Stunning New Footage Again Indicts the UN's Partnership With Hamas
Trump Blasts Biden's Latest China Play
DOJ Busted for Illegally Retaliating Against Whistleblowers
How Is Afghanistan Doing Post-U.S. Withdrawal? Well...
Pro-Hamas Protesters Reach Deal With Harvard
Hillary Clinton's Assessment of Pro-Hamas Protesters Did Not Sit Well With Fellow Dem
KJP Confronted About Biden Raising Tariffs on Chinese Imports
Peaceful Pro-Lifers Sentenced to Years in Prison Thanks to Biden DOJ
Here's Why Eric Adams Wants to Hire Illegal Aliens As Lifeguards
Here’s Why an Illegal Alien in Ohio Was Sentenced to Prison
Report: How a 'Pro-Israel' Democratic Congressman Cowered Before the Pro-Hamas Mob
Senate Democrat Changes His Tune on the ‘Laken Riley Act’
KJP Says Violent Crime Is Historically Low Thanks to Biden... Are They Sure...
Another State Just Banned Biological Men From Women's Spaces
Why Fresh NYT Polling of Six Battleground States Is Nightmare Fuel for Democrats
Tipsheet

"What's Your Plan?"

Several likely 2012 GOP presidential hopefuls have been conspicuously reluctant to adopt a concrete stance on Rep. Paul Ryan's 'Path to Prosperity' budget blueprint -- though others have been more
Advertisement
explicitly enthusiastic.  By contrast, the president's position on the Ryan budget has been completely unambiguous:  He strongly opposes it and views its (necessarily) bold agenda as an irresistible opportunity to deceive, demagogue, and divide for electoral gain.

As the arduous slog toward the Republican nomination begins in earnest next week with a nationally-televised debate, the College Republicans' national arm is hitting Iowa's airwaves with a new ad.  After poking some fun at President Obama's cringe-inducing "Winning the Future" slogan, the spot implores Iowans to challenge the Republican field of candidates to outline their own specific plans to alleviate the crushing debt crisis:





Even if you find the delivery a little cheesy, the ad's two underlying messages are on target.  (1) If Republicans want to unseat President Obama -- which, despite his poor polling, could be an uphill climb -- they'll need to advance a coherent program of credible alternatives to Obama's policies.  Harsh condemnations of Obama's horrific budget and faint, reticent applause for the House-passed offering won't suffice.  "I'm Not Obama" is a platform that will attract millions of votes, but likely won't be enough to win. (2) The urgency of defusing the debt bomb should be felt most acutely by younger voters, who won't become eligible for the social safety net's protections until long after they've been consumed and eviscerated by current policy and demographic trends:

Advertisement



UPDATE
: A brand new Gallup poll shows Obama's approval rating at 43 percent.  His strongest demographic in the survey is young voters (aged 18-29)...at 48 percent.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement