The Deplorable 'Empathy' of Hillary Clinton
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 305: 'Fear Not' – Scripture From the Torah...
The Gift That Keeps on Giving
Christian Zionism Under Fire: Analyzing the Jerusalem Patriarchs’ Controversial Statement...
Biden Tried to Kill Costco-Style Discounts. Trump Is Stopping It.
When Groundhog Day Becomes Controversial
Grid Monitor Warns of Blackouts That Utilities Can Still Prevent
Trans Treatment and Trouble With the Truth
Trump Warns Rioters: Federal Property Will Be Defended 'Very Forcefully'
Former Indiana Doctor To Pay Nearly $1.7 Million in Medicaid Fraud Settlement
DOJ Sues To Block Alleged Race-Based Admissions at UCLA’s Geffen School of Medicine
Judge Orders Release of Viral Father and Son Duo Held by DHS
Chaos in LA: Rioters Vandalize Federal Building, Hurl Objects at Police
Georgia Lawmaker Allegedly Took $13K in COVID Unemployement Benefits While Working Up to...
Judge Won't Block Minnesota Immigration Blitz
Tipsheet

Undeclared: GOP Presidential Hopefuls Keep Powder Dry

Politico's Jonathan Martin and Ben Smith have a piece up addressing a question that some political observers have been pondering in recent weeks: Why haven't any Republicans formally announced an intention to challenge President Obama in the 2012 presidential election?  The ever-expanding list of potential candidates isn't exactly top secret. Names like Romney, Palin, Pawlenty, Barbour, Gingrich, Daniels, Thune, Huckabee, Santorum, and Bolton have been already been the source of speculation, yet not a single one has officially tossed his (or her) hat into the ring.  Why?  Martin and Smith lay out three explanations, but I think one far supersedes the others:
Advertisement
Some Republicans actually believe the biennial clich? that the present [midterm] election is the most important of their lifetime — and that the future of the republic depends on a new GOP majority that can rein in President Obama. So a White House hopeful seen as doing anything but advancing the cause would invite opprobrium.
I think this has it exactly right.  Most Republicans believe that stopping the Obama administration and Democrat-dominated Congress from advancing any more of its reckless, Left-wing agenda is the most important task facing the nation, by far.  Accomplishing this objective requires a focused, all-hands-on-deck approach from a broad center-right coalition.  If any individual decided to suck up political oxygen by unnecessarily creating the huge distraction of a presidential announcement, it would be considered an unforgivable act of selfishness that would more than offset any perceived benefit of announcing first.
Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement