June 11, 2007
Rudy's Unconventional Bid
Weekly Standard: He's Anti-Organization And Pro-Choice, But Giuliani Has A Shot At The GOP Nod
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Play CBS Video Video Giuliani At GOP Debate CBS News RAW: Lightning struck when former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani was asked a tough question at the GOP presidential debate in Manchester, N.H.
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Video Giuliani On The Iraq War CBS News RAW: Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani talks to David Letterman about the war in Iraq.
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Video Giuliani's Choice On Abortion In a strategic political move, Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani has blurred his position on abortion rights. Jeff Greenfield reports followed by an analysis with Nicolle Wallace.
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Republican presidential hopeful and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani greets supporters and patrons at a restaurant in Frontenac, Mo., on June 8, 2007. (AP Photo)
The schedule for June 7 said Rudy Giuliani would address the 38th annual meeting of the Airport and Seaport Police at 8 p.m. at a Marriott hotel here in downtown Washington. Campaign and event staff said not to hurry, however. Giuliani routinely begins his events late, and in this case he had to attend a fundraiser at the Hard Rock Café downtown, where GOP senator David Vitter of Louisiana was introducing him. After that, he was to arrive at the Marriott and accept the first-ever Fred V. Morrone Memorial Award. Morrone was superintendent of the New York and New Jersey Port Authority police when he died inside the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001.
Giuliani knows how to make an entrance. After the somber police officers emceeing the award ceremony go through their introductions, the former New York City mayor enters through a side door, accompanied by his two-man security detail and a few staff members. (Giuliani has five security guards; two of them are with him at all times.) The audience, almost all men and almost all wearing dark suits, rise for a standing ovation. Giuliani delivers his speech, saying Morrone was a hero who "found himself on the front lines of a war of terrorists against us." The delivery is smooth, but you can tell the candidate hasn't spent much time with the text. Giuliani keeps looking down at the words on the lectern.
The audience doesn't seem to mind. They applaud at the appropriate moments and nod their heads when Giuliani criticizes the Senate immigration deal and evokes the horrible events of September 11, 2001. "Political correctness cannot stop us from describing clearly, and seeing clearly, our enemy," Giuliani says. He outlines two programs — BorderStat and PortStat — that would track the government's progress in maintaining border and port security. Then he's done. He poses for a few photos, seeks out former Homeland Security undersecretary for border and transportation security Asa Hutchinson for a handshake, and leaves by the side door through which he came. Giuliani won't be available to the press, a communications aide tells disappointed reporters. The mayor will spend the night in D.C. and leave the next day.
If you've ever thought there's a fly-by-the-seat-of-one's-pants feeling to the Giuliani presidential campaign, you are probably right. None of Giuliani's senior staff — campaign manager Mike DuHaime, senior adviser Tony Carbonetti, political director Mark Campbell, and communications director Katie Levinson — has much experience in presidential politics. An aide says Giuliani is playing catch-up, having made a relatively late entry into the race. Compared with the hyperorganized campaign of former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, Giuliani's is haphazard. Sometimes schedules are handed out just 24 hours before the events in question. Statements from the candidate or senior staff happen on the order of a few a week, not the constant barrage of e-mails that come from Team Romney.
Giuliani is just beginning to assemble policy advisory groups in the areas of health care, energy, Iraq and the Middle East. Former Indianapolis mayor Stephen Goldsmith and Stanford economist Michael Boskin are key domestic policy advisers, while Harvard's Stephen P. Rosen and Yale's Charles Hill handle foreign policy. Over the last few weeks Giuliani has outlined programs for restoring accountability to government and making health care more competitive and health insurance more individualized. He rarely delivers speeches from a prepared text, preferring to extemporize from notes.
The candidate's worst — and best — moments are unscripted. A few months ago Giuliani got himself into trouble over conflicting statements on federal funding for abortions. Conservatives and the press criticized his performance at the first GOP debate, when he seemed ambivalent about the future of Roe v. Wade. Still, Giuliani's attack on Rep. Ron Paul at the second GOP debate was also unscripted. And his humorous, ad-lib response when lightning struck outside the debate hall during his answer on an abortion question last week disarmed the audience.
It's an unconventional moment in American politics, and Giuliani is an unconventional candidate. "This is an unprecedented campaign," says a longtime conservative activist. It's the first time since 1952 that there is no incumbent president or vice president running in either party. There's also no clear front-runner. The failure of the more conventional conservative candidates to connect with voters, combined with Giuliani's assured presence on the stump and in debates, has left the GOP race open to hizzoner. For now, it simply doesn't seem to matter that his campaign isn't as well organized as some of the others.
