By

Thomas Sowell /

National Review/ November 16, 2011, 11:05 AM

How the GOP could blow it in 2012

Republican presidential hopefuls, from left to right, Jon Huntsman, Michele Bachmann, Ron Paul, Herman Cain, Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry and Rick Santorum participate in the CBS News/National Journal Debate at Wofford College Nov. 12, 2011, in Spartanburg, S.C.

Republican presidential hopefuls, from left to right, Jon Huntsman, Michele Bachmann, Ron Paul, Herman Cain, Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry and Rick Santorum participate in the CBS News/National Journal Debate at Wofford College Nov. 12, 2011, in Spartanburg, S.C. / AFP/Getty Images

Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said that a good catchphrase could stop thinking for 50 years. One of the often-repeated catchphrases of our time -- "It's the economy, stupid!" -- has already stopped thinking in some quarters for a couple of decades.

There is no question that the state of the economy can affect elections. But there is also no iron law that all elections will be decided by the state of the economy.

Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt was reelected for an unprecedented third term after two terms in which unemployment was in double digits for eight consecutive years.

We may lament the number of people who are unemployed or who are on food stamps today. But those who give the Obama administration credit for coming to their rescue when they didn't have a job are likely to greatly outnumber those who blame the administration for their not having a job in the first place.

An expansion of the welfare state in hard times seems to have been the secret of FDR's great political success in the midst of economic disaster. An economic study published in a scholarly journal in 2004 concluded that the Roosevelt administration's policies prolonged the Great Depression by several years. But few people read economic studies.

This economy has been sputtering along through most of the Obama administration, with the unemployment rate hovering around 9 percent. But none of that means that Barack Obama is going to lose the 2012 election.

Even polls that show "any Republican" with more public support than Obama do not mean that Obama will lose.

The president is not going to run against "any Republican." He is going to run against some specific Republican, and that Republican can expect to be attacked, denounced, and denigrated for months on end before the November 2012 elections -- not only by the Democrats, but also by the media, which is heavily pro-Democrat.

We have already seen how unsubstantiated allegations from women with questionable histories have dropped Herman Cain from front-runner status to third place in just a couple of weeks.

In short, it takes a candidate to beat a candidate, and everything depends on what kind of candidate that is.

The smart money inside the Beltway says that the Republicans need to pick a moderate candidate who can appeal to independent voters, not just to the conservative voters who turn out to vote in Republican primaries. Those who think this way say that you have to "reach out" to Hispanics, the elderly, and other constituencies.

What is remarkable is how seldom the smart-money folks look at what has actually been happening in presidential elections.

Ronald Reagan won two landslide elections when he ran as Ronald Reagan. Vice President George H. W. Bush then won when he ran as if he were another Ronald Reagan, with his famous statement, "Read my lips, no new taxes."

But after Bush 41 was elected and turned "kinder and gentler" -- to everyone except the taxpayers -- he lost to an unknown governor from a small state.

Other Republican presidential candidates who went the "moderate" route -- Bob Dole and John McCain -- also came across as neither fish nor fowl and went down to defeat.

Now the smart money inside the Beltway is saying that Mitt Romney, who is nothing if not versatile in his positions, is the Republicans' best hope for replacing Obama.

If conservative Republicans split their votes among a number of conservative candidates in the primaries, that can mean ending up with a presidential candidate in the Bob Dole-John McCain mold -- and risking a Bob Dole-John McCain result in the next election.

The question now is whether the conservative Republican candidates who have enjoyed their successive and short-lived boomlets -- Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry, and Herman Cain -- are prepared to stay in the primary race to the bitter end, or whether their conservative principles will move them to withdraw and throw their support to another conservative candidate.

There has probably never been a time in the history of this country when we more urgently needed to get a president out of the White House, before he ruined the country. But will the conservative Republican candidates let that guide them?

Bio: Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and a regular contributor to National Review. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

National Review. All rights reserved.
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noloyalisti says:
We have one sick country effed up by this cadre of Republicon clowns that work only for the Top 1%. And of course the Top 1% are responsible for all of what happened to us the last 3 years. The only people getting real welfare are the rich people who have done nothing but harm to America.

