Mitt's
Dilemma
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: The
Fire This Time
Last week's
Republican debate at Ames, Iowa, and the straw poll Saturday did
more than sort out the Republican field for 2012.
They have given
the nation a good close look at a Republican Party that no longer
resembles the Bush-McCain model.
Consider. Michele
Bachmann and Ron Paul, who garnered nearly 60 percent of the votes
cast, were both among the two dozen House members who voted against
the final bipartisan deal to raise the debt ceiling. Neither blanched
at shutting down the U.S. government.
At the debate,
every Republican onstage raised his or her hand when asked whether
he or she would reject a budget deal in which $10 in spending cuts
were offered for every dollar in higher taxes.
This is a party
whose feet are set in concrete. The United States government will
be downsized and tax rates will rise only over its cold dead body.
This is Reaganism on steroids.
Bachmann's
victory was stunning.
Every other
candidate had been in Iowa organizing before she ever got into the
race seven weeks ago. Yet she emerged with nearly 5,000 votes, the
largest total ever amassed in an Iowa straw poll, with the single
exception of George W. Bush's tsunami in 1999.
While virtually
every candidate shares Bachmann's social and economic conservatism,
none matches her fire and passion. She both humiliated and eliminated
Tim Pawlenty, a fellow Minnesotan who had been her governor when
she was a state legislator.
She is now
not only the favorite in the Iowa caucuses but also one of three
front-tier candidates for the nomination.
Ron Paul, however,
who ran only 150 votes behind Bachmann and doubled the vote of Pawlenty,
has not received the attention or credit his tremendous showing
deserves.
Four years
ago, Paul, a libertarian legend, was winning every telephone poll
taken after a GOP debate but failing to win, place or show in the
primaries. He seemed to be campaigning simply to make his case,
realizing that he had no chance of being nominated.
His
views on foreign policy were regarded as aberrational by fellow
candidates, such as Rudy Giuliani, when they were not being ignored.
In last week's
debate, Paul denounced U.S. intervention in wars that are none of
America's business, called for closing U.S. bases abroad and bringing
our troops home, and squared off against former Sen. Rick Santorum
on whether Iran represents a threat.
Santorum and
Pawlenty supported confrontation with Iran. Yet both together did
not come close to matching Paul's vote tally.
The warfare
state is now on the chopping block, thanks to the principled relentlessness
of Ron Paul. And the GOP may soon become a house divided, for the
anti-interventionists – after Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya – are
stronger than they were in 1999, when the GOP House opposed Clinton's
war on Serbia.
The entry into
the race of Gov. Rick Perry of Texas, the only mega-state that is
reliably Republican in presidential elections, has produced another
front-tier candidate and complicated the strategic plans of Mitt
Romney.
Had Perry not
gotten in, Romney might have held to his decision not to make a
huge investment in Iowa, let Bachmann or Paul win the state, and
then dispatch them in New Hampshire and go on to rout them in a
50-state battle, for which he is better-resourced than any other
candidate. Today he faces a new situation.
With Perry
going into Iowa, the caucuses, from Christmas on, will rivet the
nation's attention. If Romney is not there, he will be ignored for
that month. And should Perry win Iowa, he would storm into New Hampshire
and conceivably overwhelm Romney in his fortress state.
If he did,
it would be all over for Mitt. For no GOP candidate ever has lost
both the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary and won the
nomination.
Should Bachmann
prove to be a giant killer and defeat Perry in Iowa, she would be
a formidable rival to Mitt in New Hampshire and a favorite to beat
him in South Carolina.
There are two
questions Mitt should be asking himself:
"Can I afford
to cede Iowa to a tea party-values candidate like Perry or Bachmann
and wait for them in New Hampshire? Can I take five months of pounding
for 'writing off Iowa' and refusing to get out of my backyard and
do battle in Middle America?"
Yet
the entry of Perry and straw poll are not all bad news for Mitt.
Pawlenty, who appealed to the same Republicans, is gone. And still
in Iowa are Bachmann, Paul, Santorum and Perry, all of whom will
be competing for the same social conservative-tea party base.
Which leaves
a huge opening for Mitt.
Does he head
for Iowa, confront Bachmann and Perry, and win, in which case he
is the nominee? Or does he wait for Bachmann or Perry to come into
New Hampshire on the momentum of an Iowa victory and try to stop
them there?
Upon Mitt's
decision may hang his five-year investment in winning the office
his father failed to win.
August
16, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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