The Rick Perry boomlet is coming

Loading

Noah Rothman:

The race for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016 is well underway. In the press, establishment-friendly candidates like Jeb Bush, Mitt Romney, Marco Rubio, and even Chris Christie have garnered the most attention. Among conservatives, first-time candidates like Bobby Jindal, Scott Walker, and Rand Paul generate the most enthusiasm. In the frenzy, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry seems all but forgotten.

On paper, this makes little sense. Perry served three terms as governor of the nation’s second largest state, which also happens to be the geographic heart of the conservative movement. Both on the stump and in more intimate settings, Perry regularly wows crowds of Republican primary voters. “Rick Perry followed with a powerful and energetic speech that fired up the crowd once again,” read Ed’s impression of Perry’s speech to Iowa Freedom Summit attendees this weekend. “He hammered Obama on immigration, and then shouted down protesters by promising them more of the fight for the next two years.”

If Perry has been written off in the media and even among many conservatives, that is entirely due to his lackluster showing in the 2012 debates when his mind was dulled by the painkillers he took while recovering from back surgery. But the Texas governor has been rebranding himself a serious policy candidate in the years that have passed since he briefly spiked in polls nearly four years ago. Last week, The Washington Post noted how the former Lone Star State governor has been boning up on issues relating to both economic and foreign policy. What’s more, it seems as though he has become more effective at articulating his positions in a compelling fashion.

Perry is still best positioned of nearly every prospective 2016 candidate to brand himself as strong on the issue that is foremost on the minds of most voters: Jobs and the economic recovery. The Texas economy is the envy of every state in the Union. What’s more, the issue of immigration has taken on new importance for Republican primary voters in the wake of a border crisis in 2014 and continued efforts by both Republicans and Democrats to reform the nation’s immigration system. Perry has served on the frontlines of the fight against illegal immigration for over a decade.

Even in spite of his qualifications, Perry is still running a nascent campaign that has largely escaped the notice of much of the conservative universe. That might soon change. As Newt Gingrich knows quite well, there is no better vehicle for ingratiating yourself to the conservative electorate than to impeach the political press for biased, unfair, or misleading coverage. Perry will soon have an opportunity to do just that.

Writing in Esquire, Charles Pierce would really like you to remember that Rick Perry is the only Republican presidential candidate to be indicted by a local Texas district attorney. The word “indicted” in Pierce’s profile of the former governor appeared in both his headline and twice in his first paragraph – though the words “Rick Perry” were absent from that lede.

Pierce also apparently seeks to popularize a new pejorative applied to Perry and his like: “Tenther.” He borrowed this term from The Center for American Progress. It is designed to lump those who believe in the authority of the 10th Amendment to the Constitution, which provides the states with significant agency over their own affairs, with conspiracy theorists of a variety equal to those who believe the United States government was responsible for the 9/11 attacks (ironically, a belief once held by Center for American Progress Senior Fellow Van Jones).

Read more

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
2 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

I’ve been waiting patiently.

@Aqua: I certainly think Perry should enter the race and will be a real contender. I haven’t decided who I’m for at the moment. It won’t be for anyone that is not eligible. Such as Jindal, Cruz, Rubio all not natural born citizens.