Top Stories - Google News

Showing posts with label activists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label activists. Show all posts

Sunday, February 13, 2011

WH contenders woo conservative activists (AP)

WASHINGTON – Republicans angling for President Barack Obama's job compared him to a one-term Democratic president and a Democratic vice president who fell short in his bid to win the presidency.

Appearing before conservatives who hold huge sway in the GOP presidential nomination fight, a stream of would-be GOP candidates called Obama weak and suggested they alone possess the talents needed to beat him and lead a country in crisis.

In unrelenting attacks on Obama, the lineup of potential contenders took on the president's economic team, his advisers and even the first lady's vegetable garden. They did little to mask their disdain for the man they hope to replace.

"Ladies and gentleman: Barack Obama is not behaving like Ronald Reagan. He's behaving like Jimmy Carter," former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty said, likening Obama to the incumbent president Reagan defeated in 1980 amid foreign policy and economic crises.

"President Obama has stood watch over the greatest job loss in modern American history. And that, my friends, is one inconvenient truth that will haunt this president throughout history," Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney said, linking Obama with the film that starred the Democrats' 2000 presidential hopeful, Vice President Al Gore.

"Two years ago, this new president faced an economic crisis and an increasingly uncertain world; an uncertain world has been made more dangerous by the lack of clear direction from a weak president," Romney said.

Sen. John Thune of South Dakota said concerns about a nuclear-armed Iran and Islamic extremists are overshadowed by worries about Obama's handling of those threats.

"The only thing more alarming than these threats is the president's weak response. We can't win a peace with apologies and reset buttons," said Thune, who is contemplating a presidential bid but has yet to lay the groundwork to start a full-fledged campaign.

Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, too, joined the field criticizing the president, invoking Obama's comments as a candidate that some voters bitterly clung to guns and religion as a way of explaining those who didn't support him in 2008's protracted Democratic primary.

"We Hoosiers hold to some quaint notions," Daniels said in explaining his state. "Some might say we cling to them, though not our of fear or ignorance."

The annual gathering of more than 11,000 conservatives marked the unofficial start of the GOP presidential nomination fight. Not a single Republican has announced his or her candidacy and there is no clear front-runner among the potential candidates to take on the Democratic incumbent.

But many of the speakers are all-but-declared contenders. When Romney couched his ambitions — "if I were to decide to run for president," he began one part of his speech — the crowd in the ballroom laughed.

They also rose to their feet when he talked about an out-of-work Obama as early as 2013.

"It's going to take a lot more than new rhetoric to put Americans back to work. It's going to take a new president," Romney said to cheers.

Thune, too, looked ahead to the next election.

"If we're going to solve our entitlement problem in this country, we need to solve our White House problem by electing a conservative president in 2012," Thune said.

Pawlenty said Obama's approach to spending reflects just how out-of-touch he is with voters, who threw scores of Democrats from power in November and gave Republicans control of the U.S. House.

"Here's another commonsense principle from the heartland that President Obama clearly still needs to learn. And it's this: People spend money differently — when it's their own money," Pawlenty said.

The start of the 2012 presidential campaign has been slower than the beginning of the last cycle, when candidates hired staff in the days after the 2006 midterm elections and shortly afterward opened campaign offices in the key early voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.

This time, there has been a more tepid start, in part because potential candidates are still contemplating the role of the tea party in the nominating process and, in part, because no one else is fully in the race.

Would-be contenders were using the three-day event to test messages, introduce themselves and gauge support. They also sought to prove their mettle among the strongest conservative activists who are looking for a candidate who can level a devastating attack on the incumbent president.

For all the talk of a weak Obama, the candidates overlooked their own vulnerabilities:

• Romney didn't mention his role in Massachusetts' health care overhaul that has many similarities to Obama's national effort.

• Thune did not mention his vote in support of the 2008 Wall Street bailout that has become anathema for conservatives and resulted in several Republicans losing to primary challengers in 2010.

• Pawlenty emphasized his budget record running Minnesota but failed to note he raised taxes on cigarettes early in his tenure.

• Daniels was the exception, bringing up his remark maligned by conservatives that the next president facing economic crisis "would have to call a truce on the so-called social issues." Rather, he encouraged conservatives to broaden their reach, saying: "Purity in martyrdom is for suicide bombers."

