Pawlenty Speaks Good Dollars and Sense
Tim Pawlenty just might have the right stuff for 2012. At the very least, the man certainly speaks good dollars and sense. Which at this particular moment is the one thing Americans want most desperately to hear.
I should mention that the erstwhile Minnesota governor speaks without hyperbole, histrionics, political-shyster sophistry, or sophomoric metaphors, which I, personally, find very refreshing. Governor Pawlenty seems to understand that urgent problems require thoughtful solutions presented in grown-up to grown-up fashion, rather than in some silly politician’s idea of Vaudevillian slapstick. All in all, Pawlenty comes across as a serious man for the serious times in which we unhappily find ourselves living.
I doubt we would ever see Tim Pawlenty photographed wearing sissy shorts, sipping a Slurpee in flip-flops and shades. No, if Pawlenty were president, I sense he would work overtime without bearing a petulant grudge against the job for which he applied. I really can’t see this man demanding a vacation every other day.
No, Pawlenty is definitely of serious-worker quality.
And I’ve yet to see a fawning female groupie faint at his feet. A very positive sign.
Pawlenty went to the University of Chicago this week to give a major let’s-fix-this-damned-economy speech. He unveiled the fundamental elements of his plan, which he is calling “A Better Deal.” This is a bit too much FDR-channeling for my taste, but who knows. Perhaps even those mythical “moderates,” who voted for The One, are smart enough to recognize Obama’s “Raw Deal” — at least every time they try to grab an inflated-priced burger and beer and see the bar’s TV catching their little-people’s-savior president yucking it up at Martha’s Vineyard or ping-ponging through Europe on their dime.
Choosing this venue, the University of Chicago — a mere hop, skip and jump from Barack and Michelle’s Hyde Park mansion — was pure poking-a-finger-in-Obama’s-eye symbolism. Smart move.
The speech, I thought, was quite Reanganesque, despite the FDR-symbolism in its title.
Pawlenty seems to have properly updated his Reaganesque message for our time. Reminding Americans of the ridiculously hailed “Recovery Summer” of last year, Pawlenty reeled off the anything-but-recovered, actual economic vital signs:
- Gas is nearly $4 a gallon.
- Home prices are in the gutter.
- Our health care system — thanks to ObamaCare — is more expensive. And less efficient.
- Unemployment’s back over 9%.
- Our national debt has skyrocketed.
- Our budget deficit has grown worse.
- And the jobs and manufacturing reports are grim.
At this point, T-Paw winked at the “what would Reagan do?” crowd and introduced a prescription of his very own:
If that was a recovery — then our president needs to enter economic rehab. And the American people need to stop his policies. Cold turkey.
The addiction to spending must be brought to a halt. And we must have a president who has a growth agenda. With pro-growth policies I will.
The president wrongly thought the stimulus — the bailouts — and the takeovers were the solution. He says they worked. They did not.
The president is satisfied with a second-rate American economy. Produced by his third-rate policies. I’m not.
Straight talk about the dollars. And lots of common sense.
Pawlenty’s straight-talk, Rx approach seems to be modeled on the modern intervention methodology. This is quite apt, I think, for an electorate who, a mere 30 months ago, got completely stoned on hope-dope and delivered the presidency to their pusher.
Now, who could have imagined that 2008’s “stoned on hope-dope” election would produce calamity? Anyone?
Like all good grown-ups should, Pawlenty insists upon a major intervention ASAP. Positive intervention with the hope-dope folks is precisely what he’s offering:
I promised to level with the American people. To look them in the eye. And tell them the truth.
I went to Iowa. And said we need to phase out federal ethanol subsidies. I went to Florida. And said we need to raise the retirement age for the next generation. And means-test cost-of-living adjustments for Social Security. I went to New York City. And told Wall Street that the era of bailouts — carve-outs — and handouts had to end.
I’m willing to tell Americans the hard truth. And I believe Americans are ready to hear it.
But the truth about our economy isn’t hard at all. Markets work. Barack Obama’s central planning doesn’t.
Substance over style. Hard truth over more spell-blinding fairy dust. Seems like a very timely approach to the 2012 election if you ask me.
