Nov. 20, 2007

Revitalized Thompson Ready To Surge

National Review Online: With His Honest Message, GOP Hopeful Set To Fight For This Election

  • Republican presidential hopeful former Sen. Fred Thompson (R-TN) speaks to the media during a campaign stop at Maloney & Porcelli restaurant on November 15, 2007 in New York City. Photo

    Republican presidential hopeful former Sen. Fred Thompson (R-TN) speaks to the media during a campaign stop at Maloney & Porcelli restaurant on November 15, 2007 in New York City.  (GETTY)

  • Video Thompson Ad Touts Consistency

    "I've been a conservative my whole life," says Fred Thompson in this 60-second ad. Thompson points to his "100 percent pro-life voting record" and says rights "come from God and not from government."

  • Video Thompson Advisor Has Record

    Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson is being questioned about the criminal background of one of his key advisors. Joie Chen reports.

  • Photo Essay Fred Thompson

    He has played the role of the president in several films. Now he is running to be it for real.

  • Interactive Campaign 2008

    Profiles of the candidates, polls, fund-raising, blogs, video and more.

(National Review Online)  This column was written by Larry Kudlow.

An energetic and forceful Fred Thompson sat down with me last week on "Kudlow and Company" to talk politics and the economy. The former Tennessee senator was in good form - more animated than I’ve seen him, and definitely a different person than the one I interviewed six months ago.

I asked him about Dick Armey, the former Republican House majority leader. Armey recently predicted that Hillary Clinton will be the next president, reasoning that the GOP has departed from the first principles of limited government and lower taxes. Armey said budget overspending and the proliferating corruption of earmarks are what led to the landslide defeat of Republicans a year ago. To date, Dick Armey is unimpressed with the circa 2007 GOP message.

And Thompson agreed. He said, “If we don’t tend to business we are going to be in big trouble. Pendulum’s swinging against us. We are down in the polls. Independents are leaning the other way [where they] used to lean with us. So we’ve got to . . . adhere to the principles that made us a great party and a great nation.”

That was a strong dose of honesty and self-examination. Good for Fred Thompson.

Speaking of limited government and budget overspending, I asked if a President Thompson would veto the $300 billion earmark-pocked pork-barrel farm bill now before Congress. He called this legislation “disgraceful,” noted that it wouldn’t even help small family farms, and that it would block the expansion of world free trade.

When I asked him about Warren Buffett, the famous investor billionaire, Thompson turned up the heat. In testimony before the Senate last week, Buffett advocated a whole series of tax hikes, such as an increase in the death tax, higher capital gains and dividend taxes, and more taxes on private partnerships, hedge funds, and private-equity buyout firms. Thompson labeled this policy dead wrong. He said Buffett is nothing more than a mouthpiece for the Democratic Party. He argued that the wealth of the government is the not the same thing as the wealth of nations, and that history proves lower tax rates promote economic growth.

And he said Hillary Clinton and the other Democratic candidates are blind to all this. He noted that the top 5 percent of income earners now pay 60 percent of all tax collections; that the tax code is progressive enough; that there’s plenty of economic mobility in the country; that for those who have fallen behind, the problem is poor education, not tax rates; and that America is the freest, most prosperous, most powerful nation in the history of the world.

We talked about his controversial Social Security reform plan that would slow down future benefits by indexing them to inflation rather than wages, while providing for add-on private savings accounts with a government match, much like the system for 401(k)s.

Lower benefits? Isn’t that the proverbial third-rail of politics? Not according to Mr. Thompson. He said big problems ought to be tackled: “If you can’t do the right thing, say what you believe and what everybody really basically knows, why do it? Why bother? Life is too short for the aggravation.”

Thompson wants to tell the truth about Social Security and force everyone else in the game to respond. This issue is a real character-building definer for Fred Thompson. No one else on the campaign trail, in either party, is willing to discuss Social Security in such frank terms.