At the White House, Obama's top spokesman dismissed the day of anti-Obama rhetoric.

"I think we did pretty well in Minnesota," Robert Gibbs said of the state Obama during his 2008 campaign.

Romney took a swipe at first lady Michelle Obama's White House garden in a dig at Obama's new effort at bipartisanship rolled out in the State of the Union.

"He sounded like he was going to dig up the first lady's organic garden to put in a Bob's Big Boy," Romney said, referencing the burger chain.

Gibbs said Romney needs to be careful, given his record.

"I'd be interested to see, if throughout the next two years, the two words `health care' come out of his mouth," Gibbs said.

And Daniels poked fun at Obama's Nobel Peace Prize when thanking the conference's organizer.

"Nobel Peace Prizes have been awarded for far less," Daniels said.

A day earlier, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania and tea party darling Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota spoke with the group, as did real estate mogul Donald Trump who got a rousing welcome.

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour is to speak Saturday.

Several potential candidates were absent: Sarah Palin, the 2008 vice presidential GOP nominee, and Mike Huckabee, who won the Iowa caucuses in 2008, are favorites among conservatives who declined invitations, citing scheduling conflicts.

Jon Huntsman, the former Utah governor, hasn't yet left his job as Obama's ambassador to China, though he has given the White House his resignation, effective this spring. In the meantime, allies have established a campaign-in-waiting and on Friday announced they had hired two aides — both veterans of Sen. John McCain's 2008 presidential bid.


View the original article here

Animated Perry gets friendly reception from CPAC activists. Also, their cell numbers. (Daily Caller)

Texas Gov. Rick Perry showcased his affection for the 10th amendment, and a bit of tech-savvy in an animated speech to CPAC Friday — the first speech by a major speaker to include an explicit text message pitch from the podium.

He asked the audience to “pull out your phones,” and text “FED UP” to the number he gave. A return text from the number asks supporters to visit www.NoGovernmentBailouts.com, which features a petition to stop the “pervasive embrace of bailouts.”  Though the governor has repeatedly said he will not run for president, gathering the cell phone numbers of a bunch of national activists is an interesting move. Perry said the campaign is designed to keep conservative activists informed of “what we’re doing in Texas.”

“Fed up” was the message Americans clearly sent to Washington in 2010, Perry said.

“Americans disdain big government and it cuts across party lines, I’ll tell ya that,” Perry said. “Pink slips were handed out for legislators in both political parties…It was awesome.”

Perry’s comfortable drawl and, at times, dramatic delivery—one dramatic pause was so long it suggested he might not start up again— got the crowd going as well.  A generous peppering of 10-gallon-hatted Texans throughout the audience surely helped, and at least one supporter yelled, “run for president!”

The CPAC crowd was tough on speakers all day, and it was the more animated such as Perry and Herman Cain who fared better than more low-key speakers.

One audience member got a chuckle from Perry when he shouted “Secede” as an addition to Perry’s list of principles for creating a strong economy. The shout was a reference to Perry’s 2009 comment to a reporter in Texas, that “We’ve got a great union. There’s absolutely no reason to dissolve it. But if Washington continues to thumb their nose at the American people, you know, who knows what might come out of that.”

Critics and his Democratic opponent in the Texas gubernatorial race said the comment amounted to a threat to secede from the union.

Perry moved on with his speech after the shout, and congratulated his fellow Republican governors, mentioning Bob McDonnell of Virginia, for following the prescription he said worked in Texas— low taxes, fair regulation, restraints on frivolous lawsuits, and accountability in schools.

“They’re following that lead— not of what you said,” Perry clarified, laughing and gesturing toward the man who’d shouted.

Perry closed with his oft-professed love for the 10th Amendment, and the ability of states to offer solutions when given flexibility and freedom. And, in what was perhaps yet another denial that he will run for president, he emphasized “governors will lead the charge for reformation in this country.”

“We can restore this nation to its preeminence in the world. There is no other greater cause in our time.”

Read more stories from The Daily Caller
Republicans unveil budget proposal with $100 billion in cuts
Ron Paul calls for end to foreign aid, applauds House for not extending PATRIOT Act
Animated Perry gets friendly reception from CPAC activists. Also, their cell numbers.
Talking Points Memo takes down story on Ted Stevens buying cocaine
Mark Steyn: 'The guy in charge of U.S. intelligence is an idiot'


View the original article here