July 22, 2014      3:41 PM
Bearse: Rethinking Rick Perry
From the right: The maturing of Perry as national personality is more than just repackaging
I am loathe to make predictions about politics – especially about
elections more than two years away. Ask me who the Republican nominee for
president will be, and I will say, “ask me in August,
2016.” Ask me who the Democratic nominee will be, and it is tempting to go with
the presumptive favorite Hillary Clinton,
but in this case I will take the field. She’s like California Chrome before the Belmont, only there has been no Kentucky
Derby or Preakness where she enters the race on a winning streak.
I
think Democrats will figure out their nomination is worth fighting for, not a
coronation because “it’s my turn.” Look how well that message worked for Senator Hutchison’s gubernatorial bid
in 2010.
I
don’t know what my old boss, Rick Perry,
will do. I don’t know if he will run, or ride off into the sunset. But if he
runs, we may very well look back on this period as his “training montage,” like
in the movie “Rocky.” Rocky hit the gym, Perry hit the books, and they both
began the transformation from street fighter to contender.
First,
you have to look at the political backdrop. We have a president who won’t even
acknowledge that the crisis at the border is worthy of a visit. Imagine if President George W Bush did a fundraiser
in Shreveport and didn’t adjust his schedule to see New Orleans right after Katrina had hit. This is the group that
likes government solutions. Why can’t they come up with any?
The rest of the column by former Perry speechwriter Eric Bearse can be found in today's R&D Department.
By Eric Bearse
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