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Rick Perry All In on Foreign Policy

Le·gal In·sur·rec·tion:

Texas Democrats weren’t happy when Governor Rick Perry headed overseas in spite of the first diagnosed cases of Ebola in the U.S. appearing in Texas.

While this might have served as a valuable distraction from Wendy Davis’s falling poll numbers, Perry’s decision to maintain his international schedule is shaping up to put him ahead of the growing pack of candidates expected to seek the Republican presidential nomination.

Even David Frum at The Atlantic has been forced to admit that Perry is building momentum both for his own campaign, and for America’s foundering international reputation. In his article, Frum compares Perry’s speeches overseas with those given during Obama’s now-infamous “apology tour”—and emphasizes the crucial difference between the two statesmen:

Like Obama, Perry acknowledged faults and flaws in American democracy and European history. But he seemed to have Obama’s ‘fault on both sides’ argument very much in mind when he countered with these words: “The shortcomings of Western democracies, the systematic savagery of the enemy—to a certain way of thinking, it all gets mixed up as one: ‘They’ve got bad guys over there, we’ve got a few of our own—what’s the difference?’”

Perry’s London speech focused on the threat from ISIS and the Middle East. In Warsaw, he would have spoken about another—nearer—challenge: from Vladimir Putin and a revanchist Russia. In his prepared, undelivered remarks, Perry paid due tribute to the fact that it is the president, not governors—not even Texas governors—who make America’s foreign policy.

The list of Republican candidates for 2016 is long. Still, a Texas governor always belongs near the top of that list given the state’s lode of electoral votes and deep-pocketed donors.

You should really read the entire article; it’s extraordinarily gracious considering Perry’s history on the national stage.

Conventional knowledge tells us that foreign policy is traditionally not the platform plank that gets voters to the polls; but that’s not to say that Perry can’t use the current crisis to his advantage.

Rick Perry recently called for a controversial travel ban from west Africa; while some politicians have focusedon attacking the Obama Administration for mishandling the crisis, however, Perry’s travels have allowed him to discuss the issue outside of the domestic policy echo chamber.

This is an important distinction, and one that Perry needs to exploit if he wants to force America to forget his disastrous 2012 presidential run.

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