But that’s the revitalized Fred Thompson. The more I challenged him, the more animated he became. He simply refused to stand down.

Some people say Thompson doesn’t have the fire in his belly to go the distance. I don’t think that’s true. And I’m not picking or endorsing any candidates here. But Thompson has an honest, clear, straightforward message of economic freedom and problem solving.

Then I brought up the CNBC/Wall Street Journal debate of a few weeks ago, when Thompson slammed Rudy Giuliani. I asked if he intended to continue to pound Giuliani on the campaign trail. He said, “I haven’t pounded all day.” I asked, What about yesterday? He said, “Well, we’re pointing out some policy differences. [Giuliani] believes in federal funding for abortion. He went to court to stop our bill outlawing sanctuary cities. He’s never met a gun-control bill he didn’t like.”

A sharp-edged Fred Thompson.

Can he win? His campaign strategists told me they are pouring tons of money into Iowa advertising. They see a strong opportunity for a Thompson surge in the state, undermining Mitt Romney and inflicting damage on Giuliani. Walking off the set, Thompson told me this election will be about peace and prosperity. And he intends to fight hard.

By Larry Kudlow
Reprinted with permission from National Review Online.



America's Premier Site for Conservative News, Analysis, and Opinion.

Video and Galleries from Opinion

Add a Comment See all 33 Comments
by briannorwood November 20, 2007 3:51 PM EST
Look, we''ve had stupid for the last seven years. We can''t afford another 8 years of more stupid!

Nixon had it right when he recognized the limited intellectual abilitiies of Fred Thompson.
Reply to this comment
by clestes-2009 November 20, 2007 4:21 PM EST
The rep presidential field would NEVER exists in any other election cycle than this. Any decent candidate for Congress or the Whitehouse knows that Bush has so seriously damaged the party that no one even knows what the hell republican means anymore. That is why we see so many rep retiring rather than run again.

Thompson and Rudy are 2 of the most under qualified candidates to ever run. McCain is too old, Romney''s Mormonism will kill him.

Really the only decent rep candidate is Ron Paul and the party leaders are too scared of him to support him.

The dems are going to take total control next year. The question is WHO, not IF. And depending on the WHO, the reps may be out of power for 12 or 16 years.
Reply to this comment
by germanmom November 20, 2007 4:32 PM EST
Some say he is lazy; I don''t think that''s the case...
he''s just not well enough for the rigor of the presidency.
Reply to this comment
by imnho November 20, 2007 5:02 PM EST
I think that Fred Thompson lacks the fire in his belly to go the distance.

The arguement is academic since the whole that bush has dug himself and his party is so deep they have little hope of winning. Iraq will be a large albatross hanging around the parties neck. As the albatross swings to and fro yo will see republicans dropping like stones.

If you start a war you should know what your doing.If you don''t have a clue then expect to lose big when the public delivers its verdict.
Reply to this comment
by jn122736 November 20, 2007 5:16 PM EST
Larry Kudlow, the author of this opinion piece, showed his disingenuousness by referring to the inheritance tax as the %u201Cdeath tax%u201D.
The favorite trick used by the new Republican Party is to denigrate names and/or titles by changing them or continually associating them with something bad or unacceptable until they become unacceptable by association.

The inheritance tax has NOTHING to do with the deceased because,by definition, he or she no longer exists.

The tax is on an existing,live, person%u2019s income regardless of how obtained.

Ever since the income tax was initiated all working class people have been forced to pay taxes on money they earn no matter how they earn it.

To be fair, taxes should be collected on ANY income regardless of where the income is from. That includes interest income from bank accounts and stock investments.

Furthermore, in my opinion, the rate/percentage of tax should be on an evenly graduated scale as income increases.

If the top 5% own/earn 95% of all income they should pay 95% of all taxes because they are enjoying the fruits of living in America where they have the chance to earn that much. That would make everyone more equal.

