Showing posts with label doug hoffman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doug hoffman. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Doug Hoffman drops out of NY-23 race; endorses Matt Doheny

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Remember Doug Hoffman, the Republican who ran on the Conservative Party ticket in last year's special election in NY-23 against Democrat Bill Owens and Vichy Republican Dede Scozzafava? Hoffman was supported by Sarah Palin and conservative groups such as the Club for Growth and the Tea Party. Had the traitorous Scozzafava not dropped out of the race the weekend before the election and endorsed Owens, Hoffman would have likely won.

Fast forward to this year's race in the same district, and watch Hoffman give an object lesson in what it means to have "class":
Doug Hoffman has dropped out of the race to represent New York's 23rd Congressional District.

Hoffman's name will still appear on the ballot on the Conservative line; however, Hoffman said Tuesday morning that he wants his supporters to vote for Republican Matt Doheny.

"Our nation is at a crossroads, and it is imperative that on Election Day we wrest control of Congress from Nancy Pelosi and the Democrat majority," Hoffman said in a prepared statement. "It was never my intention to split the Republican vote."

Hoffman, a certified public accountant and businessman who lives in Saranac Lake, ran against Doheny in a Republican primary.

[...]

Now, Hoffman has decided to back Doheny.

"Matt Doheny and I may have differed on some issues during the course of our primary race," Hoffman said. "Now, we must put those differences aside and do what is best for our nation."

[...]

"My reaction is, Doug has done the right and noble thing," said Mark Barie, chairman of the Upstate New York Tea Party, when informed of Doug Hoffman's decision. "By suspending his campaign, he is giving Matt Doheny a clear shot at the incumbent, Mr. Owens, and increased the likelihood that Matt Doheny will be victorious on Nov. 2."

[...]

"This had to be a difficult decision for Doug," Barie said. "He earned the right to be our next congressman. But for a poor choice of campaign staff, he might well have been our next congressman. I don't blame Doug for that, I blame his staff still. I compliment him on a wise choice that had to be painful, but a wise choice nonetheless."
Attention Vichy Republicans Lisa Murkowski, Charlie Crist, et al. This is how it is done.

Related: Speaking of Murkowski, the Princess of Pork Projects is trying her hand at censorship. We always suspected she was a Democrat in GOP clothing. Now we're convinced. This kind of stuff is right out of their Alinsky playbook.

- JP

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Homegrown Analysis: Sarah Palin and NY-23 in Perspective

- By Ian Ransom

Post-election analysis of the NY 23 race is now speeding like an avalanche from every peak of concerned punditry, but that packed powder isn’t cascading from one of the district’s Adirondack mountain aeries. Perhaps I can hurl a relevant snowball, or two. I was actually born and raised in NY 23. Virtually everyone in my family still resides there. It’s an underestimated, overlooked, and far-too-easily dismissed frontier, which may have been one of the reasons Sarah Palin felt enough kinship with the region to offer moral, financial and political support via her endorsement of Hoffman. I have little doubt that she did her homework before putting her oar in. NY 23 is a hinterland that, in many ways, might’ve easily reminded Sarah of her own beloved Alaska.

NY 23 has always been an icy and isolated bastion of conservatism in a terrifyingly complicated liberal state that often seems to enjoy forgetting the district’s existence. When, as an adult, I would tell friends in New York City that I hailed from “upstate New York,” the response was invariably: “Oh. You’re from Albany?” No. We lived in a place far removed from such “southerly” climes. The border of Quebec is only twelve miles from the Franklin County town in which I was born. Trees outnumbered humans by about 5,000-to-1. So did cows, for that matter. But if anyone thinks NY 23 is some negligible corner of the world, think again.

NY 23 is far more complicated (and consequential) than it’s ever been given credit for. This recent race is partial proof of that, but the real evidence is found in its steadfastly conservative people -- a unique mix of hard-working business owners, factory workers, remnant farmers, and military families who endure unforgiving winters with stiff upper lips -- people who play things pretty close to the vest because that’s how one survives in tough elemental conditions. Outsiders are not rebuffed, but they can be regarded with a dose of deserved skepticism. That’s because outsiders often look with condescension upon locals, even as these “visitors” extol the breathtaking panorama of the Adirondack Mountains, lakes and other rural idylls.

