher education to be simplistic, therefore I think we must give him the benefit of the doubt.

by Mona Charen

Anticipating his entry into the presidential race, the Washington Post ran a long piece on Texas Governor Rick Perry’s ideas about higher education. “A man of grand plans,” the headline warned, “criticized as not sweating the details.” Are the headline writers at the Post on summer break? Did the temps have to dust off headlines from the Reagan era? Reagan’s ideas were constantly dismissed by the bien passant as “simplistic.” So anyone who gets tagged as simplistic by the Post gets an immediate benefit-of-the-doubt from me. As Margaret Thatcher said at Reagan’s funeral, ” . . . his ideas, though clear, were never simplistic. He saw the many sides of truth.”

So what has Perry done to earn this epithet? He’s taken on the higher education establishment in Texas. He has proposed – gasp — that Texas’s four-year institutions develop a plan to offer bachelor’s degrees for no more than $10,000. “Skeptics,” the Post tells us, say that the goal cannot be achieved without sacrificing “academic quality and prestige.” It shows, these same unnamed critics assert, that the governor has a “record of plunging into splashy ventures, at times, despite the complexities, constituencies, or sensitivities involved.”

[…]

During that same 1997-2007 decade that home prices increased by 68 percent and created a housing bubble, college tuition and fees rose even higher — by 83 percent. In fact, college tuition and fees have never increased by less than 73 percent in any ten-year period back to the 1980s. And in the decades ending in 2009 and 2010, college tuition increased by more than 90 percent. The still-inflating increases in the price of higher education are starting to make the housing bubble look pretty tame by comparison.”

In addition to suggesting that tuition be reduced, a panel appointed by Governor Perry suggested that professors were “wasting time and money churning out esoteric, unproductive research.” Shocking. The panel suggested dividing the research and teaching budgets to encourage excellence in both, while also introducing merit pay for exceptional classroom teachers.

Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal reports that students are flocking to colleges and universities in flat, freezing North Dakota to take advantage of lower tuition rates. Enrollment at public colleges has jumped 38 percent in the last decade, led by a 56 percent increase in out of state students. Colleges around the nation, the Journal advises, must now compete for a new kind of student: “the out-of-state bargain hunter.”

Admittedly, North Dakota benefited from oil revenue and spent generously on its colleges and universities over the past 12 years. But in a time of straightened circumstances for everyone, how does it not make sense to have colleges and universities compete on price?

Obama seeks to forestall this commonsense solution by once again increasing government subsidies. Student loans, courtesy of Obama, can now be “forgiven” after 20 years of payment, or after 10 years if students choose “public service.” Who pays the difference? You know who.

[…]

And Perry is the simplistic one?

Rick Perry’s education policy is more sophisticated then Obama’s

According to the Democratic leaning (to say the least) Polticio – there is another reason why I would support Rick Perry against all the Republican candidates and non candidates – Rick Perry loathes  Karl “the overrated” Rove, whose influence will be gone and he can spend his time trying to sound like he knows what he is talking about on Sean Hannity’s show on Fox, if Perry wins.  As the article states  “Perry winning would be a deathblow for Rove.”  By the way this is the second hit piece on Governor Perry in two days by Politico which tells me that Perry is the one that Obama does not want to have to run against.

For those of you who are interested in why the Bush’s and Karl Rove, Dick Cheney, James Baker, and Karen  Hughes wanted to defeat Rick Perry in 2010  it goes back to 1998. Rick Perry plays to win and does not believe in turning the other cheek.  I admire that!

In 1998, however, when Bush was running for reelection as governor and Perry was running for lieutenant governor, the two campaigns clashed over whether Perry should go negative against his opponent. Rove argued against it, insisting that Bush campaign polling showed Perry comfortably in the lead.

But Perry’s pollster Mike Baselice forecast a much closer result, and the feeling in Perry’s camp was that Rove’s real motivation was concern that negative ads would cut into Bush’s margin of victory, particularly among Hispanic voters, and undermine his efforts to build momentum for Bush’s planned 2000 presidential campaign.

