Redstate...
Rick
Perry Insensitive to Barack
Obama’s Feelings!
Yeah, it was a trap.
Posted by Moe Lane
Thursday,
August 18th
Governor
and new Presidential
candidate Rick Perry (R, TX), on his priority levels:
…if
I hurt the president’s feelings,
well, with all due respect, I love my country and I love future
generations
more than I care about his feelings.
To
give the context: the White House
has been taking the opportunity offered by Perry’s entrance to the race
to take
slaps at the candidate. As
Glenn
Reynolds noted at the time, this was not a particularly smart strategy…
which
is something that I’ve come to agree with, and I’ll tell you why.
The
President jumped the gun in
elevating an opponent. This
is almost
forgivable and certainly understandable – the Democrats have been
almost
besides themselves trying to find somebody, anybody on the Republican
side to
‘promote’ to the position of head
demon
– but in typical fashion the Left stepped on a metaphorical rake while
trying
to do it with Governor Perry. I
refer,
of course, to their epic own-goal with the ‘black cloud’ oopsie… and
you can
tell that it was an oopsie because it got Jon Stewart to yell at the
Democrats*. That’s
a fairly reliable
indicator that the Left has gone too far.
It
gives Perry access to more
microphones. The
typical rule for this
game is Never punch down: like most rules it isn’t actually physical
law, but
it is a good rule of thumb. Because
President Obama so quickly elevated Gov. Perry to a level where he was
worth
the personal attention of what is still the single most powerful man in
the
world, it naturally follows that what Perry says in response would also
be
news. And it turns
out that what Perry
says in response has nothing to do with personal spats and everything
to do
with job creation, which is a topic that Barack Obama would come off
second to…
every Republican candidate in the race, actually.
Not to mention, Bozo the Clown.
The
President is not actually good at
these kinds of fights. Obama
thinks that
he is, because he defeated Hillary Clinton in the primaries and John
McCain in
the general election. The
only problem
is, in the primaries Obama (more accurately, his staff) ‘won’ by
manipulating
every loophole in the Democratic primary system, stampeding
super-delegates,
and taking proxy slaps at an opponent who felt constrained in her
response,
thanks to somewhat insidious gender stereotypes.
As for the general… God love John McCain, but
he’s old, and he didn’t want to fight, and he really didn’t want to
fight the
black guy, and then the economy melted down, and Sarah Palin could only
do so
much. I don’t think
that either McCain’s
or Clinton’s response is going to be emulated by Rick Perry.
Does
this mean that the nomination
battle on the GOP’s side is over?
Don’t
be absurd. There
are still three viable
candidates, not one: Bachmann, Perry, & Romney.
Any 0ne of the three has an easily-traced
victory route to next year’s convention, and it is far too soon to
crown any
one of them. But
what should be done now
by all the candidates is to take careful note of the best way to handle
things
when the White House’s electoral flailing about happens to intersect a
particular campaign: keep calm, present a cheerful, slightly
contemptuous face
to the Democrats’ hysteria, and use the opportunity presented by the
extra
microphones to repeat the campaign’s main theme.
Which
right now definitely should be
‘jobs,’ by the way. The President’s currently doing horribly on that
front, and
people are noticing it.
Moe
Lane (crosspost)
*I’d
just like to clear up one thing
about that ‘tar baby’ thing, though: if Jon Stewart really does think
that it
was an unconscionable term to use, he should really bring it up with
Massachusetts Democratic Senator John Kerry, who used the term himself
in 2008.
Read
it with links at Redstate
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