There were unquestionably some in NY-23 who ignored and resented the publicity generated by outside forces in this recent congressional race. People in the district, at least from my experience, are stern but common-sensible people not interested in being guinea-pigs for national experiments in ideology. They are people who want to know, specifically, what their representatives are going to do to keep their remaining farms out of bankers’ clutches, their military base at Fort Drum open for business, their heating oil inexpensive, and their ungodly NY State taxes from ultimately overwhelming them. They also must contend with some of the highest rates of ACORN-style “generational welfare” in the North. Every nose-to-the-grindstone conservative in the district has been faced with galling percentages of people who have been on the dole for decades. The juxtaposition (and the cost in tax-dollars) is jarring, and this is one of several reasons the district has remained in Republican hands against all odds. With the district’s economic horrors amplified over the past three decades via the farming collapse, and recent downturns pushing matters to the very brink of ruin, conservative voters were already beginning to split before Palin or anyone else turned an eye to the region.

Fred Thompson and Sarah Palin rendered valuable service by bringing attention to the guaranteed catastrophe represented by Dede Scozzafava -- Dede the Ultimate Destruction. They exposed this RINO and sent her scurrying back to the Beltway Big Game Reserve where she belongs. It is my opinion, however, that Doug Hoffman and his team, even before possessing the ideological approbation of power-hitters like Palin, spent perhaps too much energy surfing the broader ideological wave and not enough addressing the very specific needs of a constituency known for rejecting any attempts to jump on big conceptual bandwagons. A close look at his campaign seems to bear this out. Conservative voters in NY 23 are some of the most issue-informed in the nation because their survival has depended upon it for decades —- not just since this latest crisis. They’re not a bunch of hicks, and they know far more than liberals were trying to lead the nation to believe (even as they shuttled “Plugs” Biden into Watertown, just for good measure).

As I noted, the rest of NY State tends to forget NY-23 exists and, thus, “North Country” voters have no time for concepts; they want sensible, specific conclusions. But things must play out, once any worthy game has begun. The board had already been too shaken-up, and conservative allegiances rendered to Scozzafava and Hoffman would have split the vote enough for Owens to win no matter what (or who) decided to become involved at the last minute. By helping voters in NY-23 oust the real, long-term danger to the district (Scozzafava), Americans like Palin and Thompson have helped a complex constituency in particular crisis win a key battle that, when it next counts, will help them handily win the war. This race —- and Sarah Palin’s decidedly subtle victory for real conservatism here —- need to be kept in perspective.

- Ian

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Conservative, Baby Conservative: The Meaning of NY-23

- By Thomas Lamb

This race was a political long-shot and Doug Hoffman, when you consider the dynamics of the race, did an outstanding job.

The same pundits who wrote Christie off, will be the same ones talking how the conservative movement is not "real" and offering the Hoffman election as proof the conservative movement and Palin as a losing platform/ride.

If that is the case, then Christie would have lost, because he ran on a conservative platform. The same conservative platform played out in Virgina.

And Obama campaigned in the races, Palin didn't...

As I stated here on this website, A Gentle Reminder to Sarah Palin: Marco Rubio...
On the face, this kid has it.

If he has no issues, this kid can win easily.

As for comments I made on the race being the testing ground for conservatives?

I still hold to the belief below on the Flordia Republican senate primary race being the testing ground for conservatives, but the New York race with Hoffman has added some interest in that it could become the catalyst in the conservative movement.

You have to hand it to the bigwigs within the Republican party. They know how to run a duplicitous campaign on smaller government.

It should be obvious now, that the Republican machine does not care about the message, it cares about winning.

Case in point, the Senate Republican primary that is unfolding in Florida.

Here you have the idiot Crist talking about how great the stimulus package is and wanting to become the senator of Florida under the Republican party banner.

Moreover, for the moment, you have a brand new poll showing the conservative losing to Crist.

But wait, is that a good sign? Not for the Republican party. The reason the Republican party is at odds right now is because it has no clear message.

It is being viewed as a duplicitous party. How can it be a party of smaller government when its bigwigs are pulling in behind Crist.

Just recently, a Gallup poll is showing the republicans making gains on the democrats. And Rasmussen has had gains at dead even between the parties, while the pundits continue to banter about how the republicans have to move from the right in order to win.

Given another poll done in February, on how independents view the stimulus package, I think Crist may be barking up the wrong tree when he is boasting about the benefits of the stimulus package and how he supports it.