Pawlenty’s tax-code overhaul sounds like pure American dream. When hard-working, middle-class breadwinners realize what’s in it for them, the national demand for sleeping pills may subside a bit. Three tax rates: 0 — 10% — 25%:
A one-third cut in the bottom rate. To allow younger — middle — and lower-income families to save and build wealth. And a 28% cut in the top rate — to spur investment and job creation.
Pawlenty also came out in favor of the balanced budget by law for the feds, saying we need to put Congress in a “spending straitjacket.” That was my favorite line, by the way, in the entire speech. Message from the people to the government: “Step away from our checkbooks. Now.”
Pawlenty is smart to remind voters every single time he speaks that he has actually spurred a sizable economy – Minnesota’s – for eight full years as a two-term governor. Having presided over the budget of one of the 49 states that require balanced budgets by law is a pretty sterling qualification to have upon one’s resume as America hangs upside down upon the cliff’s edge in waiting-for-the-Greatest-Depression-shoe-to-drop anxiety.
Pawlenty, should he get the Republican nomination, will be faced off with a guy who didn’t even so much as run his own paper route before ascending to the most powerful political position in the universe. If Pawlenty wants to make the comparison on his economic creds, he had better be reminding the voters at every turn that people stoned on hope-dope, who decide to put their pusher in charge of their bread and butter, are just begging for a slow death by starvation.
All in all, I have to say that Pawlenty is definitely in the running for my vote, despite his charisma-challenged presentation. But I’m an older, white, married gal, with a whole lot of home-budgeting, hard lessons under my own belt. The folks Pawlenty must convince were, less than three years ago, candidates for straitjackets themselves.
Will Pawlenty’s intervention model appeal to them now that they are reaping the disastrous consequences of their own folly?
Ah. That is the real question of 2012 — for all of us. Can the hope-dopers give their pusher the shove and leap into health and prosperity, latching the white coattails of a very sober interventionist?
It’s looking very iffy at the moment.
ALSO READ:Mitt Romney to Skip Key Iowa Straw Poll.






In every new speech from Obama he talks about new government spending. I don’t care who the candidate will be. That candidate will win over Obama. The outlook for the economy 2012 is really bad. The Real Estate situation the next 12 months will be a slaughter fest. And Obama is doing nothing what so ever to save himself. He’s gone and he will be remembered as the biggest failure in history. The focus should be on what to do, when he’s gone. That Obama will loose is a given.
JL you are so right. I will vote for anyone but obama. hell carter was a better president and he was abysmal. actualy the worst since woodrow wilson till obama came along,
JL
You are assuming an informed intelligent electorate. Don’t count on it.
T-Paw makes too much sense – the American people may reject him. After all, they voted for Hope & Disaster in ’08. The next President will be the candidate with the best hair (e.g. Perry, Palin, Bachmann).
I think most candidates plans are too weak. They talk about gliding paths to a balanced budget, 10 year plans etc. It’s like ripping of a band aid slowly. There was no gliding path to the unbalanced budget. The democrats created the giant deficit within the 2 years they had majority in both houses.
I sincerely hope you are right, but if the ’08 election proved anything it is that the voting public are fools…we could be stuck with Obozo for another 4 simply because there are too many idiots allowed to vote. Its not the clown prince of fools I am afraid of, rather his followers, who vote based on nothing more than skin color and slick marketing. Add to that the pathetic candidates the republicans are fielding and we have a surefire recipe for disaster, wherein those of us who make good sound choices will be forced to bear the burdens of those who use no logic or common sense.
I wonder if Tim Pawlenty could be our nation’s next Calvin Coolidge? Coolidge was a very underrated president and he was a financial genius when it came to building the American economy. He was president during the “Roaring Twenties” and he actually helped pull America out of a little-known depression in the very early 1920s through massive tax and spending CUTS in Washington. Yup, Pawlenty might be the next “Silent Cal” and we’d better start listening to him. He has experience AND has a good head on his shoulders AND he’s a Repbulican. That’s a hard combination to find these days for a guy who will have to do some serious fighting in Washington.
“Pawlenty is definitely in the running for my vote”
Me too, so far. Key words: “in the running” and “so far”. As in: not a lock.