There are challenges, however. "Giuliani is trying to throw conventional wisdom out the door," says a GOP lobbyist sympathetic to John McCain. This was brought home once again last week, when campaign manager DuHaime said the mayor would skip the August 11 straw poll in Ames, Iowa. It was a difficult decision. It's been the subject of debate inside the campaign for months. The carnival-like straw poll is a fundraiser for the Iowa GOP. It costs millions of dollars for the campaigns to bus in supporters from throughout the state. Right now Giuliani has neither the staff nor the resources in Iowa to compete in Ames. Last week, there were "more than 12 people" in the state working for Giuliani, says a senior aide. That's not exactly what you call an army. What's more, DuHaime opened Giuliani's Iowa headquarters and named the campaign's state chair only last week.
The sudden announcement a few hours later from the McCain campaign that the senator would also skip Ames surprised Team Giuliani. They took it as a sign McCain's campaign is ailing. Giuliani still faces two problems in Iowa, however. The first is that no candidate in the last 30 years has ignored Ames and gone on to win the Iowa caucuses in January. Yet Giuliani aides say the mayor still plans to compete in the caucuses. Which leads to the second problem: Giuliani and McCain will remain on the straw poll ballot in August. They won't do well, which could demoralize their Iowa supporters preparing for January. Skipping Ames could be the first step toward leaving Iowa altogether.
And that could lead to more problems. Giuliani strategists believe their candidate's national celebrity, strong fundraising, and proven ability to appeal to disaffected independents and Democrats lend him a strong advantage in primaries in Florida, California, New York, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. With the new, frontloaded primary calendar, those states will all vote within a few weeks of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina. Giuliani seems to be banking on a January 29, 2008, Florida win to propel him to the next round of big-state primaries on February 5. "The calendar has changed things an awful lot," says the senior Giuliani aide.
Here's the question: Does the frontloaded primary schedule make the first contest, Iowa, either more or less important? One longtime GOP strategist thinks it will be more important. The bounce the winner(s) of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina will receive should not be underestimated. The risk for Giuliani is that after Iowa comes New Hampshire, and candidates who have held statewide office in Massachusetts tend to overperform there. Think Dukakis in 1988, Tsongas in 1992, and Kerry in 2004. You can even go back to Amb. Henry Cabot Lodge winning New Hampshire in the 1964 Republican primary. So that favors Romney.
Then there's South Carolina. Voters there tend to go along with caucus-goers in Iowa — and the winner in Iowa and South Carolina is more likely to determine the GOP nominee than the winner in New Hampshire. In 1996, Bob Dole won Iowa, lost New Hampshire to Pat Buchanan, then won South Carolina and went on to receive the nomination. In 2000, George W. Bush won Iowa, lost New Hampshire to John McCain, then won South Carolina and went on to become the nominee. The historical record suggests it's difficult to win the nomination without winning two of these three states. The Giuliani campaign seems willing to risk testing that proposition.
Giuliani is unusual in other ways. The most prominent is his stance on abortion, which is not only pro-choice but also seems to be pro-Roe v. Wade. If Giuliani were to win the nomination, he would be the first GOP nominee in more than 30 years to hold these positions. Gerald Ford typically is cited as the last pro-choice Republican nominee, but the history is more complicated than that. The 1976 GOP platform was explicitly anti-Roe, but Ford himself was more equivocal. He said that he opposed abortion and that Roe had been wrongly decided, though he opposed a constitutional amendment to return the issue to the states. Betty Ford's strong support for abortion rights further complicated her husband's position and has shaped the historical record.
After his performance in the first GOP debate, when he seemed ambivalent and confused on abortion, Giuliani steadily lost ground in national GOP polls. Now those numbers appear to have stabilized. In some cases they've improved. The media attribute this to Giuliani's May 11 speech at Houston Baptist College, where he unequivocally supported abortion rights and civil unions for gay couples. The truth is the May 11 speech said little that was new, and Giuliani's stabilizing in the polls more likely can be attributed to his good performance in subsequent debates and his success at guiding the campaign back onto national security and economic policy terrain. A good day for Giuliani is when no one talks about social issues.