As an aside, it would be interesting if Palin's PAC targets Florida and supports the conservative candidate. And even though there was no special election in Illinois, since the Democrats picked Burris, Illinois is setting to be a perfect storm for Palin's PAC, if Palin's PAC moves in on the state.

All in all, Florida will be the testing grounds for the conservative soul and may very well be the testing ground for Palin's PAC.

Call it fantasy politics if you want but it would certainly stir the political pot.


Given the race in New York and the demographics, politically speaking, Florida may still be the place to watch and see if Palin enters the political scene in Florida.

John McCain endorsed Crist and this Senate seat race would be (if an endorsement came in to Rubio)the one to give Palin's PAC its conservative wings.

Call it Going Rogue II: Revenge of the Conservatives
With the conservative movement starting in upstate New York, Florida is setting up to be the battleground for the heart and soul of the conservative movement.

After all, the race will be a closed primary and it will give Rubio time to prove his conservative case.

Not within 30 days like what happened with Hoffman and the rally cry may just be Conservative, Baby Conservative.

- Tom

Editor's note: This was being written after Fox News declared Owens the winner and reports from NY-23 by Stacy McCain.

Sarah Palin quotes Ronald Reagan: "The cause goes on."

Via her Facebook Notes page late Tuesday night, Sarah Palin offered a message of congratulations to the nation's two new Republican governors and words of encouragement to a long shot Conservative Party candidate for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives:
A Victory for Common Sense and Fiscal Sanity

Congratulations to the new Governors-Elect of Virginia and New Jersey! I’d also like to offer a special word of support to the new Lieutenant Governor-Elect of New Jersey, Kim Guadagno, the first woman to hold that office.

Of course, the real victors in this election are the ordinary men and women who voted for positive change and a return to fiscal sanity. Your voices have been heard.

The race for New York’s 23rd District is not over, just postponed until 2010. The issues of this election have always centered on the economy – on the need for fiscal restraint, smaller government, and policies that encourage jobs. In 2010, these issues will be even more crucial to the electorate. I commend Doug Hoffman and all the other under-dog candidates who have the courage to put themselves out there and run against the odds.

To the tireless grassroots patriots who worked so hard in that race and to future citizen-candidates like Doug, please remember Reagan’s words of encouragement after his defeat in 1976:

“The cause goes on. Don't get cynical because look at yourselves and what you were willing to do, and recognize that there are millions and millions of Americans out there that want what you want, that want it to be that way, that want it to be a shining city on a hill.”

The cause goes on.

- Sarah Palin
- JP

Monday, November 2, 2009

Quote of the Day (November 2, 2009)

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Billy Atwell:
"In 'reporting' on Palin’s endorsement of Doug Hoffman... [NPR's] Betsy Reed attacked Sarah Palin for walking in 'lockstep with the Christian right' by not endorsing the Republican candidate who is pro-abortion and pro-gay marriage. I guess Reed feels as though it would be more politically advantageous for Palin to abandon her ethics by voting for a candidate in her own party. Isn’t that the type of behavior most Americans demonize politicians for?"
- JP

Palin Schools Biden: "Hoffman, Baby, Hoffman!"

While campaigning in Upstate New York's 23rd Congressional District Monday, Vice President Joe Biden made the mistake of patronizing Sarah Palin:
"Sarah Palin thinks the answer to energy is ‘Drill, baby, drill,' " Biden said at a rally this afternoon. Then he leaned in to the microphone: "It's a lot more complicated, Sarah."
Biden should have known better than to take on Sarah Palin on energy issues, her strongest suit and an area in which she has real experience and knowledge in depth. The former Alaska governor and oil & gas commissioner was quick to respond on her Facebook Notes page with this statement:
Response to Vice President Biden's Comments Today About My Position On Energy Independence

As the vice president knows, I have always advocated an all-of-the-above approach to American energy independence. Among other things, my alternative energy goal for Alaska sits at 50 percent because Alaska reached more than 20 percent during my term in office. The Obama-Biden administration, on the other hand, recently announced a renewable goal of only 25 percent. However, domestic drilling should remain a top priority in order to meet America’s consumption and security needs.

The vice president’s extreme opposition to domestic energy development goes all the way back to 1973 when he opposed the Alaska pipeline bill. As Ann Coulter pointed out, “Biden cast one of only five votes against the pipeline that has produced more than 15 billion barrels of oil, supplied nearly 20 percent of this nation’s oil, created tens of thousands of jobs, added hundreds of billions of dollars to the U.S. economy and reduced money transfers to the nation’s enemies by about the same amount.”