After one particularly contentious phone call, one Perry campaign operative punched a hole in a wall in Arnold’s office. Perry’s campaign eventually went up with negative ads, and squeaked out a narrow victory. Rove offered a “most memorable” election night apology, Baselice told the Houston Chronicle in 2006.

In 2007, Perry was captured on video at an Iowa event for former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani’s campaign, declaring “George Bush was never a fiscal conservative — never was.”

Soon thereafter, Rove and other Bush allies began aligning themselves behind Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, a longtime Bush family ally, in challenging Perry in last year’s Texas gubernatorial primary. It was in the context of that bitter race that Perry’s adviser Dave Carney, in a 2009 interview with The New York Times Magazine, disparaged the Bush crew — and Rove specifically — as “country-club Republicans” and “not conservatives.

hat tip – Rodan

by Kenneth P. Vogel

If Texas Gov. Rick Perry ultimately decides to run for president, it would shake up the Republican race, directly threatening Michele Bachmann, Tim Pawlenty and the other candidates vying to be the leading alternative to front-runner Mitt Romney.

But it could also make things tricky for another powerful Texan — Karl Rove

Rove, who served as George W. Bush’s political strategist in Texas on his way to becoming the GOP’s best known political operative, had a falling out with Perry and his staff when Bush was governor in the 1990s that has become the stuff of Lone Star lore.

With no signs the two have patched things up — and with some suggestion that Rove, or at least his team, is tilting toward Romney — speculating how their relationship would play out if Perry becomes a candidate has become something of a fixation among Perry supporters and other Republicans in Texas and Washington.

Their interest is not just in the alliances and rifts stemming from a personal feud, but in the possible consequences for one of Texas’s major exports to national politics — money.

As the intellectual spark behind a network of outside groups including American Crossroads and Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies (or Crossroads GPS, for short), Rove is the unofficial leader of a shadow Republican Party that intends to raise tens of millions of dollars on ads to defeat President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats in 2012. But Rove’s network relies to a great extent on a small group of wealthy Texans, including some who have been major donors to Perry.

[…]

One person who has sent checks to both American Crossroads and Perry’s campaigns predicted that if Perry wins the nomination, his donors will cut off the spigot to Rove.

“Perry winning would be a deathblow for Rove,” said this person, who did not want to be identified talking about political contribution strategies.

Campaign filings show that if even a handful of big Texas donors feel the same way, it could have a major impact. Of the $35 million in reported contributions raised by American Crossroads (Crossroads GPS does not disclose donations), about half (more than $17 million) has come from Texas, according to an analysis of filings with the Federal Election Commission and the Internal Revenue Service.

And 11 of the biggest Texas donors to American Crossroads, a super PAC, have also given Perry $4.7 million since 2001, the earliest year for which Texas state campaign filings are electronically accessible.
Houston homebuilder Bob Perry (no relation to Rick Perry), for example, who ranks as the biggest known donor to American Crossroads at $7.5 million, has also given at least $3.3 million to Rick Perry over the years.

[…]

Read the rest:

Perrymania grows; and What’s Obama got against Texas?

by Mojambo ( 62 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Elections 2012, Polls, Republican Party at July 26th, 2011 - 8:30 am

I am glad to see that Governor Rick Perry pretty much has said that the gay marriage issue  in New York is New York’ s problem and not his.  In this he is affirming the 10th amendment (what the 10th Amendment means is that powers not temporarily granted to the federal government by the Constitution and/or the Bill of Rights, are still the property of individual States within the union, or, in the case of those powers that were prohibited by the Constitution to the States, those powers were still the property of the people at large.). To me this shows that while he  is a conservative, he has an appeal to Independents and Suburbanites (the very people that Bush father and son turned off) and is not going to emulate the Bush strategy of throwing meaningless red meat rhetoric. “Vote with your feet” is his motto – if you are not happy with liberal policies move to Texas, and people and companies are doing so in droves.  I like the combination of  conservatism mixed with libertarianism that he is espousing. This election should be won on jobs, debt and ObamaCare as that is what makes Obama vulnerable.

by Doyle McManus

For a man who hasn’t formally decided whether to run for president, Texas Gov. Rick Perry sure sounds a lot like a candidate.