In the meantime, the peculiarities pile up. Giuliani would be the first Italian American to win the presidential nomination of either party. He would be the first Catholic ever to win the GOP nod. He would be the first former mayor to win a presidential nomination since Theodore Roosevelt. He would be the first GOP nominee to have supported Mario Cuomo for state office. All of this has never happened before. But I hear there's a first time for everything.
By Matthew Continetti
© Copyright 2007, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.
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- I hope Rudy is the GOP candidate for President in the primary elections. This is my fondest hope. He will go down in history as one of those candidates that never had a chance, but was too clueless to know it.
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- Republicans just want another "man in a Reagan mask".
Shallow little people. - Reply to this comment
- "I've read countless articles about Rudy being a hero of 9/11. None of them have explained why is considered a hero. He did what any mayor would do in the same situation, except perhaps the mayor of New Orleans, who would cry race.
Can anyone explain how Rudy was a hero of 9/11?
Posted by marcodele at 10:42 AM : Jun 12, 2007"
He was a leader in that he reassured the people of NYC of who is in charge and assured them of their best rescue efforts at the time. And heroes aren't perfect, but other mayors would be too grief stricken and helpless that they would turn over the reigns in emergency crisis to the state governor. - Reply to this comment
- A big city mayor is just that! A big city mayor! And not a president of a whole country.
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- Rudy Giuliani = next year's Bob Dole.
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- I've read countless articles about Rudy being a hero of 9/11. None of them have explained why is considered a hero. He did what any mayor would do in the same situation, except perhaps the mayor of New Orleans, who would cry race.
Can anyone explain how Rudy was a hero of 9/11? - Reply to this comment
- He will never make it through the primaries. The religious fascist's will crucify him on a cross. He isn't right wing enough for them. So don't hold your breath on him.
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- Please nominate Rudy! He will be easy pickin's in the general election!
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- Unconventional? Ruby has wrapped himself in the mythology of 9-11. He made millions off of 9-11 and has now staked his political fortunes on it, just as President Bush cannot go twelve seconds without mentioning terrorism, al Qaeda, or September 11th. Bush even managed to conflate Iraq with 9-11, blurring the lines so effectively most of the daft have given up trying to draw a distinction. And here come Rudy, echoing the refrain that a vote for the opposition equals a vote for the terrorists. What make this unconventional? Sound like the same-old Republicans as daddy party *** that brought you the debacle that has been George W. Bush!
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- If Guiliani were from Arkansas or Mississippi, the MSM would have harrassed him unmercifully for having married his first cousin...
Guiliani is the son of a stick-up man and a collection agent for a loan shark. He's connected to mobsters and is an angry little punk who knows how to keep a fake smile plastered on his mug and glad hand anyone stupid enough to imagine that this 9-11 co-conspirator is anything but a stone-killer in an expensive suit.
He betrayed the firemen--calling off the search for their comrades shortly after the Bank of Nova Scotia's (?) gold was found in the ruins. He--and then Blumberg-- have been busy as beavers paving over potholes with the remains of the 9-11 victims.
This gangster's punk media people had an infowars.com reporter arrested for asking embarrassing questions about his lies regarding 9-11 at a CNN event after the New Hampshire debates. That Rudy Giuliani has any support at all is a crime. - Reply to this comment
The Republican candidates only look good because even a Special Olympics participant would look good compared to Bush (apologies for putting down the mentally retarded close to the same level as Bush)- Reply to this comment
- Hey Rudy - why did WTC7 collapse ? what are you not telling us about 9/11?
9/11 Mysteries: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6708190071483512003&q=911+mysteries&hl=en
collapse or controlled demolition ? - look at the photo and you be the judge...
http://911research.wtc7.net/
wtc/evidence/photos/wtc2exp2.html
more photos .. collapse or controlled demolition ? how did the beams get shot so far horizontally ? curious ...
http://911research.wtc7.net/wtc/e
vidence/photos/wtc1nenw.html - Reply to this comment
- Please nominate Rudy! It will be so much fun slicing and dicing this charlatin in November '08!
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- Oh please, spare me! This guy doesn't have the qualifications to be president.
The only reason he is running at all is because Bonzo has made such a mess of things that being a republican stinks. Qualified candidates won't run because they know they will lose. Only in 2008 would such an unqualified candidate be considered.
He is a mayor, for Christsake! He would be a complete disaster as president. As bad as Bush. - Reply to this comment

How gold pays for 