Fred Thompson, or anyone else who advocates eliminating the inheritance tax, does not represent what America is supposed to be.

Reply to this comment
by walt1944-2009 November 20, 2007 5:24 PM EST
It has been learned that Fred Thompson, in an effort to save money on his campaign, will use "out takes'' from his movies to support his campaign. For example, one campaign commercial will show Fred Thompson playing the Admiral of the naval task force from the movie "The Hunt for Red October" to show that he "supports the troops"!

There will also be out-takes from his performance as the tough DA in "Law and Order" to show that he is tough on crime and supports putting criminals away FOREVER! The idea being that if Guiliani can use footage of 9/11 in his campaign, Thompson can use "Law and Order" to further his chances!

The Thompson camp feels that using his past acting performances in his campaign will boast his image and help him crawl out of the cellar in the polls.

SIG HEIL, BUSH!!!
Reply to this comment
by taddles-2009 November 20, 2007 6:09 PM EST
LOL...you pathetic NRO turds, the only place Thompson is going to "surge" is in the bathroom when his Depends fail.
Reply to this comment
by lanefiller1 November 20, 2007 7:14 PM EST
Anyone wanting to see some telling video (with an accompanying column) from Thompson%u2019s first week on the trail in South Carolina should give this a try:
http://goupstate.us/index.php/lanefiller/2007/11/05/fred_thompson_for_president_of_what_the_
Reply to this comment
by Razzl November 20, 2007 7:18 PM EST
I couldn''t believe that NRO, which takes itself so seriously, would write such a headline about a man who doesn''t have the energy to "surge" anywhere but to the nearest easy chair, until I saw who wrote it--Larry Kudlow is the laughable right-wing cheerleader for capitalism on CNBC who''s having a rough time these days in his tv appearances convincing even his conservative Wall Street panelists that the credit crisis is a small thing that won''t stand in the way of roaring prosperity for 2008. The antigovernment world view of the right isn''t flying any more in a country where everyone is holding down 2 minimum wage jobs with no health insurance and no retirement to pay their mortgages and credit card bills which are pegged at unfair interest rates because the right won''t hear of any government regulation of the industries. The Reagan Revolution is on its deathbed and Fred ain''t going to revive it...
Reply to this comment
by fredgrad2000 November 20, 2007 7:26 PM EST
"Fred Thompson, or anyone else who advocates eliminating the inheritance tax, does not represent what America is supposed to be."

Posted by jn122736

Typical liberal nonsense based on the notion that the government in ENTITLED to a piece of all money you earn, inherit, win...ALL money. The simple truth is that that money was already taxed once; to the deceased; there is no good reason that a mother and father shouldn''t be able to take their already-taxed money (that the tax and spend libs are free to earmark to high heaven) and leave it to their children. Their death is not and should not be a "taxable event"!! That money they leave behind has aleady been taxed; and would never be taxed again if they spent it before they died; there is no reason outside of socialist liberal ideology advocating redistribution of wealth through the government that mom and dad''s death should trigger a taxation. All of your other examples are typical liberal smoke and mirrors because they are examples where the personal earnings have not already been taxed once already (capital gains on investments, interest income, etc.). The DEATH TAX is quite literally that, a tax imposed ONLY because of death of the original holder of the already-taxed money.
Reply to this comment
by fredgrad2000 November 20, 2007 7:34 PM EST
"The dems are going to take total control next year. The question is WHO, not IF..." Posted by clestes