I can't imagine who would be stupid enough to inflict America with one of these dangerous idiots.
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tsigili says:
The Democrats are the nothing but the welfare party. They want to be dictators in America, and have the entire population dependent on the party, so they can stay in power.

All of the foolish Dems, followers, bash the GOP for wealth.......but they refuse to face the truth, that those in power in the Dems, are the very SAME wealthy people, they propose to hate.
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noloyalisti replies:
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That is correct, it is the 99% against the RepubliDems. However, at least there are a few Dems who have some compassion and a conscience.
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chris87654 says:
Most important is will a Republican plan work better than Obama's? So far I've only seen "trickle down" policies that won't work (NO ONE is going to hire ANYONE just because they have more money in the bank or more cash on their balance sheet). The big problem is gasoline costs pulling money from the broad economy - this is because Exxon et al do NOT use their record profits to hire more people (is like stuffing money in a mattress where it disappears from circulation). The reason is speculators who have tied oil price to stock market activity instead of actual supply/demand. There is no simple solution, but giving tax breaks to upper earners and corporations will not solve anything; "trickle down" is like winning the lottery - no one would take lottery winnings and hire someone out of the goodness of heart for that person's OR the country's benefit.
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jamessamans replies:
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Whether anything anyone does actually works is unimportant. What matters is simply and solely whether the majority of voters believe that it will work -- and the voting public is by and large made up of poorly informed and profoundly ignorant people.
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cossb says:
Republican can expect to be attacked, denounced, and denigrated for months on end before the November 2012 elections -- not only by the Democrats, but also by the media, which is heavily pro-Democrat

Cry me a river , boo hoo. Remind me, how many different papers does super conservative Murdoch own? Thats right, the media is actually heavily pro-conservative! But facts don't matter to conservatives, they've proven that year after year. Keep your articles on faux news pages and get off our "democrat" pages lamer.
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Hala_c says:
by mountainstates1 November 18, 2011 2:27 PM EST
America doesn't want the party that started "The Great Recession", or the war in Iraq, or the war in Afghanistan....
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Let's not forget about how the Republican's have confused the "War on Poverty" for their "War on the Poor"! Or the so-called "War on Drugs" that's really little more than a "War on Marijuana". Never mind that numerous world leaders (including Kofi Annan, Pual Volcker and George Shultz) recently signed on to a Global Report on the War on Drugs and labelled it a failure as well as pointed out that alcohol has a much greater cost to society than MJ does.
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MissouriHank says:
"There has probably never been a time in the history of this country when we more urgently needed to get a president out of the White House, before he ruined the country."

Oh yes there was - 2001. Too bad we kinda drew a blank on that one, huh?

By all means, nominate all-hat-and-no-cattle Perry. Or Newt - who facilitated perhaps the most corrupt Congress since Reconstruction. Make sure you demonize any moderates who might - God forbid - compromise or approach governance with nuance and sophistication. Yes, running farther and farther right will work out just fine...you bet.
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Hala_c replies:
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Newt... even Jack Abramoff has called him one of the most corrupt politicians, and this comes from the man that wrote the book on corruption.
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jshtahoe says:
If the Republicans don't nominate a small government constitutionalist, it is time for a third party because the game is over, liberalism wins.
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mountainstates1 replies:
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Lets hope liberalism wins. It's the last stand against fascist conservatism. America doesn't want the party that started "The Great Recession", or the war in Iraq, or the war in Afghanistan, or the GOP that first ran up the deficit, or the party that sent all our jobs over to China and then blamed it on police officers and teachers. Lastly, America doesn't want the GOP that "boos" our troops. Republicans are anti-American.
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koko98-2009 says:
The Republicans are left with two bad choices. They can nominate Romney have the right stay home and get swamped. Or they can nominate Romney, run a third party candidate to try to save themselves down the ballot. Two bad choices
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jamessamans replies:
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Glad to see that the democratic process has left Republicans with only one possible nominee from an entire field of candidates.
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retiredgustav says:
If they want to win they have to find themselves a candidate first.
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mountainstates1 replies:
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Where's Sarah Palin when the GOP needs her? You betcha!
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noloyalisti says:
This ridiculous Government of Pig Party is obsolete and no longer wanted here in America. These people have ruined the country and ruined many other countries by their insane and failed economic ideas. They are done forever.
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