Here’s the thing abt Pawlenty; he grabs your attention, but he can’t really close the deal. While what he says is clear, he doesn’t yet present as “Presidential”. More like local Chamber of Commerce. And sometimes when he gets angry, it sounds like he’s about to channel Bob Dole (maybe his campaign manager told him to show emotion?) and that’s never a good thing.
I look forward to hearing more from him, and will watch carefully his performance at the NH debates.
Let’s hope whomever we choose this time, is really a choice of substance over style. If so, and Pawlenty makes it through our vetting/bloodletting passage that is called an election cycle, I agree he has a real chance.
Well, he isn’t perfect, but he may have to do until a politician actually admits that social security and medicare need to be entirely (and quickly) phased completely out.
He stays the course, unlike Perry, Romney, and Gulliani, he openly supports the second amendment as written, unlike Perry, Romney, Gulliani, Huntsman and Cain.
But, he has also “flirted” with government mandates and healthcare which puts him closer to Romney and Huntsman (two men who would force me to conclude that even “O” would be the lessor evil).
I won’t rule out supporting him as I’ve ruled out Romney, Gulliani, Huntsman and Christi (if he runs).
My pecking order as of today is: West, Palin, Pawlenty, Cain (insert very long gap here) and Perry. I simply will not support any of the other so called candidates the GOP is considering.
JustAl, since you’ve included some non-runners in your pecking order… Haven’t you forgotten one? PAUL RYAN.
Pawlenty sounds Pawreferable right now.
Instead of excitement I want experience. Instead of polemics I want plans. Instead of spend-n-splurge I want sustainable solutions. Instead of rhetoric I want rubber-meets-road practicality.
So far, Pawlenty exhibits more of what serious adult voters are seeking than any other candidate in the pack. Many miles to go, so we’ll see.
Ms. Shiver: Your essay comes close to obeying Reagan’s 13th Commandment, but I hope you will make the effort to move from judge to encourager — from shopper to supporter. To get rid of Obama in 2012, each of us all the time must encourage Governor Pawlenty and all other candidates with the guts to stand up to the Obama juggernaut. At this point pecking orders are like a starving family throwing away bread because they insist on eating some perfect cake they imagine exists. And don’t think a big part of the Obama strategy isn’t to make us spend our energies shuffling our own pecking order instead of going after the turkey in the White House.
For the moment it seems that Pawlenty exhibits more of what serious adult voters are seeking than any other candidate in the pack, but there is many miles to go, so we’ll see.
Cheers
Mikkel
http://weekendopholdikøbenhavn.dk/
I don’t know a great deal about him, but T-Paw needs a bit more fire in the belly.
Cojones?
At some point as governor, he advanced a cap and trade scheme, which is dangerously on a par with Romney effecting Romneycare in Massachusetts when he was governor.
(But, as Ann Coulter echoed my sentiments on Hannity last night, she would vote for Charlie Sheen over re-electing Obama.)
Speaking of Obamacare (were we?) cheer for and pray for the circuit court in Atlanta
Pawlenty “refudiated” himself on AGW. In ’08, he sent a letter to Congress to say he was wrong to embrace AGW. I respect and accept his recant of AGW.
Pawlenty IS saying the right things these days. He is taking tough positions, which the usual vanilla candidates would avoid. Good on him. He’s looking better to me. Previously, he was a compromise candidate. “Well, we can’t agree on anyone, but Pawlenty is barely acceptable to us all, so we’ll compromise and go with him.”
It seems to me the “T-Paw once said something nice about cap and trade” is a meme the mainstream media can me counted on to repeat endlessly. The MSM is trying to get us to focus on any flaw in any candidate — and we need to laugh in their faces. I do love the Coulter comment, and it could be a useful response for us all to the Obama divide and splinter approach. Yes, I vote for Sheen over Obama, proudly!
I am going to gauge the quality of the leader based on who he intends to surround himself with. Can this country survive another 4 years of an executive branch surrounded by idealogues? (I put Immelt in that category.) Can Pawlenty summon the staff that a Ronald Reagan assembled? Remember Reagan prosecuted over 2,000 S&L execs and I think 1,500 served time. Obama and the mortgage and banking crisis? I had no clue who Obama had on his economic team until one by one they all resigned. We need a storic leader as a president with an eye for hands on, problem solving talent. Pawlenty and Cain would make a great team.