This nonsensical opposition to American domestic energy development continues to this day. Apparently the Obama-Biden administration only approves of offshore drilling in Brazil, where it will provide security and jobs for Brazilians. This election is about American security and American jobs.

There’s one way to tell Vice President Biden that we’re tired of folks in Washington distorting our message and hampering our nation’s progress: Hoffman, Baby, Hoffman!

- Sarah Palin
This is the same Biden that recently placed himself in a "gaffe-free zone." When will Slow Joe learn that in a debate with Sarah Palin, he brings a knife to a gunfight?

- JP

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Reaction to Dede's Decision to Exit NY-23 Race, Part 2

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View From The Right:
"[Scozzafava's] withdrawal... is also a vindication for those Republicans, most notably Sarah Palin, who broke with the party and supported Hoffman, and egg in the face for the GOP stalwarts who backed Scozzafava, particularly Newt Gingrich."
Matt Lewis:
"The Winners - Sarah Palin - Her surprise endorsement of Hoffman helped cement her status as the favorite candidate of the grassroots conservative "tea party" set. That could be helpful in Iowa!"
Maggie's Notebook:
"[Hoffman's] candidacy got a giant boost when former governor, Sarah Palin stepped in and supported him, over Newt Gingrich's foolish endorsement of Scozzafava."
GOP 12:
"Now... among 2012 people, Palin obviously gets the big boost, Pawlenty gets some (albeit) late credit, Romney and Huck just look tepid (which feeds into lingering questions surrounding Mitt), and Newt looks like a carved up Jack-o-Lantern."
Betsy's Page:
"Besides Scozzafava, the big loser in all this is Newt Gingrich who had been going to the mattresses to defend his support for her. Meanwhile, Republicans have been following Sarah Palin's lead and endorsing Hoffman."
Dan Balz:
"Then there was Sarah Palin. In her first significant move since she resigned as governor of Alaska, Palin announced her support for Hoffman, prompting others to do the same."
DaTechguy:
"Big Winners: Sarah Palin - She was the republican who was willing to put herself on the line..."
Robert George:
"Palin... recognized where the base's train was going and quickly got on board. Romney missed the train -- and missed the opportunity to take a significant role in a tough internal ideological debate that his party is undergoing. Even if Romney [had]endorsed Scozzafava... at least he would have made a principled decision and could have articulated his reasons for it. Instead, he looks completely wishy-washy."
Des Moines Conservative Examiner:
"Sarah Palin and Fred Thompson had the guts to do what Mike Huckabee, Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich and the entire Republican Party would not do... Leaders take bold steps by standing on their principles. That is what Sarah Palin and Fred Thompson did."
Rob Harrison:
"Gov. Palin is definitely one who gets major credit, perhaps the most credit, for taking down the Scozzafava campaign. Back in Alaska, she put a few trophies on the wall of her war room of 'Republicans' who weren't upholding the ideals and positions of the Republican Party; now, with her endorsement of Doug Hoffman, she's added another, her first from the national scene."
North Country Public Radio:
"The conservative movement that cohered around former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin in 2008 has emerged as the vibrant core of the modern Republican Party."
Dump Dede:
"I see some liberals and certain moderates and their Razzie-esque support of Scozzafava as some sort of women’s rights leader, Tweets such as 'the GOP and big tent need more of her.' These were the same people who dumped all over Sarah Palin, the same people who dump on Michelle Bachmann, so no, 'women’s rights' isn’t something that you can cherry pick and decide to support based upon whether or not you like the woman in question."
C. Edmund Wright:
"Sarah Palin and Fred Thompson agreed before it was cool to be pro-Hoffman."
VotingFemale:
"This is a serious win for Sarah Palin and other big name GOP heavyweights who disagreed with the GOP business-as-usual forces such as Newt Gingrich and Michael Steele, who backed a Socialist ACORN-endorsed RINO and rejected a true Reagan Conservative, Doug Hoffman."
Rick Moran:
"And while Gingrich comes out of the fray with egg on his face, Sarah Palin emerges once again as a savvy leader who recognized the opportunity to ride the populist wave and make a sizable impact with her timely endorsement. Other potential 2012 presidential candidates hesitated, either failing to grasp the opportunity or not recognizing it. Palin’s boldness in sensing the mood of national conservatives and bucking the establishment only adds to the perception that... she will be a force in national politics in 2012 and beyond."
- JP

Jack Kelly: The Power of Palin

Jack Kelly wrote his syndicated column on NY-23 before the news broke this weekend that Dede Scozzafava was suspending her campaign. Here are some excerpts:
Political soothsayers will be studying the returns Tuesday from Virginia and New Jersey for omens that could predict the outcome of the midterm elections next year. But the race with the greatest national implications is for the House seat in upstate New York because of what it portends for the relationship between the Washington GOP establishment and an increasingly restive base.

