- Apr 16, 2009
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We have several prospects:
- Paul Ryan
- Chris Christie
- Marco Rubio
- Rand Paul
- Bob McDonnell
- Bobby Jindal
- Condi Rice
- Rick Santorum
- Mike Pence
- Others
Their opponents are likely going to be Clinton and Biden, there are a few other good choices but those two have a huge lead in several areas atm. Clinton stepping down gives her an opportunity to start planning now and focus on the race.
Given the bad taste left in our nations mouth over the Republican primaries and the significant opponents the party will be facing in the race what will they have to change to win over a majority of the country and get people out to vote?
Paul Ryan is a leading pick from some inner circles; he has the experience running at the national level and strong support from the party. He is budget minded and has tried several times to bring a discussion to the table on budget reforms.
Chris Christie did a very good job handling a natural disaster and challenged the GOP when they denied his constituents funds to help with the relief effort. Many actually blame him for the Romney loss however which could be a negative in the primaries.
Marco Rubio in my opinion will be a front runner as the Media sets him up for the nomination. He was a leading VP pick this past election and has been critical at times of the current GOP. Especially after the post-election blame game.
Rand Paul will have a huge grass roots advantage and he does not have his fathers "senile old man" look. He was extremely critical of Clinton during the Benghazi hearings however he said she should have read all wires relayed back to DC which is in the thousands and almost impossible. It was a pure political move to set him up for a 2016 run.
Rick Santorum if history is any indication would have him as the eventual pick to head the helm. He placed 2nd in the primaries and is seen as a steadfast Conservative in the modern party.
I am not overly fond of the other prospects but I honestly do not see any of these guys bringing about change to the actual message other than Christie and Paul. Both of which are going to have a very difficult time securing a nomination given their past history or relatives.
I very seriously doubt Condi even runs because of the Bush debacle. I would like to see Mike Pence make waves and challenge the party.
The Republicans have to change several things to win imo; Make amends with minorities, abandon the interventionist foreign policy, focus on common sense tax/spending reforms (I'm looking at you Rand), work with Democrats and the President in the meantime to pass effective legislation, abandon the old dogs and implement new leadership and plan for the future.
It all starts right now, even if another Reagan comes along the party cannot possibly win without an overwhelming change in the party focus soon.
- Paul Ryan
- Chris Christie
- Marco Rubio
- Rand Paul
- Bob McDonnell
- Bobby Jindal
- Condi Rice
- Rick Santorum
- Mike Pence
- Others
Their opponents are likely going to be Clinton and Biden, there are a few other good choices but those two have a huge lead in several areas atm. Clinton stepping down gives her an opportunity to start planning now and focus on the race.
Given the bad taste left in our nations mouth over the Republican primaries and the significant opponents the party will be facing in the race what will they have to change to win over a majority of the country and get people out to vote?
Paul Ryan is a leading pick from some inner circles; he has the experience running at the national level and strong support from the party. He is budget minded and has tried several times to bring a discussion to the table on budget reforms.
Chris Christie did a very good job handling a natural disaster and challenged the GOP when they denied his constituents funds to help with the relief effort. Many actually blame him for the Romney loss however which could be a negative in the primaries.
Marco Rubio in my opinion will be a front runner as the Media sets him up for the nomination. He was a leading VP pick this past election and has been critical at times of the current GOP. Especially after the post-election blame game.
Rand Paul will have a huge grass roots advantage and he does not have his fathers "senile old man" look. He was extremely critical of Clinton during the Benghazi hearings however he said she should have read all wires relayed back to DC which is in the thousands and almost impossible. It was a pure political move to set him up for a 2016 run.
Rick Santorum if history is any indication would have him as the eventual pick to head the helm. He placed 2nd in the primaries and is seen as a steadfast Conservative in the modern party.
I am not overly fond of the other prospects but I honestly do not see any of these guys bringing about change to the actual message other than Christie and Paul. Both of which are going to have a very difficult time securing a nomination given their past history or relatives.
I very seriously doubt Condi even runs because of the Bush debacle. I would like to see Mike Pence make waves and challenge the party.
The Republicans have to change several things to win imo; Make amends with minorities, abandon the interventionist foreign policy, focus on common sense tax/spending reforms (I'm looking at you Rand), work with Democrats and the President in the meantime to pass effective legislation, abandon the old dogs and implement new leadership and plan for the future.
It all starts right now, even if another Reagan comes along the party cannot possibly win without an overwhelming change in the party focus soon.