Townhall...
It’s
Going to Be a Wild Ride
By Jackie Gingrich Cushman
October 8, 2011
I’m
a little bit disappointed that
Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey is not running for the Republican
nomination
for president. He was sure to inject another round of excitement into
the
campaign.
After
many in the media concluding
slightly more than a month ago that the race was more than likely going
to go
to either former Governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney or current
Governor of
Texas Rick Perry, this past week’s poll (showing businessman Herman
Cain
surging and Perry falling) has reminded observers that in politics
anything can
and often does happen. The one thing that we can be sure of is that
everything
will change, and then change again.
It’s
been a race full of epiphanies
from the press that have proven not to be true.
The
long, hot, pressing summer
included stories of how former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich (my
father)
would soon quit the race after several consultants left his campaign.
Well,
he’s still in the race (as are a few of the consultants, who are now
working in
Perry’s camp).
When
the stories of Gingrich’s
predicted rapid demise and imminent departure from the race were
traveling the
circuit, I kept thinking, “Don’t these people remember that he was the
one who
shut the government down four times to balance the federal budget?” A
man who
can stare down a sitting president of the United States to balance a
budget is
not going to quit because a few people went somewhere else.
Rep.
Michele Bachmann’s campaign had a
great head of steam going into late summer, and she won the straw poll
at Ames,
Iowa. A formidable opponent, charismatic and lively, she looked to be
set in
the top tier for the race.
Her
win at Ames was overshadowed when
Perry entered the race, announcing from South Carolina and missing a
debate in
Ames (the second debate; the first was held in Manchester, N.H.). Perry
quickly
surged to the front of the pack. Gallup released its poll on Aug. 24,
soon
after his announcement, noting, “Texas Gov. Rick Perry has emerged as
rank-and-file Republicans’ current favorite for their party’s 2012
presidential
nomination. Twenty-nine percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning
independents nationwide say they are most likely to support Perry, with
Mitt
Romney next, at 17 percent.”
Perry’s
top ranking has fallen in the
past two weeks, according to a CBS News poll released Tuesday, from 23
percent
to 12 percent. At the same time, Cain has moved to the top with Romney,
both at
17 percent, with Gingrich in fourth at 8 percent. Cain was at 5 percent
two
weeks ago, and Romney was at 16 percent.
My,
how fast polls can change...
Read
the rest of the column at
Townhall
|