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Perry vs. Romney? What Do Conservatives Really Want?

According to the left-leaning media and punditry, the race for the Republican nomination for president is dominated by right wing extremism. Positions as frightening as phasing out Medicare and getting rid of the Department of Education are being bandied about, with the only solace for liberals being the knowledge that those positions will moderate once the primaries are over and the Republican candidate tries to appeal to voters beyond the Republican base.

Supposedly, Rick Perry and Mitt Romney represent this “hard shift to the right” within the Republican Party, which is why they are in first and second place, respectively, in national polls. However, given the histories of these two men and their present stand on the issues, that narrative just doesn’t jibe with reality. In fact, if average conservative Americans really believe what they say they believe, it is difficult to figure out how any of them could cast a vote for Perry or Romney.

By “average conservative Americans,” I mean those people not in public office and unconnected to the political machine who vote in polls this early in the election cycle. Everyone knows these people. We work with them, socialize with them, live with them. Unlike most people we know, they feel strongly about politics and identify themselves as conservatives. They care enough to follow the nomination races over a year before the general election and can articulate an opinion, as opposed to the majority of Americans who will say something like “I haven’t made up my mind yet” to cover for the fact that they have no idea what any of the candidates in either party stand for.

I think that most would agree that this group of people generally say they believe in small government, free enterprise, traditional family and religious values, and (let’s face it) unqualified worship of the U.S. military, no matter how it is employed. These are the things that conservatives say that they are for.

It is not so much what they are for as what they are against that brought the Republican Party back from the brink in 2010. The Tea-powered victory in 2010 rode a wave of conservative backlash against Barack Obama and his socialist agenda of big government healthcare, environmentalism, and wealth redistribution. More than anything else, it was Obamacare that served as the rallying point. Anyone who attended a Tea Party event can attest to the fact that the overwhelming majority of the signs and speeches (when not glorifying the military) represented opposition to this evil, Marxist scheme. If only Obamacare could be repealed, America would return to the capitalist paradise
that it was under George W. Bush.

With that in mind, one has to ask how Mitt Romney is even in the race. After all, it was the Massachusetts healthcare plan supported and signed into law by Governor Romney that inspired Obamacare in the first place. Despite Romney’s insistence that there are “major differences” between the Massachusetts plan and Obama’s, the only tangible difference that he has been able to cite is that his plan was run at the state level and not forced on every American citizen as a “one-size fits all solution.” Other than that, I don’t believe that Romney or anyone else has been able to point out a fundamental difference between Romneycare and Obamacare.

So that’s what all of the noise was about in 2010? The Tea Party rallies, the signs, the angry town hall meetings? I thought that conservatives objected to the fundamental socialist principles embodied in Obamacare: the central economic planning, the government-enforced mandate, and the wealth redistribution. I don’t remember signs saying “let the states run Obamacare.” It was get rid of government-run healthcare (except for Medicare) or we’ll be living in the 1960’s-era Soviet Union before the next election.

“People can change,” some supporters might tell you, and that is certainly true. But has Romney really changed? As of this writing, the issues page on his website says, “States and private markets, not the federal government, hold the key to improving our health care system.”

Not just “private markets,” but “states and private markets” hold the key. It would seem that Romney hasn’t changed his mind at all about his state-run, big government socialist healthcare program. If Romney’s only defense of his plan is that it was run at the state level rather than the national level, then average American conservatives should be automatically vetoing his candidacy on Romneycare alone. Yet Romney led the race until Rick Perry entered, and is still a solid second.

That brings us to Rick Perry. He has also convinced his conservative supporters that he has changed his views since previously being a Democrat. That is certainly not unprecedented. Conservative icon Ronald Reagan was once a Democrat before becoming what most conservatives perceive as the quintessential conservative president. However, Perry wasn’t just a Democrat.

If there is any one person in second place to Obama as the arch-villain in conservative mythology, it is Al Gore, (or Algore as Rush Limbaugh refers to him). Gore is the undisputed leader of the liberal environmentalist movement, which lays the blame for the global warming that conservatives don’t even believe exists at the feet of free enterprise. If Obamacare was the peanut butter of the present administration’s platform in 2008, then Cap and Trade was the jelly. Conservatives wanted no part of either, and see Gore as every bit the evil Marxist that Obama is because of his leadership on this issue.

Believe it or not, it was this Conservative Public Enemy No. 2 that Perry supported as a Democrat in the 1988 primaries. He not only supported Gore, but actually chaired his campaign in Texas. He could have supported the eventual Democratic nominee, Michael Dukakis, whose most striking difference to Gore was his refusal to bow to environmental interests at the expense of economic development, as documented in the New York Times. In other words, even as a Democrat, Perry backed a radical environmentalist extremist instead of a somewhat more moderate centrist.