[...]

The Washington GOP establishment quickly lined up behind Ms. Scozzafava. The National Republican Congressional Committee and the Republican National Committee have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on her behalf.

But the locals haven't been eager to support someone who is clearly a Republican In Name Only. Hence the candidacy of businessman Doug Hoffman, running on the Conservative Party line.

Mr. Hoffman was languishing in third place until he was endorsed by Sarah Palin. That triggered a flood of contributions and a rash of other endorsements.

[...]

The Republican Party may be saved from its "leaders" by the woman they love to hate. The Beltway Brahmins can't stand Sarah Palin because she isn't one of them, doesn't aspire to be one of them, and isn't afraid of them.

If Mr. Hoffman wins, Sarah Palin will deserve the lion's share of the credit. She made her bones in Alaska politics by taking on a smug, corrupt, complacent GOP establishment and beating it.

A larger reform opportunity beckons.
The full Kelly column was published in Saturday's edition of the Toledo Blade.

- JP

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Sarah Palin: A Time to Unite

On her Facebook Notes page, Sarah Palin has posted her thanks to Dede Scozzafava for suspending her campaign and a call to all who oppose ObamaCare and Cap and Tax to unite behind the candidacy of Doug Hoffman in New York's 23rd Congressional District:
A Time to Unite

I want to personally thank Republican Dede Scozzafava for acting so selflessly today in the NY District 23 race. Now it's time to cross the finish line with Doug Hoffman so that he can get to work for District 23 and the rest of America.

With Congress poised to overhaul one-sixth of our economy with so-called health care "reform" (which is really a government takeover of health care) and with plans to enact a cap-and-tax bill just as our economy struggles to recover, Doug Hoffman will be a voice for fiscal responsibility and common sense in Washington.

We need candidates like Doug now more than ever. In these final days of the campaign, it's vital that Doug continue to receive the enthusiastic support of those who want to bring common sense to Washington. Let’s help make it happen! You can help Doug by visiting his official website today and offering your support:

https://www.doughoffmanforcongress.com/donate3.html/

- Sarah Palin
- JP

Reaction to Dede's Decision to Exit NY-23 Race

Here is some early reaction to Dede Scozzafava's Saturday announcement that she is suspending her campaign for the U.S. House seat in New York 23rd District:

The Minnesota Independent:
"After seeing high-profile Republicans like Rep. Michele Bachmann and Sarah Palin side with her Conservative Party challenger, GOP-endorsed candidate Dede Scozzafava has suspended her campaign to win the special election in New York’s 23rd Congressional District."
Melissa Clouthier:
"Sarah Palin looks amazingly…..smart and prescient."
John Galt:
"This looks like an immense victory for Gov Palin. Go get em Cuda. It looks like the Artic Fox is now the head of the Republican party."
Hillbuzz:
"Big implications for Mitt Romney or Mike Huckabee in 2012…both of whom... are already laying claim to the "it’s my turn" mantle... but it sure feels like Sarah Palin delivered a karate chop to the "it’s their turn" nonsense…quite possibly to benefit herself... If she wants it, this Scozzofava business could help Palin a lot…especially if Hoffman wins."
Michael van der Galien:
"Although Scozzafava was destined [to] lose this race, especially after Gov. Sarah Palin and Gov. Tim Pawlenty endorsed Conservative Party candidate Doug Hoffman, she could still have been a spoiler for the conservative movement’s favorite."
Kim Priestap
"Scozzafava dropped like a rock once Hoffman and his conservative views became more well known. This can be attributed to folks like Sarah Palin and Fred Thompson."
Deadenders:
"Look what we have here, the power of Palin. Citizen Sarah Palin starts a trend."
America's Right:
"If you stand for something, they will come. Sarah Palin bought into this belief, and so she endorsed Hoffman."
Michelle Malkin:
"Hey, GOP elites: Can you hear conservatives NOW?!... Thank you, Sarah Palin."
Mickey McLean:
"After a week where her Conservative Party opponent Doug Hoffman picked up major endorsements from national figures such as Sarah Palin, Fred Thompson, and Tim Pawlenty and with a poll showing her falling hard out of first to third place in the race, Republican Dede Scozzafava has withdrawn from the New York’s 23rd District congressional contest."
HotAirPundit:
"Sarah Palin 1, Newt Gingrich 0"
Left Coast Rebel:
"So it seems that a Hoffman victory is one for conservatives and Sarah Palin. At least according to the grassrootssss."
More quotes to come...