Ahhh, the loons are out in full force for Thanksgiving!! George Bush is unpopular because of the management of the Iraq War, period. Americans would still be supporting the war (WMD or not) by 70-80% if we had WON!! Americans do not like to lose; but the looney left''s confidence is completely unfounded, Americans are no more liberal or left-wing than they were pre-Iraq!! Americans still see no issue with fighting a war on terror, still do not want their taxes raised, still do not want gov''t run healthcare, still do not support gay marriage, still do not support subordinating our national security to the one-world gov''t UN crowd. Even in this situation, the MoveOn.org candidates (Kucinich, Edwards, Obama) cannot get over 25% of the Dem primary vote!! Even the Dems know that they cannot commit to a surrender in Iraq because the American populace doesn''t want a pacifist weakling in office; the Dem prez candidates won''t even commit to having troops out in 4 years because they know it will kill them in the general election. Dems may gain in Congress and win the White House, but they''ll be gone as fast as they came is they follow the looney left; and they ALL know it...so if you do get your Dem majority; trust me, it will lean much more towards the policies of the Bush Administration than the policies of MoveOn.org!!
Reply to this comment
by jerr11 November 20, 2007 11:01 PM EST
Ready to surge.

That sounds dangerous.

Get ready, Jeri, and hide that v i a g r a stuff from grandad.

Reply to this comment
by gkc99 November 20, 2007 11:04 PM EST
Doesn''t the spew every stop coming from the Mouth of Sauron? It''s like Linda Blair all over again.

Punkinhead Thompson ain''t goin nowhere! He don''t got his hound dawg with him, so he''s losing the cracka vote.

Giuliani and Romnuts are ************* each other to death. McCain would make a fine president of Mexico.

I LOVES it!
Reply to this comment
by elz523 November 21, 2007 12:10 AM EST
Typical liberal nonsense based on the notion that the government in ENTITLED to a piece of all money you earn, inherit, win...ALL money. The simple truth is that that money was already taxed once; to the deceased; there is no good reason that a mother and father shouldn''''t be able to take their already-taxed money (that the tax and spend libs are free to earmark to high heaven) and leave it to their children. Their death is not and should not be a "taxable event"!!--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by fredgrad2000 at 04:26 PM : Nov 20,

Very good conservative bs. The purpose of the inheritance tax is to prevent a permanent aristocracy in America. It is something our forefathers thought was an exceptionally good path to pursue in the land where all men are created equal.

Reply to this comment
by elz523 November 21, 2007 12:11 AM EST
The government has the right to tax whatever it likes. This is a right given to it by the people through our representatives. The government establishes the very system through which wealth is built and then protects that wealth. Without the government providing the rules for wealth accumulation and the currency of wealth, there is no wealth as we currently recognize it. When you are accumulating wealth you are simply doing a good job of applying the rules the government provides. Other than hard assets, what is wealth? It is a creation of the government. Tell us again why it isn''t fair for the government, that the establishes the game and makes the rules, to say that everyone gives up what they have at the end of the game, so that the new players all start out even.
Reply to this comment
by elz523 November 21, 2007 12:21 AM EST
Ahhh, the loons are out in full force for Thanksgiving!! George Bush is unpopular because of the management of the Iraq War, period. Americans would still be supporting the war (WMD or not) by 70-80% if we had WON!! Americans do not like to lose; but the looney left''''s confidence is completely unfounded, Americans are no more liberal or left-wing than they were pre-Iraq!!




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by fredgrad2000 at 04:26 PM : Nov 20, 2007
+ report abuse

Uh, anyone who supports the policies of George Bush should be careful about throwing around words like loon.
Reply to this comment
by denn034 November 21, 2007 12:54 AM EST
Go Thompson.
Reply to this comment
by mattgersz November 21, 2007 1:27 AM EST
Fred Thompson: Biggest underachieving candidate in either party.
Reply to this comment
by hsinco-2009 November 21, 2007 1:46 AM EST
Typical liberal nonsense based on the notion that the government in ENTITLED to a piece of all money you earn, inherit, win...ALL money. The simple truth is that that money was already taxed once; to the deceased; there is no good reason that a mother and father shouldn''''''''t be able to take their already-taxed money (that the tax and spend libs are free to earmark to high heaven) and leave it to their children. Their death is not and should not be a "taxable event"!!--------------------------------
----------------------------------------
--------