“Cap and Trade Tim”?
Seriously people, you need to take a closer look.
Pawlenty is still an advocate of cap and trade. But he couches his support in nebulous terms so as to make it seem that he is simultaneously for and against cap and trade in the same breath.
Kyle-Anne, unfortunately there are too many times when we are an unserious country, electing unserious candidates, who spend their time on unserious matters…which does us serious damage.
Al Franken and Jesse Ventura also come from Minnesota.
Pete Stark is a complete joke as a human being, but the amount of damage he does is not funny.
We are in a terrible spot. Our information stream is so polluted, we cannot obtain appropriate information upon which to self-govern this land of ours.
We can’t chew on the facts because suffer from a horrific case of truth decay. And the voting patterns now rooted in our system of elections show signs of ethical necrosis. Our own Department of Justice gives off all the appearances of countenancing intimidation and voter fraud.
We have attack dog tactics on candidate’s wives and children.
We not only are bored by the best and the brightest, we are primed to send the least and the vilest. The current guy was so unvetted, we know less about him as our leader than we would know about someone who rented a property from us.
Celebrity is not to be confused with cerebrality. Tim Pawlenty seems to be genuine. (A trait that can be faked for only so long, the plastic smiles melt and inner pervert or tyrant appears from behind the mask eventually).
Tim Pawlenty, Paul Ryan, Eric Cantor, Jim Thune, Mitch Daniels, all seem to lack the “drive for celebrity” factor. None of them would send a tingle up Chris Matthews leg. They are just sound, solid, responsible, adults.
Not a chance our polluted information stream would ever let them lead this land of ours. We just aren’t serious enough about real leadership for that type of candidate.
And that’s how we wind up with an unvetted community organizer, a Swift Boat fraud, a sex poodle, a comedian and a WWF wrestler running for high office…and winning. It’s a major problem. Seriously.
Nice.
Ask the people of MN how they feel about T Paw. He used the old CEO trick of sacrificing long term profits for short term gain on that state. Under funded infrastructure repair/maintenance/inspection to make up for his tax cuts.
Guess what happened? They had a bridge collapse and their roads are desperately in need of maintenance. That doesn’t sound like solid, responsible leadership to mee.
Bridge collapsed? You mean I-35? Isn’t that a FEDERAL highway, thus the federal governments responsibility?
The roads most everywhere are bad, because States are strapped. Bridges are not maintained. Even if they had the political will to fix the bridges, we lack the skilled welders to do all the fixing. We need 50k more welders to do the work.
And no one can afford to fix roads, anyway, because of the unions. Roadwork is too expensive. We use the wrong materials, because of planned obsolescence. We have stupid “prevailing wage” laws.
I think I’ll not hold this too much against Pawlenty. Not a big fan, but still.
I’m glad to see you make a compelling and timely case for Pawlenty. I happen to agree with you and I think we could not do much better.
That said, I think the possible entrance of Rick Perry may make for a very tight nomination race. And, just because I am somewhat taken with the idea of a smart woman President, I think Palin may yet run.**
Either of these men could benefit greatly by adding Palin to their ticket. Romney is gone (or should be), the ubiquitous Gingrich is gone (or should be) and Giuliani may yet enter.
There is a wildcard here that I still wonder about and that is Michele Bachmann. Like Palin, she would be great as an addition to one of the above tickets, or again like Palin could do well heading up her own ticket.
** I have to wonder if she may take a run at Senator Kyl’s seat. A subsequent run for Potus from a successful stay as Senator from AZ could make for a very strong conservative candidacy. Our job would be to see that she is not overly influenced by McNasty.
lukewarm
This article was written while President Bush was still in office, but look at the numbers.
Now with your “Community Organizer” in the WH the country is on the verge of totally ruination.
George Bush has been in office for 7 1/2 years. The first 6 the economy was fine.
A little over one year ago:
1) Consumer confidence stood at a 2 1/2 year high;
2) Regular gasoline sold for $2.19 a gallon;
3) the unemployment rate was 4.5%.