- JP

Here's a real game-changer: Dede suspends her campaign!

Sarah Palin, look what you've done! Stacy McCain reports from NY-23:
"Just confirmed that Republican candidate Dede Scozzafava has quit the race."
More from FOX News:
Republican state Assemblywoman Dierdre Scozzafava has suspended her campaign for upstate New York's 23rd Congressional seat, leaving Democratic nominee Bill Owens and Conservative Party nominee Doug Hoffman in the race that will conclude Tuesday, Fox News has confirmed.

The move comes on the heels of a new poll that showed Scozzafava had fallen behind her two competitors in a race too close.

The Siena College poll has Owens picking up 36 percent of the vote, while Hoffman has 35 percent. Scozzafava has 20 percent, with nine percent of voters undecided.

It's a turnaround from the first Siena poll on the race in September, which had Scozzafava leading, followed by Owens and Hoffman.

The special election is Tuesday.
Although Scozzafava did not endorse Hoffman, NRCC spokesman Ken Spain told FOX News that Scozzafava is releasing her supporters to vote for Hoffman.

Now that's what we call a game-changer!

Related: Check out these two tweets from Democrat pollsters PPP:
"With about 200 interviews down we had Hoffman 45 Owens 26 Scozzafava 17...her withdrawal will just make it that much easier for Hoffman"

"Well that wrecks our NY-23 poll. We're finding Hoffman with more support than Owens and Scozzafava combined...explains the withdrawal"
- JP

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Miracle on 23rd Street

Don Surber, citing the latest NY-23 poll:
Markos Moulitsas — Kos — backed Scozzafava in this race. She is down 9 points in his poll since then.

Sarah Palin backed Hoffman. He is up 9 points since then.

Who is the fool now, fool? Barack Obama carried this district.
Meanwhile the latest hatching at Big Lizards:
Evidence is mounting (a favorite liberal-stream media word) that far from making a "blunder," Sarah Palin had her finger on the crystal ball: Hoffman looks like a winner now, and Palin was the first Republican heavy-hitter to come out for him.
The Lizards acknowledge that Fred Thompson endorsed Hoffman before Palin did, but point out that Fred, much as well all love the big lug, does not represent the GOP's future. We were Frederalists back when the man who portrayed Rear Admiral Joshua Painter in a submarine movie you may have seen, but we have to agree that Fred is not likely to make any more runs for the White House. Still, we can see him cast in the role of mentor and Chief of Staff in some future administration... 

- JP

Reaction to Sarah Palin's Doug Hoffman endorsement, Part 5

And the quotes just keep on a-comin'...

Doug Patton:
"Naturally most true conservatives are lining up to support Hoffman, the nominee of New York’s Conservative Party. Former Alaska Gov. Sara Palin, arguably our most reliable political compass at the moment, has enthusiastically endorsed him."
Maggie Thornton:
"Palin's endorsement of Doug Hoffman in New York's 23 Congressional District is driving the old boys crazy."
Chris Cillizza:
"Hoffman's ability to stay competitive financially... and high-profile endorsements from the likes of former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty among others has turned Hoffman from a fringe third-party candidate into a potential winner."
Logistics Monster:
"Tim Pawlenty is now endorsing Doug Hoffman in the special race in NY-23. Once again, Sarah is leading and Pawlenty is trying very hard not to look like he is following."
Patrick J. Buchanan:
"'Sometimes party loyalty asks too much,' said JFK. For Sarah Palin, party loyalty in New York’s 23rd congressional district asks too much. Going rogue, Palin endorsed Conservative Party candidate Doug Hoffman over Republican Dede Scozzafava."
Yael T. Abouhalkah:
"This is a high-profile bid by Palin to test her coattails in a U.S. congressional race."
Gary P. Jackson:
"Sarah wasn’t the first heavy hitter to come in and help Hoffman. Dick Armey and his Club For Growth were early supporters followed by Fred and Jeri Thompson. Sarah was the first person, however, to really stake her reputation on Doug Hoffman. Sarah was the first person considered a front runner in 2012 to lay it on the line."
Alan Orfi:
"An upset victory by Doug Hoffman would send huge reverberations to the Republican establishment... Genuine conservatives such as Sarah Palin and the host of conservative commentators who had the courage to stand up for Hoffman will have taken a huge step forward in reclaiming their party."
James Taranto:
"Establishment Republicans like Newt Gingrich lined up behind Scozzafava, while conservatives like Sarah Palin endorsed Hoffman."
Investors.com:
"Sarah Palin? But isn't that the kiss of death in a northeastern liberal state? This is clearly the thinking of those 11 local party bosses who chose Scozzafava, but with Hoffman having surged into the lead in late October, the voters seem to think otherwise."
- JP