Again, people can change their minds, but has Perry changed his? Does he oppose Cap and Trade on principle, as most conservatives say they do? Apparently he does not, according to his actions as governor. As with Romney on healthcare, Perry is completely supportive of a policy that conservatives say they are fundamentally opposed to, as long as the evil is perpetrated by the state governments rather than the feds. The chief difference between the Cap and Trade imposed on Texans and that imposed by the federal government seems to be that Texas measures emissions limits on the whole facility while the EPA measures it on every smokestack. Is that the sole objection that average conservatives have to Al Gore and his global warming (excuse me, climate change) agenda?

As with Romney, Perry’s support for a key plank in the socialist-liberal agenda should be a deal killer for anyone remotely describing themselves as conservative. Yet not only has Perry been able to sidestep any criticism on this position, he’s currently leading the nomination race by a comfortable margin.

So, what do conservatives really want? If these polls are any indication, they want a good-looking former governor with a suspiciously liberal background who is good at spouting hardcore conservative rhetoric and then doing exactly the opposite once he gets into office. In other words, they want Ronald Reagan, the former New Deal Democrat who suddenly became a libertarian-leaning ultra-conservative and rode that rhetoric into the White House, where he promptly doubled the size and power of the federal government, raising taxes six times and further empowering the Department of Education that he promised to abolish.

It’s not as if there are not alternatives. Ron Paul, currently running third, actually believes in the principles conservatives say they hold dear and has voted consistently according to them as a 12-term Congressman. He is on the record vowing to get rid of the Department of Education, along with Energy, Commerce, and most of the others. You won’t hear anything like that from Romney or Perry, yet it’s an uphill battle for Paul, supposedly because of his foreign policy positions.

But what about Herman Cain and Gary Johnson? As a libertarian, I don’t buy into the “government should be run like a business” philosophy, but most conservatives do. Both Cain and Johnson take this approach, with Johnson promising to deliver a balanced budget proposal in his first year, including abolishing the Department of Education. Yet these two candidates aren’t even on the map with conservative voters.

With several nationally-televised debates completed and plenty more coming, conservative voters have plenty of alternatives in selecting a candidate. According to their most fiercely-held beliefs, conservatives should be voting "anybody but Perry or Romney," yet those two lead the race. One has to wonder where all of these supposed "right wing extremists" are hiding.

Contrary to the liberal media narrative that the Republican Party has shifted hard to the right and is fielding “extremist” candidates to run against Obama, the primary race looks more like business as usual. Former liberals and big government conservatives are railing against government to energize their conservative supporters, while at the same time openly supporting cornerstones of the liberal agenda. If Perry and Romney are an indication of where conservative voters are headed in 2012, then the Democrats have nothing to worry about, even if Obama loses.

Tom Mullen is the author of A Return to Common Sense: Reawakening Liberty in the Inhabitants of America.

© Thomas Mullen 2011




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Outdated News Opinion Article

This is an outdated news or opinion article. Rick Perry has fallen to less than half his support and Herman Cain is now rising the polls. Well, Herman Cain is beginning to slide in the GOP preference polls as well. So, if in the next two weeks the Cain train falls off the tracks then what about Newt Gingrich? Is it his turn to be the flavor of the week/month? If this scenario holds then Newt Gingrich star will rise and fall by the end of November/early December and Cain will be polling with Rick Perry around Nov. 15th. Then will it be Rick Santorum turn to rise and fall in the polls just in time for the Iowa Causes? I doubt this scenario because I think Dr. Paul needs to pick off another 5-7% of support from Michelle Bachmann, Rick Perry, and Herman Cain to win in Iowa and elsewhere.

2012

Romney/Obama 2012 lol

donvino

they simply want their "team" (i.e. tribe) to "win"

Principles, ethics, & morals are for "wimps".
Such is the perspective of pure evil.

I don't know what they want

I don't know what they want but I know what most of them need: a head examination.

According to Numbers 5:11, abortions are supposed to be performed by priests, not doctors.
אני מקלל אותך עברית כי אתה לא שווה את המאמץ לקלל באנגלית

"conservative republicans" yeah, right.

today a "conservative republican" told me he would never vote for ron paul because "ron paul will abolish FEMA". i just laughed and told him that he was no different from a liberal democrat in that he is unwilling to part with any government programs. he had no reply. i have no idea what is their definition of "conservative" is these days. i thought it meant small limited government. i guess i was wrong.

nr

What exactly does FEMA do

What exactly does FEMA do again, aside from pissing off National Guard and local emergency responders?