4) the DOW JONES hit a record high–14,000
5) American’s were buying new cars,taking cruises, vacations overseas, living large!…
But American’s wanted ‘CHANGE’! So, in 2006 they voted in a Democratic
Congress and yes–we got ‘CHANGE’ all right. They put Nancy Pelosi and Harry
Reid in charge and in the PAST YEAR:
1) Consumer confidence has plummeted;
2) Gasoline is now over $4 a gallon & climbing!;(yes, I know it’s lower but wait until
after the election)
3)Unemployment is up to 5.5% (a 10% increase);
4) Americans have seen their home equity drop by $12 TRILLION DOLLARS and prices still
dropping;
5) 1% of American homes are in foreclosure.
6) THE DOW is probing another low~~ $2.5 TRILLION DOLLARS HAS
EVAPORATED FROM THEIR STOCKS, BONDS & MUTUAL FUNDS INVESTMENT PORTFOLIOS!
“The marvel of all history is the patience with which men and women submit to burdens unnecessarily laid upon them by their governments.” George Washington
I think it likely that by this time next year the economy will be in freefall, rampant inflation abounding, our urban areas on fire, the middle east a powder keg and Obama in hiding. We will have the luxury of picking the one who would make the best president, not the one who we think necessary to beat Obama as it stands now, those two possible candidates not necessarily synonymous.
We will need someone with great courage to do the tough things to ensure the survival of the republic. By tough, I mean Founding Father tough. As far as conservative principles go, I like Santorum, Cain, Pawlenty and Palin and Perry if they decide to run. For who we will need for our next president I would eliminate the first three, they strike me as good technicians put unable to think outside the box enough. Palin could do it if she surrounded herself with very capable people. Perry, I don’t know enough about yet, but hopefully he could be the one.
pawlenty is not a contender.
What Stinks Worse? Ethanol or Sean Penn?
It’s difficult to say whether ethanol or Sean Penn smells worse. It’s all dependent on your olfactory, political, and occupational sensibilities.
If you’re an American consumer of crude oil, which category would incorporate everyone who drives, consumes produce and manufactured products delivered via road and rail, wards off frigid cold with #2 heating oil in your homes, or labors in a factory/office kept functioning thanks to semi-liquid gold, you may say that ethanol takes the stink prize.
If you cook with corn oil, use masa harina, or just love tortillas, ethanol should beat Sean Penn in the stink run by at least a mile since the brainstorm of conservationists and numbnuts at the EPA which inspired the idea of converting a valuable food staple, corn, into ethyl alcohol biofuel and blending up to 10% of the stuff into gasoline has sent the price of corn into the stratosphere.
And, notice what it’s done for gas prices!
Ostensibly re-introduced, (after Henry Ford gave up on the idea almost a century ago), to curb America’s dependence on foreign oil imports, another government failure, ethanol has evolved into a typical, wasteful boondoggle. It serves to enrich farm states and has made major political capital for pols in those states while helping to impoverish those needing gasoline to survive and those dependent on corn to eat.
A remarkably slow-learner in our un-scientific survey on whether ethanol or Sean Penn stink more, the Hollywood star would be the sure winner among those who appreciate second-rate acting and off-camera demonstrations of total ignorance.
As noted here in an earlier article, “BiofuelsWatch.com has enumerated the numerous negatives associated with ethanol production and use. They include the explosive danger, (it’s more flammable than gasoline), its solvent, drying, and water-absorbent properties which can lead to engine contamination and the disintegration of rubber and plastic, its lower energy value, its irritant and cancer-causing potential, its greater expense, and, primarily, its effect on food production.” (http://bit.ly/kwcHWa)
As an added ironic fillip to the ethanol controversy, in the face of Republican efforts to put an end to federal subsidies promoting increased ethanol production by decreasing food production, the United States Department of Agriculture added a dumb insult to serious injury by announcing a push for more “flex-fuel [ethanol] pumps” at filling stations. (http://bit.ly/m0NtHb)
There’s nothing quite like enhancing the ridiculous with the totally absurd. Maybe Mexicanos and Taco Bell can learn to substitute feather grass for maize.
Sean Penn, who makes Ben Affleck and Charlie Sheen look smart, is notable as an admirer of Cuba’s Castros, hater of George W, Bush, defender of the LGBT, and savior of New Orleans and Haiti,. . .
(Read more at http://www.genelalor.com/blog1/?p=4803)