Though he has not announced he’s running for president, Gov. Scott Walker is accumulating supporters on the right side of the blogosphere.
Dan Balz of the Washington Post is not one of them, but he notes Walker’s strengths:
In the scramble of the 2016 Republican presidential nominating contest, everyman Walker hopes to be the otherman, a candidate with potential appeal to many of the competing constituencies in a fissured party.
Walker is a contradiction, a boring warrior. He will not win the charisma primary, but he has been hardened by his experiences in office. Whatever miscalculations he made that led to the explosion of protests in Madison four years ago, he now wears proudly his subsequent battles with the forces on the left.
He takes every opportunity to remind an audience, as he did last week at the RNC meeting in San Diego, that he has been, as he tells it, the No. 1 target of big unions and big government constituencies — and that he has defeated them repeatedly.
His résumé as a second-term governor gives him establishment credentials. His confrontational reform agenda in Wisconsin and his wars with labor unions and the progressive left have made him a well-loved figure among many in the GOP’s tea party wing. His potential fundraising network, thanks to three campaigns in four years — and especially the 2012 recall election — is among the biggest in the GOP, if he can truly tap it.
The son of a minister, he speaks easily the language of religious conservatives. When he appeared before the RNC meeting, he made repeated references to the power of prayer and the comfort it provided him through difficult campaign tests.
He told a story. When his friend Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) was selected as Romney’s vice presidential running mate in the summer of 2012, Walker advised him that people would soon be telling him they would be praying for him. When they do that, he told Ryan, “you need to reach out and touch them, because you will feel the power of God.”
Walker is well situated geographically, one of a group of Rust Belt governors who have been talked about as GOP candidates. Others are Ohio’s John Kasich, Indiana’s Mike Pence and, sometimes, Michigan’s Rick Snyder. Of the group, Walker is the only one moving aggressively to assemble a campaign operation.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker doesn’t light up rooms when he enters. He is unassuming in that way, a proud cheesehead who wears a battery-powered electric jacket to keep warm at Packers and Badgers football games. He appears a Midwestern everyman, belied only by his burning ambition to be president. …
Ohio is always a battleground, but Democrats have controlled most other big states in the industrial belt. A Republican nominee who could put into play some of those states — Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania and maybe even Illinois — would force a recalculation of the Democrats’ current advantage in electoral college math. That’s not to say that Walker could do so, but it would be a calling card he would dangle in front of Republican primary and caucus voters.
His message is a work in progress, not yet as tight or crisp as he will want it to be. His RNC speech was less animated but almost twice as long as one that Perry delivered Friday afternoon. While well received, Walker’s speech did not produce the kind of applause Perry got.
Walker presents himself as an outsider to the nation’s capital and a fresh face in contrast to those with bigger names and longer time in the national spotlight (but who, like Romney and Bush, have been out of office for years). The outlines of his message include the assertion that Washington needs what Wisconsin has gotten under Walker — a reform conservative agenda.
What he did not do when he appeared before party leaders, as some other candidates will do as they go around the country, was say that he could bring the two parties together in Washington, that he would work across party lines to produce harmony and productivity.
He favors a bold and conservative agenda and leadership by a firm hand. He says that voters who don’t agree with all his views still appreciate that style. His state has been deeply polarized around his governorship, but he has managed to prevail at home in spite of that.
There are many questions about a Walker candidacy that go beyond whether he can break through in a field with bigger names and flashier personalities. Is he too much a stolid Midwesterner, too narrow in his Wisconsin grounding. Would he be able to marshal the necessary forces for a national campaign and to let go some of the strategic micromanagement of his own candidacy? Would he be able to withstand the rough-and-tumble ahead?
Walker has focus and determination. His hope may be that he will be long underestimated — a candidate ready to surprise at the moments it counts most.
Thomas Sowell does seem to be a fan:
Among the Democrats, Hillary Clinton is honing her message to appeal to the mindset of the left wing of her party, whose support she will need in her second attempt to get the nomination as the Democrats’ presidential candidate in 2016.
The left wing’s true believers would of course prefer Senator Elizabeth Warren, who gives them the dogmas of the left pure and straight, uncontaminated by reality. But she says she is not running.
Maybe she thinks the country is not ready to put another rookie senator in the White House. After the multiple disasters of Barack Obama, at home and abroad, that self-indulgence should not be habit-forming.
We can certainly hope that the country has learned that lesson and that Republican rookie senators get eliminated early in the 2016 primaries, so that we can concentrate on people who have had some serious experience running things — and taking responsibility for the consequences — rather than people whose only accomplishments have been in rhetoric and posturing.
The more optimistic among us may hope that the Republicans will nominate somebody who stands for something, rather than the bland leading the bland — the kind of candidates the Republican establishment seems to prefer, even if the voters don’t.
