Real Clear Politics
 
 
 
September 26, 2011  
Still Looking for a Candidate to Replace  Obama
By _Michael  Barone_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/?author=Michael+Barone&id=14827) 

The Republicans' presidential debate Thursday night sponsored by Fox News 
and  Google gave primary voters and caucus-goers at least one good reason to 
reject  every candidate on the stage. The interesting question now is 
whether someone  else will enter the race -- at just about the same point in 
the 
election cycle  in which Bill Clinton entered the Democratic race in 1991. 
The spotlight was hottest on Rick Perry, the frontrunner in national polls  
since he announced his candidacy in Charleston, S.C., on Aug. 13, the same 
day  that Michele Bachmann won the straw poll in Ames, Iowa.

 
Perry's problem was not just that he punted on the tough question of how to 
 respond to a terrorist takeover of nuclear-armed _Pakistan_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/pakistan/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&;
utm_campaign=rcwautolink) 
.  Even the smooth-talking Mitt Romney might have had trouble with that 
nightmare  scenario. And Perry was right to cite our informal alliance with 
_India_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/india/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
   as a source of leverage. 
The problem was that Perry couldn't respond cogently to utterly predictable 
 questions and was unable to articulate his pre-scripted criticisms of 
Romney. A  case can certainly be made that Romney has flip-flopped on issues. 
But Perry  failed to make it. 
Perry defended his order requiring HPV vaccinations by citing his talks 
with  a woman with cervical cancer -- but they took place only after his order. 
He  failed to fend off attacks on his criticisms of Social Security in his 
book "Fed  Up!," saying he was only endorsing the longtime exemption from 
the program for  state and local public employees. 
He failed to explain why Texas, with its large legal and illegal immigrant  
and young populations, has a high percentage of people without health  
insurance. 
He was eloquent in defending Texas's in-state college tuition for children 
of  illegal aliens, but his stand is hugely unpopular with Republicans 
outside  Texas. And he failed to point out that it helped him win a respectable 
38  percent from Latino voters in the 2010 election. 
Mitt Romney clearly benefited from his greater experience over the years 
and  his superior preparation in recent weeks. But he also benefited from the 
fact  that no one challenged him convincingly on claims that he is unlikely 
to be able  to sustain. 
He sloughed off Perry's accurate charge that he supported the Obama  
administration's Race to the Top education program -- a defensible position, 
but  
not a popular one for Republicans. 
He repeated now what has been his standard defense of his Massachusetts  
health care program. But someday someone is going to nail him on his 
insistence  that its individual mandate to buy insurance covers only 8 percent 
of the 
 population. It actually applies to everyone. 
He avoided Perry's claim that he deleted defenses of the program from the  
paperback edition of his book. He won't be able to deftly dodge that  
forever. 
If he overtakes Perry in the polls -- a likely possibility after the 
Texan's  stumbling performance -- he will likely become the pinata for the rest 
of 
the  field, a role he figured to play before Perry entered the race. 
None of the other seven candidates on the stage made a convincing case for  
advancing to the top tier. The closest was Rick Santorum, who was eloquent 
and  knowledgeable on foreign policy. But his answer on gays in the military 
was  cringe-inducing for people on all sides of the issue. 
Michele Bachmann refused to back down from her statement relaying the claim 
 of a woman who approached her saying that the HPV vaccine caused 
retardation in  her child. Bachmann has made headway by championing the 
instincts of 
ordinary  hardworking citizens over the supposed wisdom of experts. But on 
vaccinations  the experts are right. 
Pundits are fixated on designating a frontrunner, but the polls in this 
race  -- witness Romney's rise and fall and Perry's rise -- have all the 
solidity of  cotton candy. Bachmann's numbers peaked in July, Herman Cain's in 
June, Ron  Paul's and Newt Gingrich's in May -- and not at high levels. 
Santorum's haven't  peaked at all. 
Could another candidate give a better performance than Perry and deliver 
more  sustainable responses than Romney? To judge from their performances in 
various  public and private venues the answer is yes for Mitch Daniels, Paul 
Ryan and  Chris Christie. 
Each has taken himself out of the race. Each still has time to get in. Most 
 voters are ready to reject Barack Obama. But not necessarily for one of 
those on  the stage Thursday night. 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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