Posted by fredgrad2000 at 04:26 PM : Nov 20,



Freedom is not free. And its cost is not only blood. It takes $$$$ to have a vibrant and free democracy. What do you have against democracy that yuou don''t want to pay for it?
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 November 21, 2007 3:05 AM EST
International Brian Online: The NRO Are The Only People Still Believing That There Are Honest Politicians, And That They Are Republicans.
Reply to this comment
by jsilver2th November 21, 2007 6:21 AM EST
this is a joke right?
Reply to this comment
by afmca November 21, 2007 11:26 AM EST
When the Repub propagandists want to spread their lies they go to the NRO. This story cannot even be reused as TP in an outhouse in Alabama. Thompson is an idiot in the mold of Bush. He thinks this is another TV roll, but unfortunately the writers are on strike. What a worthless President he would make. What is scary is the many Repubs think he is deserving.
Reply to this comment
by lfitts1 November 21, 2007 12:15 PM EST
All you have do to understand this article is remember who wrote it--Larry Kudlow--if you have ever heard any of his views--he is as incisive as George W. Bush
Reply to this comment
by fredgrad2000 November 21, 2007 12:17 PM EST
Ahhh, the loons are out in full force for Thanksgiving!! George Bush is unpopular because of the management of the Iraq War, period. Americans would still be supporting the war (WMD or not) by 70-80% if we had WON!! Americans do not like to lose; but the looney left''''''''s confidence is completely unfounded, Americans are no more liberal or left-wing than they were pre-Iraq!!




--------------------
----------------------------------------
--------------------

Posted by fredgrad2000 at 04:26 PM : Nov 20, 2007
+ report abuse

"Uh, anyone who supports the policies of George Bush should be careful about throwing around words like loon." Posted by ELZ523

Except I''m right and that must drive you nuts; Americans still don''t oppose the fact that we invaded as a matter of principle, but as a matter of performance!! And you know it!! My point is proven by the election campaigns, no one who has a realistic shot is running on a platform of there is no war on terror or that we should never use our military; the issue is, rightly, Bush''s and his team''s PERFORMANCE in Iraq. I hold to my point, which you know is correct, if we had performed better in Iraq, had won the war rather than been bogged down, WMD or not, the support from the American public for the war and for Bush would be 70%, and 55%, respectively.
Reply to this comment
by fredgrad2000 November 21, 2007 12:21 PM EST

"Very good conservative bs. The purpose of the inheritance tax is to prevent a permanent aristocracy in America. It is something our forefathers thought was an exceptionally good path to pursue in the land where all men are created equal." - Posted by ELZ523

When did the Constitution establish the right of the government to determine how much is too much wealth and who is entitled to it? This is typical liberal redistribution of wealth nonsense; if I earned the money and was taxed on it, and want to leave for my children; the government shouldn''t be able to tax it just because I died!! They already taxed it; you whole premise is derived from rights to our government that don''t exist. When was the government granted the right in our constitution to determine who could accumulate wealth or not? And don''t quote me taxation law, because we are talking about money that has already been taxed!!
Reply to this comment
by fredgrad2000 November 21, 2007 12:27 PM EST
Freedom is not free. And its cost is not only blood. It takes $$$$ to have a vibrant and free democracy. What do you have against democracy that yuou don''''t want to pay for it? - Posted by HSinCO