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Palin Power Impresses Moderate Blogger

Sarah Palin is, as we pointed out here, now viewed more favorably by independents than is Vice President Joe Biden. If she can improve her standing among moderates as well, she will have made considerable progress with two key demographic groups. One influential moderate who appears to now look more favorably upon the former governor than in times past is Michael van der Galien, who blogs at PoliGazette. Here are excerpts from his latest post, "Palin Power in Action":
When Governor Sarah Palin endorsed Conservative Party candidate in New York for Congress, she took quite a big risk.

[..]

Hoffman trailed his Republican and Democratic opponents in the polls. Until, that is, Palin announced her support for the conservative New Yorker. Suddenly, Hoffman received a lot of free coverage and a lot of money, because Palin not only used her SarahPAC to donate to his campaign, she also called on her Facebook fans to do the same. The result? Hoffman is now leading in the polls and he suddenly has more funds available than his Republican rival.

[...]

The reason for the sudden support is crystal clear: once Palin endorsed Hoffman, other Republicans could also find the courage to revolt against the official leadership of their party.
Hoffman's turnaround is no small accomplishment for the 2008 GOP vice presidential candidate, says van der Galien. And we agree that it's impressive. Considering the massive resources the NRCC is pouring into the district in support of his liberal Republican opponent, if Hoffman wins the congressional seat, it will be all the more an impressive achievement, thanks in no small part to Sarah Palin.

- JP

Monday, October 26, 2009

Terry Bascom: Get off your knees and stand with Sarah

In Terry Bascom's latest column for Annuit coeptis, he says Sarah Palin is calling conservatives to arms, and it's time for them to get off of their knees and stand with her:
The fact is that we are already engaged in a civil war. It is not being fought with guns and knives, but the U.S. is under attack. And the enemy is within. Our neighbors, our family, our friends are lined up on one side or the other, and only the Democrat/Liberal “progressives” are on the attack. The Republican/Conservative “traditionalists” are still hoping for a reasoned discussion leading to a restoration of American tradition. We want to avoid open hostilities while they savagely attack and attempt to destroy us and our non-compliant leaders – like Palin.

[...]

I do know Sarah Palin, and while I do not agree with her in all things (what two people do?), I fundamentally trust her. And I trust the fact that the Democrats and progressives, as well as the liberal wing of the Republican Party, want to marginalize or destroy her. I am not willing to give her my unqualified allegiance, but I am willing to give her the benefit of the doubt. And I appreciate that she is willing to break with the Republican Party on principle.

[...]

Sarah has stepped forward. She might not always be right in particular choices, but at least she is standing in the breach and pointing forward by pointing us back to our proud tradition and values. We need to get off our knees and stand with her, where we will take some shots but have the opportunity to give as good as we get.
Read the unabridged version here.

