From Christian Science Monitir: Sarah Palin’s advice to Mitt Romney: 'Go rogue'
Mitt Romney has been getting lots of gratuitous advice from fellow Republicans and conservatives worried about what they see as a presidential campaign that’s slipping toward defeat.
As usual, Sarah Palin is the most direct and colorful. In a statement to the Weekly Standard on Saturday, she put it this way:
"With so much at stake in this election, both Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan
should 'go rogue' and not hold back from telling the American people
the true state of our economy and national security. They need to
continue to find ways to break through the filter of the liberal media
to communicate their message of reform."
"America
desperately needs to have a 'come to Jesus' moment in discussing our
big dysfunctional, disconnected, and debt-ridden federal
government," the former Alaska governor and 2008 vice presidential candidate told the conservative magazine.
Are you more (or less) conservative than Mitt Romney? Take our quiz!
To
some Republican kibitzers, “going rogue” means unleashing Rep. Paul
Ryan, Mr. Romney’s running mate and a relative youngster who seemed to
bring some pizzazz to an otherwise staid ticket.
“They not only
need to use [Ryan] out on the trail more effectively, they need to have
more of him rub off on Mitt because I think Mitt thinks that way but
he’s gotta be able to articulate that…. I think too many people are
restraining him from telling [his vision],” Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker told a radio interviewer Friday.
Where’s the evidence of Romney’s so-called “bold choice” in picking Ryan? others ask.
“Even in Wisconsin, I think he’s being underused,” Charlie Sykes, the radio host who interviewed Gov. Walker, told Politico.
“I guess what’s frustrating is especially now that we’re embroiled in
this conversation about the makers versus the takers, where is Paul
Ryan? He is eloquent, he knows the numbers, he can frame this in a very
compelling way. The fact that he is not front and center on some of this
is, I think, a lost opportunity.”
Even in Wisconsin – Ryan’s home state – an NBC poll shows Obama leading Romney by 5 percentage points, and that’s just part of recent polling news the Romney campaign must find troubling
As the Monitor’s Mark Trumbull reported this week, Obama leads Romney in
eight out of nine swing states where the two are in tight contests:
Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio, Virginia, and Wisconsin. North Carolina is the only one where Mr. Romney currently has an edge.
Unleashing Ryan may not be the answer, of course. As House Budget Committee chairman, he authored a plan that was controversial – particularly for what it portended for Medicare, the health care program for seniors. He tried to explain it at an AARP meeting this week, but was booed by many in the audience.
Apparently, that wasn’t just a one-time deal in a room full of retirees. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll this week shows Obama leading Romney by 10 points (47-37) in dealing with Medicare.
It’s
a law of all organizations – including (maybe especially) political
campaigns – that when things are tough, infighting and finger-pointing
will ensue. Politico’s must-read scoop last Sunday – “Inside the
campaign: How Mitt Romney stumbled” – set off something similar among
conservative pundits.
Weekly Standard editor William Kristol
called Romney’s comments about “the 47 percent” who presumably would
never vote for him because they pay no federal income taxes “stupid and
arrogant.” Rush Limbaugh
complained that “every Democrat under the sun's retweeting that all
over the place,” that too many conservative fellow travelers who once
supported Romney “have bailed on him.”
Over at the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page, columnist and former Reagan speech writer Peggy Noonan wrote, “It’s time to admit the Romney campaign is an incompetent one.”
Then
she revised her estimation: “This week I called it incompetent, but
only because I was being polite,” she wrote. “I really meant ‘rolling
calamity.’"
That left Chris Wallace at Fox News questioning Ms. Noonan’s “conservative bona fides.”
“Sometimes they’re New York City’s
idea of conservatives,” Mr. Wallace said of Noonan and others similarly
critical of the Romney campaign. Ouch. And here we thought such
intramural squabbles were principally the province of Democrats.
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