I pay my taxes; and I pay at a higher rate of my income than most people, but it is faulty logic to assign to the government the right to tax the same money TWICE in order to redistribute wealth. Now, this is a legal issue, if its law, I''ll pay; I think its wrong, but my biggest issue is with your logic that its proper because it will (and was intended to) prevent the establishment of an "aristocracy"? When did it become, outside liberal world, the government''s right to determine who could have how much wealth? I''m pretty sure that''s not in the constitution, even under the usual "living constitutional reading" of the left...
Reply to this comment
by creeper00 November 21, 2007 12:32 PM EST
Nice try, Mr. Kudlow. Fred Thompson is already history.
Reply to this comment
by fredgrad2000 November 21, 2007 12:33 PM EST
HSinCO - my error, I assigned some of my response to the arguments made by another posted below. But my point to you is still valid in my view; I pay the taxes the government has assigned and will continue to do so; I do not believe further taxation on those who have the capital to invest is wise economically or in the long-run will generate more tax revenue. 2 points: 1) it is generally accepted that money invested is worth more due to the multiplier effect of that money (ex: money invested is used to expand production, and new workers are hired as a result, etc.) than money simply spent (taking money from those with capital to invest is economically unwise), and 2) Higher tax revenues are a DIS-incentive to work and expansion; thus ensuring a smaller tax-base even if taxed at a higher rate.
Reply to this comment
by roger3815 November 21, 2007 1:13 PM EST
Franken Berry is a third string candidate with no hope of being the president--if America has any sense left. Why he even gets taken seriously is a mystery to me. It will take a whole lot more reality than some high-powered java can provide to enliven his campaign.
Reply to this comment
by clestes-2009 November 21, 2007 2:24 PM EST
fredgrad2000

I probably read more in a day than you do in a month. I also read a wide variety of articles from international newspapers to nonpartisan opinion polls. They are all saying the same thing.

The American people are distinctly angry and unhappy with those in power now. They are pissed that Congress has not gotten done what they wanted, which was an end to Iraq. And guess who they blame for that?? You got it, the republicans. By more than a 2 to 1 margin.

The republican party has got major problems with its identity. They used to stand for fiscally conservative, small government, strong defense. Not anymore. Under this version of the rep party all those mainstays are trashed. The average joe of the rep party has no one to identify with. They have completely lost the moderate republican. Those people are now either independents or democrats.

There is not a single rep candidate except Ron Paul that appeals to the tradional republican. The party has been transformed into something that promotes empire building to build little Americas all over the world at a sky high cost in dollars, men, reputation and no matter how much is put into that effort, it is going to fail.

Look at history. There has never been an empire that did not crumble. And the one the neo-cons are dreaming of never even had a chance. Their idea was to reform the middle east into a bastion of democracy starting with Iraq.

Reply to this comment
by clestes-2009 November 21, 2007 2:26 PM EST
And if think the surge is working or has a chance of working, you don''t understand anything at all about Iraq. Success in Iraq is measured only by political reconciliation. Reduction in violence is MEANINGLESS without it. The moment US troops leave, the warlords will take over because there is NO UNIFIED IRAQ. That is not going to be a good thing.

So predictions of democratic success next year are not "looney", but based on the feelings of Americans today and the facts that by next year the ecomony will be worse than today plus the middle east will still be a caudron of chaos.

Take a good look around. Oil is at $100 a barrel. That alone will doom the republicans.
Reply to this comment
by balto_babs November 21, 2007 2:56 PM EST
Quit the conservative BS about how unfair the inheritance tax amd how it is costing your children. Until this country get''s it priorities straight and NEVER again allows children to die for lack of dental care, just stop your greedy whining!!!
If Thompson and all the Republican candidates are so gung-ho about the war in Iraq then let''s pay for it now with a war tax (as we did in the past) and not leave our children hundreds of billions in debt.
Reply to this comment
by taddles-2009 November 21, 2007 4:00 PM EST
But greedy whining is all you''re gonna get from the Repubs, they are the party of "all for me". they don''t want top pay taxes yet they want all the services txes pay for so really what they want is someone else to their taxes for them. They don''t want universal health care because then someone might ask them to pitch in a few bucks and God knows a few bucks might break a Conservatives bank account.

Perhaps we should start treating the Repubs like the greedy pigs they are and start making bacon out of their tax fattened carcases.
Reply to this comment
See all 33 Comments
  • MOST POPULAR
  • Viewed
  • Commented
Latest News
Featured Blogs