“I’m not ready to tell you that I’m ready to announce that I’m in,” Perry told the Des Moines Register, the biggest newspaper in Iowa, where the first big test in the Republican nomination race is held. “But I’m getting more and more comfortable every day that this is what I’ve been called to do. This is what America needs.”

And Perry isn’t just being called; he says he’s being actively pushed to run by his wife, Anita, a former nurse.

“Get out of your comfort zone!” he says his wife told him. “Yeah, being governor of Texas is a great job, but sometimes you’re called to step into the fray.”

[…]

And that’s been enough to touch off a boomlet of Perrymania, at least in some parts of the Republican Party. Perry says he may not decide whether to run until Labor Day, but the mere possibility was enough to vault him into second place in two polls released last week, close behind the dogged but unloved frontrunner, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. (Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, who unlike Perry is actually running, came in third.)

[…]

The point is that most Republican voters haven’t found their dream candidate yet. There’s a big hole in the Republican field, and it’s made to order for a Southern governor who’s conservative on social issues but not censorious, and who’d rather talk about cutting government spending and holding down taxes.

Perry’s favorite claim is that in recent years Texas has created almost as many jobs as the other 49 states combined, and that his low-tax, low-regulation policies are the reason. Economists debate how much credit Perry deserves; the fact that Texas produces oil and we’re in an oil boom helped too. But Texas has done better at job creation than most states, and it’s hard to think of a more potent talking point in a campaign that will be fought largely over economic issues.

Perry’s conservatism goes beyond low taxes, though.

His pre-campaign book, “Fed Up,” is mostly an essay about the evils of federal power and an appeal to move decision-making back to the states as laboratories of democracy.

“We are tired of being told how much salt to put on our food, what kind of cars we can drive, what kind of guns we can own [and] what kind of prayers we are allowed to say,” he writes in his list of complaints against the federal government (which doesn’t actually tell people any of those things, unless you count Agriculture Department brochures about salt).

Last month, he sponsored a bill in the Texas Legislature that would have made it a criminal offense for a federal airport security screener to perform an “intrusive” pat-down on a passenger in Texas. (The bill failed.)

And he proclaims himself a good notch more conservative than his predecessor, George W. Bush, whom he blames for launching a “big-government binge” by expanding federal programs in education and healthcare.

But in the spirit of states’ rights, Perry is cheerfully tolerant of diversity in social policy. He’s a vigorous opponent of gay marriage, but if the voters of other states want it, he seems to think that’s their problem. “Vote with your feet,” he advises. “If you don’t support the death penalty and citizens packing a pistol, don’t come to Texas. If you don’t like medicinal marijuana and gay marriage, don’t move to California.”

[…]

Shawn Steel, former chairman of the California Republican Party — who met with Perry in Newport Beach last month — isn’t sure that Perry can pull off a Reagan-style victory. The former California governor, he noted, could “take controversial positions and make them sound like ice cream. Can Perry do that?”

Right now, Perry’s rawboned conservatism doesn’t sound much like ice cream. It’s more like strong tea, with no sweetener. But even his toughest critics in Texas say he’s a formidable campaigner, so if he runs, we’ll see an epic battle for the heart of the Republican Party.

Read the rest: A boomlet of Perrymania

Barack Obama – knowing how successful Texas has been despite his loathsome economic record, is doing all he can to bring Texas done to the  level of the rest of the nation. In this he will (try at least) to knock some of the sails out of the candidate that he is most afraid of the Texas governor. As the photo says “President Obama seems determined to use suffocating bureaucracy to bring Texas down with the rest of the country.”

