Huckabee Right Choice for McCain

Although I have been a longtime supporter of former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, I do not think that he is the right choice for John McCain to choose as his running mate. To compete with the dynamic Barack Obama, John McCain needs to choose someone with charisma that will appeal to working class. He will also need a running mate that can shore up his support in the South and Midwest. Choosing Huckabee instead of Romney will probably eliminate the chances that Obama has in states like Georgia and Virginia. The guitar-playing, populist former minister from Hope, Arkansas has the charisma that McCain needs to showcase. He also appears young and sincere.

Huckabee was a surprise in the primaries, never given much of a shot. Indeed, he was rarely given questions to answer at early debates when McCain, Guiliani and Romney were in the spotlight. Huckabee was given about as much as time as Senator Brownback, Representative Paul and Representative Tancredo. When Fred Thompson entered the race, the media believed that Thompson would cut off a lot of the appeal that Huckabee had early on. The media has often been proved dreadfully wrong in this election. Huckabee performed well in Iowa and in the South. It is my belief that he will do well campaigning out West also, where people share his values. The only pitfall to choosing Huckabee over Romney, Jindal and others seems to be that Huckabee is not the strongest in Michigan. It is my belief, however, that Republicans must do all they can to first shore up support in red states before attempting to take away blue states. The map in the past few elections has favored Republicans.

So, John McCain, my advice to you is to select someone that can hold the base. If you can maintain the Bush ‘04 states you will win. McCain and Huckabee are both great Americans. Indeed, they are both admirable leaders. They are friends and there are few soundbites in the primary where they have argued like McCain and Romney have. Huckabee is young enough to put Americans at ease about McCain’s age. He is also capable enough to be President of the United States.

Published in: on July 6, 2008 at 12:18 pm Comments (2)
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Presidential Rankings: #43 Lyndon Baines Johnson

In this political season I have decided to rank all of the Presidents. Recently I ranked the top ten on Helium. If you are impatient and don’t want to wait the 43 days it will take to get there, here is the link to my top ten. This blog will feature more in-depth articles on these Presidents. Today, however, I am going to focus on the WORST PRESIDENT OF ALL TIME: Lyndon Baines Johnson.

I have chosen Johnson as the worst President ever because I think enough time has passed that we can understand his presidency. On most lists, Nixon would be #43 because of his spying on Democrats during the 1972 election. What historians have come to find out, however, is that this was a practice started by Johnson in 1968. This can be found in No Peace, No Honor by Larry Berman, a noted and credible author. Alongside Johnson’s spying on Republicans in ‘68, I believe his actual entire administration was inept.

Johnson created “The Great Society” in a time when Americans could not afford the entitlements it promised. Although admirable for the 1964 Civil Rights Act, little else has amounted to anything. Johnson was a President that spent a lot of money and expanded military operations in Vietnam. It was his administration that made Vietnam a conflict that American could not exit from with its honor intact. The spending of the Johnson administration plagued the nation later as the dollar’s value became inconsistent because of the heavy debts accumulated throughout the Vietnam war.

Johnson also was a man who could not take criticism and frankly was overwhelmed by the office of President. He was brash and angry. When he was challenged in the 1968 primaries by his own party, he ran away from the office out of fear of losing a Presidential election. Some claim that Johnson was doomed by the situation in Vietnam and that he would have been an excellent President. Johnson, however, had complete control of the conflict in Vietnam. He had the option to exit before combat troops were deployed.

These are the reasons why I believe Lyndon Baines Johnson is the WORST PRESIDENT EVER!

Why Ole Miss?

Ole Miss

“Why Ole Miss?”

This question has been a constant in my life since I decided to attend the University of Mississippi School of Law. Upon the announcement of my decision to certain individuals I have seen varied responses. In the faces of my family and my friends I have seen joy, pride, sadness, disgust and confusion. Those who have been to Oxford recently seem to understand my decision. And so I turn the question to the Commission of Presidential Debates. Why have you chosen the University of Mississippi for the first and probably most important Presidential debate?

“Why Ole Miss?”

Presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain will meet at the University of Mississippi on September 26th, 2008. During their stay in Oxford, they are likely to see the statue commemorating the desegregation of the university by James Meredith in 1962. They are likely to drive through the old Southern square, where the state flag of Mississippi is almost entirely overshadowed by the upper left hand corner of it, where the Confederate battle jack is prominently displayed. These two presidential candidates will do battle with words in a state that has often been called “reactionary” and “stubborn.” It is a state that is one of the least likely to be in play in this election cycle. In the universally acknowledged “change” election:

“Why Ole Miss?”

