The Big 14: GOP 2012 Presidential Candidate Round-up
The John Birch Society weighs in on the three Republican Presidential candidates, currently in office, in the House:
Put simply, most Congressmen earned failing grades. But not all. In the House, 24 congressmen earned 100-percent scores, including presidential candidate Ron Paul of Texas. (Two other House members running for President, Michele Bachmann of Minnesota and Thaddeus McCotter of Michigan, earned scores of 95 percent and 89 percent respectively.) In the Senate, two lawmakers earned perfect scores — Rand Paul of Kentucky and Mike Lee of Utah.
There is an interesting item to note beyond Representatives Paul, Bachmann, and McCotter: Mitt Romney finished up his term and did not run for a second — which he would not have won. (it’s pretty typical: John Edwards would not have won a second term, for instance, before taking up for a Presidential bid.) Tim Pawlenty served his two terms, both won with under 50 percent of the vote, and then took up a bid for President. Newt Gingrich resigned his seat in 1998. Gary Johnson started his last term in office in 1998. Jon Huntsman left his office to join the Obama Administration. Rick Santorum lost his last election, winning 41 percent of the vote — which, come to think of it, is a greater percentage of the vote than the one current office holder from a statewide election of the bunch– Rick Perry (last election won with under 40 percent of the vote). Roy Moore lost his last election campaign for governor — after creeping out the Republican establishment.
Of course, the leader of this brigade of “Kind of embarrassing their last election”, and this is going to have to be mentioned in EVERY SINGLE PROFILE for Buddy Roemer — see:
Thaddeus McCotter… He has Five Core Principals…
#1: Our liberty is from God not the government  #2: Our sovereignty is in our souls not the soil  #3: Our security is from strength not surrender  #4: Our prosperity is from the private sector not the public sector  #5: Our truths are self-evident not relative.
Hmmph. Some things to watch with Thaddeus McCotter:
This is pretty interesting. It’s the “Will he deviate for the broader party electorate?” line. (Like Tim Pawlenty with Global Warming. Like Dennis Kucinich on Abortion… Like Mitt Romney… And this is interesting:
“Unemployment rising, people struggling in the Obama-Romney economy,” McCotter tweeted Friday.
HOTCHA! A Mitt Romney — Thaddeus McCotter Fight!
By and by, the answer to the question of the possibility of McCotter flip-flopping on his relatively pro-union voting history:
Two interesting items about this Tim Pawlenty profile in the New Republic.
Perhaps the best example of Pawlenty gaming things out a few steps ahead of the pack came during his second term. Reelected by just 21,000 votes in November 2006, Pawlenty two months later made renewable energy one of the four cornerstones of his State of the State address to the legislature. “Minnesota can’t reverse global climate change by ourselves,†he declared. “But we can do our part and help lead the way. Our energy plan will significantly reduce the amount of carbon we put in the atmosphere. I look forward to working with the Democrats and the Republicans to pass and sign comprehensive historic renewable energy legislation this year.†Pawlenty endorsed cap-and-trade, and his far-reaching environmental agenda called for Minnesota to derive 25 percent of its electricity from wind power and solar energy by 2025. As Sviggum put it, “Tim was a bit more green than I was.†By 2008, Pawlenty had begun seriously discussing visiting the North Pole with Arctic adventurer Will Steger, a Minnesota native, to see firsthand the effects of global warming.
That notion died just about the same time that John McCain began vetting Pawlenty as a potential 2008 running mate. Democratic State Senator Steve Murphy, who negotiated with Pawlenty on energy-related transportation issues, recalls, “When it became public that he wasn’t going to the North Pole with Will Steger, everybody knew that Tim Pawlenty, the environmentalist, was history.â€
Pawlenty now treats this period of his gubernatorial career as the equivalent of a politician’s pot-smoking college days. “Everyone has some clunkers in their record, and cap-and-trade is one of mine,†he has said. During our interview, Pawlenty ticked off practical reasons for not trekking to the North Pole with Steger, ranging from cost (“I couldn’t do it at state expense, because it didn’t seem like a good use of state moneyâ€) to time pressures (“It’s not easy to carve out a week or two of the governor’s scheduleâ€). But, in the end, Pawlenty contended that his melting enthusiasm for both the Arctic adventure and cap-and-trade was based on a gimlet-eyed assessment of the science.
Figures. Our political climate is out of whack. Once upon a time, “Cap and Trade” was that “market oriented” policy idea. It’s actually, I think, a bad policy (look into the arguments for and against yourownself) — but it is something designed to “address” the issue of global warming. It was fiercely opposed by those “market oriented” forces once it came into focus, suggesting that the proponents pushing for it as against “market unfriendly” ideas never took it seriously in the first place — Competitive Enterprise Institute and… Newt Gingrich must now back-peddle.
Back to the base:Â Nearly six in 10 white evangelical respondents believe that natural disasters are signs from God.
Second interesting tid-bit about Tim Pawlenty.Â
I’m a little annoyed to see Tim Pawlenty clapping at Michele Bachmann after he declined to address Mitt Romney face to face.
Says:Â Jon Huntsman is Mormon like Lady Gaga is Catholic.
For what it’s worth, if I had to rate the presidential candidates’ chances for the nomination, I’d have Romney first, and a task at splitting apart Pawlenty, Huntsman, and Perry for second. Unconventional rating, surely, but it’s important to note I note that Huntsman has a much better chance of splitting out before the years is out than winning the nomination.
It is interesting to note Rick Perry as the campaign head of Al Gore’s Presidential bid in 1988 — back when Al Gore was the Southern (read: conservative Democrat) candidate, best known for his wife’s campaign against explicit music lyrics, bashing Michael Dukakis for being soft on crime and weak on the military. Rick Perry since switched parties — which puts him in the same category as his fellow presidential opponents for the nomination — Buddy Roemer and David Duke.
Okay, fine: Here’s what you need to know about Rick Perry’s record as Texas governor. Also, he — like the rest — doesn’t see anything wrong with America Defaulting:
As for Herman Cain, who’s been doing well despite never holding office or running outside of Georgia, Johnson attributes that showing to having a name that sounds similar to one Republican voters already know well.
“I think Herman Cain, I think a lot of that has to do with ‘McCain,’†Johnson said.