AP: Palinmania may stop Romney from running in 2012
posted at 2:00 pm on November 14, 2008 by Allahpundit
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Eh. If there’s any truth to it, I’d say Ambinder is a lot closer to the real reason than the AP is.
The surprising ascendancy of McCain’s eventual pick, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, and her popularity among some GOP conservatives have left Romney wondering whether he could wage a viable second campaign for the White House, according to friends and advisers…
“While (Palin) may not be popular with the winning majority that Barack Obama put together, she’s enormously popular with the losing minority that John McCain put together — and that pretty closely mirrors Republican primary voters,” said Rich Bond, former chairman of the Republican National Committee.
Charley Manning, a Massachusetts Republican operative who has worked as a Romney adviser, recently told a local radio interviewer: “I’d be surprised if Mitt ever ran again for president. I sure don’t think it was the best experience of his life.”
Taking on the ‘Cuda is a fool’s errand only if two things occur: (1) the economy recovers, leaving Mitt without an obvious argument for why the base should prefer him to her, and (2) Huckabee doesn’t run, thereby ceding social cons to Palin. Number one is obviously more important than number two since a sustained crisis would give the GOP a shot at the White House; absent that, I’m not sure why any Republican would want to run in 2012, especially a guy like Mitt who had to eat a ton of campaign debt this year and would probably end up on the hook for a ton more trying to take down The One’s money machine.
For a guy who’s supposedly sour on the idea, though, he sure seems to be making the right moves:
Now the onetime front-runner for the Republican nomination is schmoozing influential party insiders on the National Review’s annual cruise — a gathering of 700 conservative activists and the same forum where Palin wowed the movement’s media elite last year, beginning her meteoric rise from obscure governor to vice presidential nominee.
But even as Romney publicly declares he has no intentions to run again, several former aides said they believe he will, and this week’s get-together with leading conservatives is only the latest sign the man who spent more than $50 million of his own money to vie for the party’s nomination last year is itching to do it again…
Romney also has maintained close relationships with key supporters in the early voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire, according to party officials there, and could easily revive the infrastructure he built should he launch another bid.
A free-for-all for the nomination between him, Huck, and Palin would be fascinating insofar as it would leave Mitt open to tack gently away from the culture warrior persona he cultivated last year and be more of the technocrat he seems better suited to being. He could never challenge either of them for the love of evangelicals, so why try? I never really understood his stress on social conservatism anyway, except as a form of gross overcompensation for his previous heresies on abortion. Anyone can say “life begins at conception,” but how many people can organize the Olympics?
Almost as fascinating, but in a distinctly darker way, will be seeing who emerges as the nominee if Obama’s first term is successful. Who’s old enough and ambitious enough that they wouldn’t mind the agony of a longest-of-long-shots campaign for the presidency? The only obvious person is Newt. Exit question: Er, who’s going to be the “national security candidate” next time? Is there anyone in the party’s top tier at this point with notable credentials in that area?
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Right_of_Attila on November 16, 2008 at 5:17 PM
I definitely agree with you on the primaries. Iowa and New Hampshire have undue influence, and open primaries are a joke.
thecountofincognito on November 16, 2008 at 7:38 PM
There’s a lot of talk about a possible book deal worth as much as $7 million for the ‘Cuda. I think she needs to be careful about something like that.
First, if she becomes a millionaire she loses her “regular, hockey mom” persona, something that was already threatened by the whole clothes thing. Second, if such a book were just a rehash of the campaign it could be interpreted as settling scores even if it wasn’t. Third, a campaign or life story book doesn’t actually add any policy or governing meat to her image. Everybody already knows all the really great stuff about her life (moose hunting, mom of five, pioneer woman, etc.). What’s missing in the conventional wisdom about her is a simple, clear governing philosophy and a handle national and foreign policy.
If she’s really serious about running in 2012 or 2016, I think she needs to resist the temptation to cash in until she’s ready to write a serious, detailed book about her governing philosophy and her vision for the country. Such as book would help make the argument on why she’s the best person to lead the country. I know that the fluff book worked for Obama, but I think that the ‘Cuda needs the ballast that a serious book would give. I think it’ll be too easy for some to dismiss any biographical book that she writes as demonstrating that she’s somehow a lightweight. If she writes a good, serious book on governance it helps her knock down the dismissals of her and helps her distill her thinking on conservatism, etc. I think she’s an instinctive conservative, now she needs to think through everything so that she can make her arguments clearly, concisely, and passionately. So, I think that she should actually write such a book for her personal benefit, and not necessarily ever sell it to a publisher.
meltenn on November 16, 2008 at 7:50 PM
Bradky, it makes you look smarter when you respond to something someone actually wrote.
Smellthecoffee had it exactly right. It isn’t that Palin doesn’t read, because it was well-established before she was selected by McCain that she always has been a newspaper reader. But having already stepped in some land mines in her previous interviews with MSM anchors acting as DNC assassins, she was wary of what such a question was setting up.
For example, if she said, “The New York Times” or “The Washington Post” or “Time” or “Newsweek,” the next question might have been, “What do you think of the fact that (fill in publication) agrees that Georgia was the aggressor against Russia?” or “Why do you think their editorial boards feel you are unqualified for the Vice-Presidency?” If she had replied, “National Review” or “The Weekly Standard” or “The American Spectator,” I don’t think I need to tell you what sport would have been made of that by Couric.
Or, maybe I do. Well, if so, you’re outta luck — conquering that kind of ignorance is beyond my pay grade. Contact Anne Sullivan, “The Miracle Worker.”
L.N. Smithee on November 17, 2008 at 5:08 PM
As opposed to someone who can only be a shill. I didn’t realize that the great Palin is allowed Mulligans. I must have missed it in the mad rush….
in this case wary means calculating and looking to answer what she thinks voters want to hear… wait a minute, isn’t that what Obama was criticized for?
but just because I know you want to say it I’ll say it for you “CUDA!!!” — no other words are needed or necessary..
/sarc off
Bradky on November 17, 2008 at 7:03 PM
Bradky on November 17, 2008 at 7:03 PM
I don’t think you understand the allure. Sarah, after all, rhymes with bara!
Seriously though, I actually like Sarah, although her accent grates on me at times. Accents aren’t important to me, leadership is. However, her biggest backers on here are definitely drinking some kind of Koolaid and think she can do no wrong. She’s good but she needs work, we’ll see where she stands in 2012.
thecountofincognito on November 17, 2008 at 8:54 PM
There is no fight when it comes to choosing between Palin and Romney.
If American conservatives had wanted Romney, they would have picked him over McCain. They did not.
Romney had plenty of time to prove his conservative credentials to the conservatives and he did not. That is because his conservative credentials were thin at the very best.
Like Reagan, Sarah Palin will have plenty of time to grow. Reagan lost the party’s nomination in 1968 and 1976 before winning in 1980. In that time, Americans found out what a bad president really looked like in Jimmy Carter as Reagan persevered and grew more solid in his principles. Sarah has the time, Romney will have to continue to buy the conservatives respect. Now, Romney has a lot of money, but I am not sure he has enough to buy himself some solid conservative principles.
kcarpenter on November 18, 2008 at 1:01 AM
kcarpenter on November 18, 2008 at 1:01 AM
By your logic, if conservatives wanted Reagan, they would have voted for him the first few times.
Lets be realistic here, it wasn’t “conservatives” who were voting for McCain in the primaries. The conservatives were dividing their votes between Romney, Thompson, and for whatever strange reason, Huckabee. McCain got the moderates, kind of like Gerald Ford.
thecountofincognito on November 18, 2008 at 1:30 AM
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