Posts Tagged ‘convention’

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Mitt Romney’s victories in six of the ten Republican primaries on “Super Tuesday” solidified his position as the leader in his party’s race for the presidential nomination, but it also confirmed his weaknesses. He did not win decisively where it counted, especially in the battleground state of Ohio, where Romney edged Rick Santorum by one percent and only a little more than 10,000 votes. Santorum also generated enthusiastic victories in Tennessee, Oklahoma, and North Dakota. Newt Gingrich won his home state of Georgia. Romney continues to confront strong Republican opposition to his candidacy, and his challengers will surely remain in the race through the early summer. Romney’s delegate count remains low at 404: far from the 1,144 he needs to lock up control of the Republican nomination and avoid a deadlocked convention in August.

So, the show will go on. Expect many more weeks of attacks and counter-attacks around red meat topics that have little connection to the real policy issues confronting our country. Santorum will continue to attack Romney’s religion. Romney will criticize Santorum’s preparation for office. Gingrich will surely announce more superficial “big think” schemes for space travel, and Ron Paul will find more government offices to attack. All the while President Barack Obama will sit and watch, avoiding any substantive public statements about the difficult choices we must make as a society concerning long-term entitlement spending, taxation policy, and national security. The extended Republican primaries will prolong our present political limbo.

The state of Texas will hold its Republican primary on May 29. This could be an opportunity to change the race. Like all states, Texas has deep political divisions, but it also has a strong can-do entrepreneurial spirit. That is, after all, what separates the Lone Star state and its pioneering history from many other parts of the country. Led by businesspeople, activists, and even professors, the citizens of the state could demand some serious answers from the candidates: What are our domestic priorities and how are we going to pay for them? How are we going to restore and improve American international competitiveness? What are the essential elements of American national security, and what are the excesses we can do without? What is our inclusive and hopeful national vision for the next 5-10 years?

John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, and Ronald Reagan answered these questions in compelling terms when they campaigned in Texas. That is why they won their presidential bids. That is how they changed our nation. The time has come for voters in Texas and other big states to throw around their weight again. Let’s reject the wedge issues and focus on what really counts. Let’s drop the small stuff and demand attention to the crucial priorities that will determine the progress of our nation’s economy, society, and security. In this contested and confused presidential election season, bigger is better.

 

This blog post originally appeared at http://globalbrief.ca

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Newt Gingrich’s victory in the South Carolina Primary exposes a fact that Republicans have tried to hide. The party of Lincoln, Eisenhower, and Reagan does not have a credible candidate to challenge President Barack Obama. This is ironic considering President Obama’s profound vulnerabilities. He is not very popular. Unfortunately for Republicans, their party has clearly failed to promote a candidate who can mobilize people for an alternative. South Carolina proved that none of the Republican candidates can build a consensus in their own party. They have no chance with a much larger and far more diverse national electorate.

It is hard to see how any of the four remaining Republican candidates can secure the party’s nomination. Gingrich won South Carolina among extreme partisans in one of the country’s poorest states. He faces irreconcilable opposition from the establishment and mainstream of the party. No one who has observed his erratic behavior up-close, particularly during his ignominious period as Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, will tolerate a replay of that nightmare. Although Gingrich can rant about his opponents, his appeal is confined to extremes.

The same can be said for Rick Santorum. He, of course, appeals to the most religious parts of the Republican party. He has little following beyond that. South Carolina also showed that religious voters will frequently privilege other issues in these difficult economic times. Santorum’s followers are motivated, but they are a distinct minority, even among strong Republican loyalists.

Mitt Romney has the money, the experience, and the mainstream credentials to be the candidate many observers would expect to capture the imagination of those who want to defeat Obama and elect a Republican president. The primaries and caucuses have shown, however, that Romney’s appeal is capped at around 25 percent of Republican voters. The rest of the party simply does not trust him to be a true conservative, rather than a moderate or a compromiser or even a pragmatist. Romney’s Mormon faith does not help with those who seek a “trusted Christian” in office.

Ron Paul is the most authentic candidate and he has the most loyal following among young voters. He is also consistently the most interesting, if misguided, presidential hopeful to hear. Paul will stay in the race, but he is a fringe candidate. He has potential as a gadfly and a spoiler; not a nominee.

This analysis means that the battle for the Republican presidential nomination will continue…probably until the party convention in late August 2012. The Democrats obviously know their nominee, but the Republicans will not have one all summer. They are likely to enter their convention deadlocked, divided, and very disoriented.

Although party conventions without a clear nominee have not occurred in recent memory, they have a long history. Before the Second World War they were, in fact, the norm. Party nominees emerged from long summer days of debate, longer nights of horse-trading, and smoke-filled rooms of hard-nosed deliberation. The party elders, not the rank-and-file, made the final choices. The outcomes were unpredictable. Most of all, new names came forward as the obvious candidates could not gain enough support.

Expect the same from the Republican nomination process this year. There is a good chance that none of the four remaining party candidates will be the final nominee. Someone else will emerge during the coming months. In desperation, the Republican Party will look to draft prominent figures with broad appeal who have stayed on the sidelines. Yes, we will hear a lot more about Chris Christie of New Jersey, Mitch Daniels of Indiana, Michael Bloomberg of New York, and even…former Florida governor, Jeb Bush.

Fasten your seat belts. This wild election season has only just begun.

 

This blog post originally appeared at  http://globalbrief.ca

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Jeremi Suri is the Mack Brown Distinguished Professor for Global Leadership, History, and Public Policy at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author of five books on contemporary politics and foreign policy. In September 2011 he will publish a new book on the past and future of nation-building: Liberty's Surest Guardian: American Nation-Building from the Founders to Obama. Professor Suri's research and teaching have received numerous prizes. In 2007 Smithsonian Magazine named him one of America's "Top Young Innovators" in the Arts and Sciences. His writings appear widely in blogs and print media. Professor Suri is also a frequent public lecturer and guest on radio and television programs.

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