Editorial

New unemployment claims rose this past week and total unemployment across the nation edged upward to 9.2 percent. The national economy simply isn’t growing anywhere near as fast as President Obama claimed it would when he and the Democratic 110th Congress pumped $859 billion worth of stimulus into it. Job creation has all but ground to a halt in recent months. If the country is not at the precipice of the second dip in a double-dip recession, it clearly is in a jobless recovery.

The one bright spot in the national economic picture is Texas, which has an economy busting out all over with new jobs. Nearly half of the estimated quarter-million new jobs that have been created since February 2009 were created in Texas. But Obama seems determined to use suffocating bureaucracy to bring Texas down with the rest of the country.

Consider the excessive delays imposed on the energy industry in the Gulf of Mexico by Obama’s Department of the Interior in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon tragedy. Other states border the Gulf, of course, but the Gulf region’s energy industry is centered in Texas, so when the federal government stops issuing drilling permits and promulgates costly new regulations on drilling in the Gulf, Texas suffers most. An econometric study released Friday by House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., describes the magnitude of the Obama administration’s regulatory strangulation of the Gulf energy economy:

[…]

And elsewhere in today’s edition of The Washington Examiner, Bryan Shaw, chairman of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, notes that EPA’s own computer modeling showed his state does not contribute significantly to the emissions the rule seeks to reduce. But EPA officials refuse to explain why they insist on applying the new rule to Texas. At this rate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry may have to run for president as a matter of self-defense.

Read the rest: What’s Obama got against the Lone Star State?

Polls Show Governor Rick Perry Already Striking A Chord With GOP Voters

by Mojambo ( 11 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, Headlines at July 20th, 2011 - 8:12 pm

If he runs, Perry will get the nomination. He has a superb job creation record as well as balancing the budget without raising taxes, as well as tort reform.  That Santorum/Gingrich/Huntsman campaign(s) have really taken off haven’t they? Ha!

by Alex Roarty

Even as he meets with potential top donors, Rick Perry has yet to decide if he’s running for president. But two polls released this week indicate that if the Texas governor chooses to do so, he would enter the race better positioned than rivals who have campaigned for far longer.

The still-undeclared Perry — who has promised to make a decision in the next few weeks — received 11 percent of Republicans’ support in an NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey of the GOP presidential field, trailing only Rep. Michele Bachmann and early primary front-runner Mitt Romney. Nine percent of GOP voters picked Perry as their second choice, according to the poll, tied for third highest.

The results are good for Perry, and bad for two of his top potential opponents. The Texas governor’s totals dwarf those of ex-Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman. Each of them, at one time considered among the most likely to win the party’s nomination, got the backing of just 2 percent of Republicans surveyed – meaning their combined support was less than half of Perry’s.

A second poll released on Tuesday also showed a bright result for Perry. Gallup reported that Republicans who know the Texas governor hold an overwhelmingly positive view of him. Perry received a net positive intensity score – the measure of how many voters strongly approve of a candidate minus those who strongly disapprove — of 21 points. It was the same score as Bachmann’s, an indication that Perry’s backers share the fervent support that has sparked the Minnesota House member’s meteoric rise in recent polls.

Perry’s name identification still stood at just 55 percent, Gallup reported, well below rivals Romney, Texas Rep. Ron Paul, and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. But it was the same percentage as Pawlenty’s and higher than Huntsman’s, whose name ID stands at only 41 percent.

Perry possesses strong numbers even though he is not yet an official candidate and has considered entering the race only in recent months. Pawlenty, meanwhile, has been a de facto candidate most of the year, has been treated as one of the front-runners by most of the press, and has participated in both presidential debates. Huntsman has more of an excuse, having returned from China in the spring as U.S. ambassador there, but months on the campaign trail have yet to produce gains for him in most polls.

Pawlenty’s and Huntsman’s struggles should hearten Perry: If he runs, he will compete with the them to become the alternative to the front-running Romney. Poor showings from the two former governors could coalesce support of the anti-Romney vote behind Perry.

[…..]

Read the rest – Polls show Perry Already resonating with GOP voters