Showing posts with label Rick Perry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rick Perry. Show all posts

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Religion enters GOP race; Cain gains traction

GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney, speaks at the Values Voter Summit in Washington, DC

Herman Cain is getting plenty of attention less than three months before the first votes are cast in the fight for the Republican presidential nomination.

In the process, the ex-pizza magnate has highlighted the vulnerabilities of Rick Perry and Mitt Romney, who this weekend were dragged into a public debate over Romney's Mormon faith at an annual gathering of social conservatives here.

The Romney-Perry contretemps came after the Rev. Robert Jeffress, pastor of a large Baptist church in Dallas, endorsed and introduced Perry, then later told reporters that evangelicals believed the Mormon faith - which Romney and fellow GOP candidate Jon Huntsman practice - was a "cult." Jeffress further predicted that if nominated by the Republicans, Romney could not beat President Barack Obama, because evangelicals would not support the former Massachusetts governor.

Romney was atop a Quinnipiac University poll of Republicans released Wednesday, but Cain had jumped ahead of Perry. Doubts about the Texas governor have increased after mediocre debate performances and because of objections among conservatives to his positions on immigration and his support of mandatory anti-cancer inoculations of children.

All three, along with Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn.; former Rep. Newt Gingrich; former Sen. Rick Santorum; and Rep. Ron Paul spoke to the annual "Values Voters" conference sponsored by the Family Research Council and other conservative groups.

Cain was greeted with enthusiasm. He joked that "Yes We Cain" and proclaimed himself as a fellow social conservative.

"I believe in life from conception, period, no exceptions," he said to sustained applause. "I believe that marriage is between one man and one woman."

The former CEO of Godfather's Pizza said he was the personification of the American Dream - a black man who grew up during Jim Crow but who could not have similarly succeeded in any other country.

"A reporter asked me . . . well, aren't you angry about how America has treated you?" Cain told a crowd of 3,000 at a D.C. hotel. "I said, 'Sir, you don't get it. I have achieved all of my American dreams and them some because of the great nation of the United States of America. What's there to be angry about?"

Cain finished second, to Paul, in a straw ballot conducted during the conference, far outdistancing both Perry, who finished with 8 percent, and Romney, who got just 4 percent. Paul got 37 percent, Cain 23, and Santorum 17.

Asked what it meant to Perry and Romney, who have alternatively led in national polls among Republicans in general, Family Research Council Chairman Tony Perkins said that "there is still work to do" to attract social conservatives.

But Jeffress's controversial endorsement competed with that headline. He told reporters that he believed Romney was a strong family man, but not a Christian, and therefore would have trouble with evangelical voters. Evangelicals vote heavily in states among the first where ballots for the Republican nomination are cast, including Iowa, South Carolina and Florida.

"There are a lot of Christian voters who don't want to appear bigoted, so what they say to pollsters is not necessarily what they will do in the privacy of the voting booth," Jeffress said. "I frankly agree if Gov. Romney is the nominee Barack Obama will be the new president of the United States."

Romney did not directly refer to the issue when he addressed the group Saturday. But he did praise former Education Secretary Bill Bennett, who referred to Jeffress by name and said: "Do not give voice to bigotry."

Bennett complained that Jeffress "stepped on and obscured the words" of seven Republican presidential candidates who addressed the conference.

"You did Rick Perry no good, sir, in what you had to say," Bennett said.

Perry told reporters campaigning in Iowa after his Friday speech that he did not believe Mormonism was a cult.

Paul, who also received a robust reception, said the Perry-Romney dust-up was a distraction.

"Too much government is the issue of the day, not the definition of a cult," he said after his speech.

In his remarks to the group, Perry tried to draw sharper differences with Romney on abortion.

Touching social conservatives' criticism that Romney only hardened his views against abortion when he began running for president, Perry said: "For some candidates, pro-life is an election-year slogan to follow the prevailing political winds. To me it's about the absolute principle that every human being is entitled to life."

Romney responded by telling the conference that "our values must also encompass the life of an unborn child." He acknowledged that "there are, of course, strong convictions on both sides of the life issue. Yet, it speaks well of our country that almost all Americans recognize that abortion is a problem."

He also said that "the blessings of faith carry the responsibility of civil and respectful debate."

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Sarah Palin won't run for president

Sarah Palin made it official Wednesday: She won't run for president.

In a letter to supporters, the 2008 vice presidential nominee took herself out of the running for the Republican nomination.

Instead, Palin said she can be more effective helping other Republicans win office as governors, members of Congress and president.

It was a shorter, sweeter retreat than New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie's official bowing-out on Tuesday, which came at a lengthy press conference in Trenton.

Taken together, the twin Shermanesque statements pretty much leave Republicans facing what's likely to be the complete GOP field -- dominated by Mitt Romney and a fading Rick Perry, and with pizza magnate Herman Cain rising in the polls.

Most Republicans had not expected Palin to run ever since Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann got into the race and soared to the top in the Iowa straw poll. But Bachmann's stumbles since then opened the door a bit for another female contender with strong conservative credentials.

Palin's path to the nomination would have been complicated by the presence of Perry and so many others, including Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich, destined to split the conservative vote.


The man who picked her as his running mate in 2008, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, said on Twitter that Palin will "continue to play an important role in our party and for our nation."

The announcement, made from her home in Wasilla, Alaska, could mark the end of Palin's meteoric political career. She was an obscure first-term governor in America's 50th state when she became the surprise vice presidential candidate on the eve of the 2008 Republican National Convention.

Her experience as veep nominee was rocky, much as Dan Quayle's was 20 years earlier when he was plucked from relative obscurity by George H.W. Bush on the eve of that year's GOP convention in New Orleans.

After a strong convention speech, she had a tough time dealing with a skeptical media. Her worst moment may have come during an interview with Katie Couric on CBS, when she reiterated that her state's proximity to Russia gave her foreign policy experience.

Here's the former Alaska governor's letter, as obtained by ABC News:

After much prayer and serious consideration, I have decided that I will not be seeking the 2012 GOP nomination for President of the United States. As always, my family comes first and obviously Todd and I put great consideration into family life before making this decision. When we serve, we devote ourselves to God, family and country. My decision maintains this order.

My decision is based upon a review of what common sense Conservatives and Independents have accomplished, especially over the last year. I believe that at this time I can be more effective in a decisive role to help elect other true public servants to office -- from the nation's governors to Congressional seats and the Presidency. We need to continue to actively and aggressively help those who will stop the "fundamental transformation" of our nation and instead seek the restoration of our greatness, our goodness and our constitutional republic based on the rule of law.

From the bottom of my heart I thank those who have supported me and defended my record throughout the years, and encouraged me to run for President. Know that by working together we can bring this country back -- and as I've always said, one doesn't need a title to help do it.

I will continue driving the discussion for freedom and free markets, including in the race for President where our candidates must embrace immediate action toward energy independence through domestic resource developments of conventional energy sources, along with renewables. We must reduce tax burdens and onerous regulations that kill American industry, and our candidates must always push to minimize government to strengthen the economy and allow the private sector to create jobs.

Those will be our priorities so Americans can be confident that a smaller, smarter government that is truly of the people, by the people, and for the people can better serve this most exceptional nation.

In the coming weeks I will help coordinate strategies to assist in replacing the President, re-taking the Senate, and maintaining the House.

Thank you again for all your support. Let's unite to restore this country!

God bless America.

Sarah Palin