In part, the selection of the University of Mississippi for the first Presidential debate of 2008 is an acknowledgment of the progress the university has made in recent years. This quiet, uniquely Southern town of nearly 13,000 is likely to welcome the 3,000 journalists expected for the debate as readily as they accept the 15,000 Ole Miss students every semester. Oxford has become an extension of Ole Miss unlike any other college town. It is unique in that the town gives off a vibe of being all about Ole Miss. Undoubtedly, Oxford’s reputation as being an excellent college town and Ole Miss’s reputation as an excellent university weighed heavily on the minds of the Commission of Presidential Debates as they made this decision.

Although the venue was announced long before Barack Obama was even favored in the Democrat primary, it seems almost destiny that he appear here, in Oxford, the first African-American candidate for President. His arrival in Oxford will show a much different side of the town than many remember in 1962, when federal marshals went face to face with state law enforcement officials beneath the beautiful magnolias in the grove and atop the streets of Oxford.

So why Ole Miss? Because it’s not your grandmother’s Oxford. It is the New South, a place where a Yankee boy from Muncie, Indiana can be welcomed while getting an excellent legal education. It’s a place where the first African-American Presidential candidate can be welcomed as well. It is a hospitable town that has been entirely changed since 1962, but refuses to be ashamed of its past. America is finally giving Oxford its well-deserved second chance. I look forward to the coverage and analysis of my new hometown this September, and I will be providing coverage of my own to you.

Prairie Creek; Where Progressivism Goes to Die

Mayor McShurleyA number of Muncie residents have recently complained to me about the lack of objectiveness in recent Star Press articles about the Mayor of Muncie, Sharon McShurley. While it is apparent that The Star Press (or, at least journalist Nick Werner) has taken a stand against the mayor recently, it is also obvious that they are covering her far too often. Several unnecessary articles even appeared while she was away in Japan, searching to bring jobs into the last notch in the Rust Belt: Muncie, Indiana. I have tried to remember how often the last mayor of Muncie received front page attention in the Star Press, and the answer is: rarely.

The coverage that the Star Press has given the Mayor has led to a political exhaustion of the citizens. Many of the residents are just tired of hearing about it. The Star Press has recently covered the troubles at Prairie Creek Reservoir extensively, as well as commenting on legal debt that resulted from a recount. Today, they published a good news / bad news article on Prairie Creek alongside the legal debt article. The good news article was about twenty words, the bad news … naturally, it got a ton of ink and space. It is time to have some responsible journalism, the different articles deserve equal space and equal ink.

This mayor has shaken up the city. She has worked extensively to clean the corruption that has existed for decades. She has made strong and bold statements that the City of Muncie is going to be a good steward of tax dollars. That is what a good city does. It spends the tax dollars on necessary public good. Prairie Creek reservoir is an inherited burden of corruption and deceit as Larry Riley pointed out in his recent editorial. It is time to privatize the reservoir. If it is Prairie Creek that sinks this administration, the fault lies in a gullible electorate. Prairie Creek is where progressive politics goes to die, and those that are willing to jump on the mayor on this one issue alone are the reason why Muncie is lagging behind the rest of the nation.

Published in: on June 18, 2008 at 1:40 pm Comments (2)
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Tired? Lame? Not Exactly.

Welcome to my first venture in the Blogosphere. Indeed, I am entirely new to this. I seem to have missed the wagon entirely several years ago. This might just be my thing. I am going to start tentatively with this. I have plans to buy my own domain eventually if this gets off to a good start in readership. I still have a lot to learn about this hobby.

I think the title is a tad misleading at this point. I do have a passion for politics, but my perspective on the national election may not be anything new. I like to focus on local politics – and I now have homes in two locales. I live now in Muncie, Indiana, but I will shortly be moving to Oxford, Mississippi. Both are very politically active places with important issues that show a microcosm of America. I will share with you my views, my comparisons and my beliefs. They may not echo yours, but I hope that they will help advance the issue-driven dialogue of this national election.

I will return soon. Let’s be enlightened.

Published in: on at 11:29 am Comments (2)
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