If the Republicans do finally decide to nominate somebody who stands for something, and who has a track record of succeeding in achieving what he set out to do, then no one fills that bill better than Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin, who has put an end to government employee unions’ racket of draining the taxpayers dry with inflated salaries and extravagant pensions.
That Governor Walker succeeded in reining in the unions, in a state long known for its left-leaning and pro-union politics, shows that he knows how to get the job done. It also shows that he has the guts to fight for what he believes and the smarts to articulate his case and win the public over to his side, rather than pandering to whatever the polls show current opinion to be.
It is hard to explain how a country in which conservatives outnumber liberals could have elected a far-left Congress and a far-left president of the United States, without taking into account how rare are Republicans able and willing to develop the skills of articulation.
As a result, everyone knows what the Democrats stand for, but even some Republicans in Congress seem to have only a hazy idea of what principles Republicans stand for.
The country does not need glib or bombastic talkers. But it does need people with clarity of thought and clarity of words, along with a clear sense of purpose and an ability to achieve those purposes.
Republicans with these qualities seem far rarer in Washington than in state governments. Governors such as Scott Walker in Wisconsin and Bobby Jindal in Louisiana can both talk the talk and walk the walk. In Congress, not so much.
If you think back to the most politically successful Republican presidents of the 20th century — Ronald Reagan, Theodore Roosevelt, Calvin Coolidge, and Dwight D. Eisenhower — they were all men who already had the experience of being responsible for results, whether as governors or as a military commander in the case of General Eisenhower.
Those Republican presidents who self-destructed politically — Hoover and Nixon, for example — lacked that kind of background, however much they might have had other assets.
Josh Bernstein is definitely a fan after he picks, and then downplays, 11 other possible GOP choices:
So who is left? Who then can Conservatives get behind for 2016? I think the question Conservatives and Republicans need to ask themselves instead is who is the most electable Conservative candidate who is authentic and closest to purity that can win the nomination and then go on to win the Presidency?
I believe that person is Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin. Governor Walker is a solid conservative. He is an authentic and real reformer who ran on a Conservative reform platform and has practiced what he has preached. He is pro life, pro marriage, and pro gun.
Let’s look at some of his credentials:
Signed into law a voter identification law that requires voters to show a government issued ID card before casting a ballot.
Returned a 37.6 million dollar Federal grant meant to be used to set up health care exchanges in Wisconsin.
He has called on the Wisconsin legislature to repeal Common Core standards in public schools.
However, what he is most famous for (or infamous if you are a leftist union thug) is what he did to collective bargaining rights in Wisconsin. After liberal Governor Jim Doyle left Wisconsin’s economy in a fiscal crises the newly elected Walker immediately put his campaign promises into action to fix the problem. He proposed a 2011 budget repair bill that along with balancing Wisconsin’s budget in the future, also eliminated many of the collective bargaining rights that the unions in Wisconsin used to intimate workers, harass private businesses, and grow their ranks.
As a result of this the unions tried to recall him but their efforts failed. Scott Walker has defeated the left not once, not twice, but three solid times and he did it in the blue state of Wisconsin. He has already proven to be a winner and that is what Republicans need to realize. Do we want to look good and sound tough with red meat rhetoric? Or do we want to finally win an election and defeat the left soundly? Scott Walker already has the infrastructure in place, the ground game in waiting, and could easily build a national presence in all 50 states much sooner than most other candidates. In addition, he will fully motivate and re-energize those 7 million voters who stayed home in 2012.
Although he has not made any formal announcements he is going to be speaking in Iowa at The Iowa Freedom Summit on January 24th. If Republicans and more importantly Conservatives were smart they would get behind Governor Scott Walker immediately.
2016 will be upon us before we know it. The left will be anointing Hillary Clinton probably very soon and they will have a lot of time, money, and resources to spend on her as she prepares for her probable run in 2016.
If Republicans are ever to win another Presidential election again they need to avoid two major mistakes.
The first mistake is hesitation. If we hesitate to get behind a candidate that we know can win than we are allowing the establishment to once again pick our candidate for us. We have seen their track record and it isn’t pretty. The second mistake we can’t afford to make is to show a lack of unity. We can not afford to be divided in who we want to represent the party in 2016. We need to get behind one person and do everything we can to make sure they not only defeat the establishment candidate but more importantly win the nomination and the Presidency.
The truth is folks whether you want to admit it or not we are on the last throngs of our democracy. That is not right wing scare tactics that is the grim reality. Everywhere we turn there are factions working against our freedoms and trying to take our liberties. It is mostly coming from the left but unfortunately more and more we are finding ourselves fighting it from our own ranks as well.
Governor Scott Walker is my choice in 2016 because he is a proven winner. Also, my contacts in Washington tell me that of all the candidates that I have mentioned so far, the one candidate the left fears the most is Scott Walker. That’s good enough for me.
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