According to Numbers 5:11, abortions are supposed to be performed by priests, not doctors.
אני מקלל אותך עברית כי אתה לא שווה את המאמץ לקלל באנגלית

sits around all year

waiting for a catastrophe and then when one happens the Army Corp of Engineers and private contractors do most of the actual work. I worked two hurricanes as contractor to FEMA. They hire the Army Corp who hires private companies and then most of the day to day problems the Corp tackles. But people say well FEMA works to prepare for such events, but one thing I learned about catasrophes is that you can't prepare. It simply takes lots of on the ground hard work from people like the Army Corp, volunteers, churches, and private contractors to get in there and clean things up. And FEMA employees are hard to find out there in the field.

jferrier

Conservatives want a liberal Republican

What do Conservatives want? I would think the question should be what is the definition of conservative? Clearly we have not had a conservative Republican president in generations. Not Ronald Reagan, who massively increased the national debt, not Richard Nixon who instituted wage and price controls, not the Bushes with the foreign wars and entitlement spending. None of these Republican presidents were conservative, they did little to reduce the power of the Federal Government, reduce national debt, cut entitlement spending or limit federal regulations. The only true conservative running is Ron Paul.

Ronald Reagan was a communist

Ronald Reagan was a communist punk.

According to Numbers 5:11, abortions are supposed to be performed by priests, not doctors.
אני מקלל אותך עברית כי אתה לא שווה את המאמץ לקלל באנגלית

We need to pick up the fight

We have been doing very well educating people and that is very important, probably the most important thing. We need to remember though that politics is war. We need to bring down the other candidates. We should start with Rick Perry. I usually hate this kind of politics but Rick Perry is our enemy. We should go to all the news outlets and articles on the web and comment, assimilating Rick Perry to a Racist. Everywhere you have a chance to write, "Rick Perry is a Racist." Rick Perry has had a "long" history of racism....something like that.

A real poll?

Has one even been done to prove top their tier status? Not straw polls but honest polls that weren't faked in any way.

Romney the Scumbag

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, is not supposed to endorse a presidential candidate, because he sits on the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, but he is out partying and attending fundraisers with former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney. JP Morgan the larges scumbag bank in the world. Jamie Dimon who received billions from the Federal Reserve. JP Morgan the hit bank for the Fed. JP Morgan who has so many silver shorts backed up by noting, it is not even funny. JP Morgan who drives down the price of silver and gold for the crooked Fed. Romney is three times more crooked than Obama. Yes I know that is hard to believe, but believe it.

you are right, and chairman cain is even worse.

anybody who says ron paul supports are "stupid" for wanting a complete and independent audit of the fed is a devil. chairman cain's popularity is on the increase. that's probably the most scary thing that is happening now.

nr

Yes be scared of Cain

Perry was too stupid and did self destruct as expected, however Cain is much more clever. He is well spoken and he can lead people (in the wrong direction). He is the elite's new puppet as Perry is done and Romney was never going to last.

Be very afraid of Cain. He has the media's backing (owned by the elite), he is a dangerous insider presented as an "outsider", non-establishment candidate. He has all the money and all the power in the world as the insider's puppet. He is not going away.

Thanks

Good article thanks for the post.

"Don't lose your grip on the dreams of the past you must fight just to keep them alive"

The Republicans are

The Republicans are controlled by "right wing extremism"? I don't use terms like "left" and "right" anymore because nobody can seem to agree on what they mean. Calling the Nazis "right wingers" obviously doesn't sit well with Conservatives. The Nazis and the Communists are much closer to advocates of big government, regulatory agencies. government secrecy, torture, destruction of our personal freedoms, a worthless fiat currency, undeclared wars based on lies, and and Executive that is out of control. So where does that leave people like me who want a return to Constitutional government?

Neither Romney nor Perry are going to give us Constitutional government. Should either of them get elected, nothing will change. The bailouts will continue, inflation will continue, the wars will continue, the destruction of the economy will continue, the destruction of our personal freedoms will continue. So, why are they being described as "right wing extremists"?

There are really only two candidates: Obama and his Republican counterparts on one side, and Ron Paul on the other. Make your choice.

Great article and some very

Great article and some very good points. I find it very frustrating and sad that Ron Paul for decades has been fighting a battle (virtually by himself) against the Fed, the growth of government, etc. and now all the other candidates are saying the same things as him (take on the Fed, eliminate the Department of Education, etc) and people believe them even though these same guys greatly expanded government while they were in power.

Btw, I love how the Department of Education is such a sacred cow, even though it was only created in 1979 (and we all know our education system is so much better now than it was then) and its creation was opposed by the American Federation of Teachers at the time.