Mitch Daniels, the one who got away
Even his strongest critics don’t deny that “big stuff” has been achieved. Daniels was arguably the most ambitious, effective conservative governor in America. He managed to ride a recession that bucked other leaders — balancing a series of budgets without increasing taxes. He left Indiana with a $500 million yearly surplus and $2 billion in reserves while awarding taxpayers a substantial refund on his way out the door. During eight years in office, he shed 6,800 state government jobs — 19 percent of the total — while improving public services. He passed legislation ending mandatory union dues. He created the largest school-choice program for low-income parents in the country. He privatized a toll road and the state lottery and busted cable monopolies. …
Daniels is just the sort of leader most needed in a Republican revival: an upbeat, tolerant, conviction politician. A surprisingly effective, RV-cruising populist. And the most compelling GOP critic of the red menace. “I stubbornly adhere to the view,” he told me, “that Americans can be talked to like adults about the deficit problem. They can be told the pure arithmetical facts of life — the injustice that current policies are doing to the poor, the young and minorities.”
Returning quietly to private life after public service is honorable and admirable. But this doesn’t change one fact. The best Democratic politician in America is about to take his oath as president of the United States. The best Republican politician will soon be president of Purdue.








Blowback
Note from Hot Air management: This section is for comments from Hot Air's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that Hot Air management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment just because we let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with our terms of use may lose their posting privilege.
Trackbacks/Pings
Trackback URL
Comments
And if he influences the academics there, he’s in exactly the right spot.
roy_batty on January 18, 2013 at 10:07 AM
He couldn’t put his wife and children through the national media scrutiny and attacks that would surely have followed his announcement to run. Every rock would have been overturned looking for more scandalous information and every name and slur in the book would have been aimed at his wife and his forgiveness.
Leave him alone and wish him well at Purdue.
Fallon on January 18, 2013 at 10:11 AM
Or to look at it another way, one put a brewery in the White House, the other is now a Boilermaker.
radjah shelduck on January 18, 2013 at 10:14 AM
I do not think we have heard the last of Mitch Daniels as an influential figure. I await him transforming Purdue as he did the state government of Indiana. He will create the roadmap for a sensible, affordable higher education system of the future. If so, he may do more for America than any President has since Reagan.
I hope all the do-nothing Marxist tenured profs and useless administrators in their six-figure jobs at Purdue have updated their resumes.
rockmom on January 18, 2013 at 10:19 AM
Mitch Daniels is the real deal. I really wish he had run.
lexhamfox on January 18, 2013 at 10:21 AM
Hee.. Yep, Purdue is going to get a lot less bloated. Perhaps Daniels will become Treasury Secretary in a Rubio or Ryan administration.
Illinidiva on January 18, 2013 at 10:23 AM
rockmom, is that a particular problem at Purdue? I mean, I always figured that there is less of that in schools like Purdue and Georgia Tech than most other colleges. If your university’s bread and butter is graduating astronauts and engineers, there is less time for Marxist foolishness.
radjah shelduck on January 18, 2013 at 10:27 AM
Bingo.
I was very disappointed he did not run…I can only imagine how much better things would be if he were in the Oval Office.
JetBoy on January 18, 2013 at 10:29 AM
If only…
KS Rex on January 18, 2013 at 10:42 AM
Just having someone serious, articulate, and responsible in the primaries would have done the GOP and the country a world of good. He really does have a message that resonates outside of the base and he even impressed my liberal friends with his cogent conservative arguments. Instead we got the Newt-Trump-Cain circus.
lexhamfox on January 18, 2013 at 10:42 AM
Mitch Daniels didn’t “get away”, he took himself out of the game.
You have got to figure he knew a lot better than anyone else whether the skeletons in his closet doomed his chances from the start.
cool breeze on January 18, 2013 at 10:44 AM
I have 3 sons that graduated from Purdue, the last this past May. Purdue is probably one of the most conservative campuses in the country. My sons told me when someone tried spewing liberal nonsense they were always engaged and/or laughed of their soapbox.
I really wanted Mitch to run but I’m also glad for Purdue and future students. He will make an impact.
GADinSB on January 18, 2013 at 11:02 AM
I don’t know for sure, but it is a typical large university and they all have suffered from administrative bloat and the “edifice complex.” Daniels has already made some statements to the effect that he is going to look to curb administrative costs before increasing tuition. It is a fairly conservative school already – had it not been, it almost certainly would not have hired Daniels – so he should be able to do a lot.
With one child in college and another going in a few years, I am more interested in higher education right now than almost anything else going on in the country. So I have high hopes that Daniels can really make a difference there.
rockmom on January 18, 2013 at 11:22 AM
I love Gov Daniels but all the fantasies people had of him being the next convservative savior for us in 2012 were laughable
– he is not constitutionally capable of running a tough, aggressive campaign. He would have made Mitt look like a tough guy. He had nothing to combat the nastiness and desperation of the O camp
– he is too meek, short, bald, etc. Sorry, but it’s true. You have to look the part on stage, at debates, on the trail, etc. I love that about him, but for the low information idiots who decide election, appearance matters
– the biggest issue– his wife is a trainwreck. All it took was one very small warning shot from the NY Times that they would be happy to discuss her sleazy past and she flipped out. She is not well liked in Indiana and has had several meltdowns. Sorry, but his wife was probably the deciding factor. I’m fully convinced Mitch wanted to run himself and she blocked it. That’s how stupid politics is now, spouses matter almost as much as candidates
The bottom line is Mitch would have gotten crushed in a national campaign. Would he have been the best man for the job? Probably so, but it doesn’t matter if you can’t win the damn election
thurman on January 18, 2013 at 11:43 AM
I wish Mitch Daniels would have run..
Dire Straits on January 18, 2013 at 12:03 PM
All this fluffing for Daniels…..
..Don’t get me wrong, I like the guy, but will ANYONE be
surprised if he’s yukking it up next year with Marxist Profs???
ToddPA on January 18, 2013 at 12:41 PM
Mitch gave his wife a veto and she used it. For those not familiar with the history, she left Mitch and the kids for another man. Thereafter she had a change of heart, and they reconciled.
Does anyone doubt what kind of smear campaign the loathsome media would have waged against him, and how it would escalate if he appeared to be a real threat to Obama? They would have stopped at nothing and tried to destroy his candidacy by attacking his family.
It is a shame she didn’t have the courage or the strength to back him up. But it is understandable.
novaculus on January 18, 2013 at 1:33 PM