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March 9, 2007
A Real
Victory in '08
by Mark Alexander
From The Patriot Post
While the presidential election of '08 is still
20 months out, the contest to determine which
candidates will win their party nominations will be
over in 11 months. That's because 19 states
representing more than half the nation's population
are taking steps to hold their presidential
primaries on 5 February 2008.
The last time both major political parties had
open contests for their presidential nominations,
without an incumbent president or vice president in
the running, was 1928. This will be an interesting
primary season and a critical one for the
Republican Party, in no small measure because
Republicans must also defend 21 Senate seats in
next year's general election, while Democrats are
defending only 12.
The political rout last fall was the direct
result of the failure of President George W. Bush
and his Republican congressional majorities to
protect the fundamental tenets of the Republican
platform -- such as promoting individual
liberty, holding constitutional limits on
government and the judiciary and promoting free
enterprise and limited taxation without
reservation.
One thing is clear: If Republicans don't choose
a nominee who can reunite and refocus the GOP on
its principles,
they'll be in for another thrashing at the
polls.
This year's 2007 Conservative Political Action
Conference posted record-breaking attendance, which
is to say that conservative grassroots activists
and organizations, those motivated by the spirit of
Ronald Reagan,
are alive and well.
Unfortunately, the rancor over an admittedly
callous remark from my colleague Ann Coulter stole
a fair amount of CPAC thunder from outstanding
panel discussions and thoughtful presentations by
the Republican presidential candidates -- sans
one.
Over the din, you probably heard that
presidential wannabe John McCain snubbed CPAC. The
most telling snub this year, however, involved Mel
Martinez, chairman of the Republican National
Committee. Senator Martinez didn't speak at CPAC,
either -- not because he didn't want to, but
because he wasn't invited.
From this exclusion, one may conclude that the
Republican Party will have to earn the good will of
grassroots conservatives, because when the RNC was
put to Reagan's "trust but verify" test, it
failed.
So, at first pass, here, in order of preference
based strictly on their conservative voting records
and credentials (for those who have them), are the
contenders for the 2008 Republican presidential
nomination. Please note that this list is NOT based
on their ability to raise money and make media buys
-- which, unfortunately, is the primary determinant
of who captures the gold ring.
The first group of contenders are members of
Congress: the aforementioned McCain, Senator Sam
Brownback of Kansas, Rep. Duncan Hunter of
California, Rep. Tom Tancredo of Colorado, Rep. Ron
Paul of Texas and, potentially, former Speaker Newt
Gingrich of Georgia.
Three of these candidates have the experience
and ability to rally conservatives across the
nation: Brownback, Hunter and Gingrich. These three
candidates have lifetime voting records that are
90-percent favorable by one good measure -- that of
the American Conservative Union. They are all
constitutional advocates and fiscal and social
conservatives -- with the understanding that no
political record of any significant tenure can be
spotless.
The second group of contenders hails from the
states and includes four former executives: Gov.
Jim Gilmore of Virginia, Gov. Mike Huckabee of
Arkansas, Gov. Tommy Thompson of Wisconsin and Gov.
Mitt Romney of Massachusetts. They are joined by
former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
Of these, the early favorites, based on little
more than name recognition, are Giuliani and Romney
-- neither of whom has sufficient records to
motivate the national conservative base, and both
of whom have been wrong on various political and
social issues important to conservatives. While
Giuliani currently leads in name recognition,
Republican insiders favor Romney.
Governors Gilmore, Huckabee and Thompson have
the potential to rally grassroots conservatives --
but short of the emergence of another state
executive, we give higher marks to Brownback,
Hunter and Gingrich.
The candidate field has not narrowed yet, but it
will in a few short months. The RNC should take
note -- CPAC attendees who cast ballots in the
straw poll (80 percent of whom were between the
ages of 18 and 40) were asked this question: "All
things being equal, would you be MOST likely to
support a Republican candidate for President who
called himself a "Ronald Reagan Republican" or a
George W. Bush Republican"? Reagan won with 97
percent.
Will the Beltway establishment listen to its
base -- its national foundation and the best hope
for the liberty of our posterity? Probably not.
Should the Republican Party's establishment
continue to forsake its platform mandate and fail
to demand true conservative credentials of its next
standard-bearer, we can expect a repeat of the 2006
midterm carnage in '08 -- or worse.
However, for those of us out here in the
trenches, take refuge in these words from President
George Washington: "We should never despair, our
situation before has been unpromising and has
changed for the better, so I trust, it will again.
If new difficulties arise, we must only put forth
new exertions and proportion our efforts to the
exigency of the times."
On that note, we will continue to fight the good
fight, not for partisanship, but in support of our
Constitution
and the legacy of our national heritage.
The
Patriot Post
Copyright 2007 by Publius Press, Inc. and
reprinted with permission.
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