- JP

Reaction to Sarah Palin's Doug Hoffman endorsement, Part 4

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Don Surber:
"Conservatives blame the Republican Party’s fall from power on the moderates. The moderates blame Sarah Palin. And Sarah Palin is flexing her political muscles. She has this year and next to show she can raise money and bring voters to the polls."
Conservative Girl With a Voice;
"While Huckabee is not going to endorse the liberal Republican Party candidate, he is not going to support a man who believes in the same things he does? For the sake of conservatism, take a stand!"
Right Thinking:
"Palin demonstrates her commitment to principle, and she remains faithful to her conservative principles, even when it means going against the party establishment. That’s true leadership, and that’s one thing that sets Sarah Palin apart from most politicians."
Pamela Geller:
"Sarah Palin gets it -- big time. The future looks bright."
Standing Pat:
"Whatever the outcome of NY23, Palin sided with true conservatives and real patriots. Gingrich didn’t... Who will we support... for 2012? Palin wins hands down."
Anthony Moretti, Ph.D.:
"Her recent endorsement of the most conservative of the candidates in one New York Congressional election makes clear that Mrs. Palin is ready to carve out her niche as the conservative voice of the Republican Party."
More Than Right:
"Palin is appealing to the real power. That power was represented by the 1.8 million Tea Party protesters who marched on Washington not that long ago, which was comprised of disgruntled Republicans and Democrats alike."
Stacy McCain:
"The Doug Hoffman campaign collected $116,000 online in a single day last week [just after Sarah Palin endorsed him]... I spoke with a campaign source who told me that the overwhelming majority of those donations were in the $20-$50 range."
LCBorden:
"She can draw a crowd, she can raise money, she can sway closely contested elections... More power to her. Goodbye Newt, hello Sarah!"
The Lonely Conservative:
"The GOP needs less political tactitians like Newt Gingrich and more rogues like Sarah Palin and Doug Hoffman. Or they can continue down the same destructive path they’re on, only to find themselves completely irrelevant and powerless against the democrats in their quest for socialism in America."
The Reaganite Republican:
"And it's quickly looking like Newt and the Huckster flat-out blew it --  along with the GOP grandees that saddled NY-23 with this unfortunate choice."
American Conservative Daily:
"Sarah Palin, et al. broke ranks to support Hoffman and she threw her SarahPac behind him not out of Gingrich’s sense of expedience but out of concerned principle."
The Right Rev Rowland:
"Hoffman has surged in recent days ahead of both the Democrat and Republican candidates. Add to that a one-day fundraising total of over $116,000, and the momentum is clearly with the Independent candidate. Perhaps the endorsement [by] Gov. Sarah Palin had something to do with it?"
Dan Riehl:
"I still remember Sarah Palin referencing Newt and his ideas about getting beyond party to some degree. Funny that she chose one side in NY and he the other."
The Daily Instigator:
"After Palin Endorsement, Conservative Candidate Surges Ahead"
- JP

Pawlenty follows Palin's lead; endorses Hoffman

Red State.com's Erick Erickson has the scoop:
With polling now showing NY-23 has come down to a two man race between Hoffman and Owens, the Democrat, momentum is clearly in Hoffman’s favor.

Gov. Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota is now adding to the momentum becoming the first sitting Republican Governor to endorse Hoffman. This comes on the heels of Sarah Palin’s endorsement from last week.
Erickson says that Pawlenty's endorsement is remarkable because the Minnesota governor "has not been seen as diverging with the Republican establishment." He adds that Pawlenty's bold move redraws the battle lines for 2012:
I still don’t think Palin is going to run, but even were she, we now have two candidates, a former Governor and Vice Presidential candidate and a sitting Governor and potential 2012 candidate breaking with the establishment in favor of the Republican base.
Moreover, with Palin and now Pawlenty on board, will Mitt Romney and other potential 2012 GOP presidential candidates feel the pressure?
Now we’re going to have to ask where the other 2012 candidates are. Who else is willing to be brave and bold. Who else will defy the beltway and stand with the heartland? Conservative activists have legitimately made New York’s 23rd Congressional District a Hill to Die On. The GOP establishment must know that it will either win with us or lose without us.
When asked Thursday, just minutes before Sarah Palin made her announcement that she was endorsing Doug Hoffman, Pawlenty had declined to make an endorsement, explaining that he was not familiar with the details of the race in NY-23:
"You know I haven't been following that, I haven't studied the race at all," he said. "It's not that I would or wouldn't, I just don't know anything about it. I haven't taken the time to study their positions, their records, so I haven't taken a position on it."
It appears that the Minnesota governor did some homework over the weekend. We applaud Tim Pawlenty for following Sarah Palin's lead. Read Erick's full RedState.com diary, including Pawlenty's statement, in its entirety here.

- JP

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Memo to Stephen Stromberg: That's Thunder, Not Blunder

From Big Lizards (which has, btw, one of the coolest header banners in all of blogdom):
In response to Palin's endorsement (and the $116,000+ in cash it helped raise for Mr. Hoffman), a peevish blogger at the Washington Post, Stephen Stromberg, has declared it "Sarah Palin's latest blunder." He "reasons" that she will only alienate the GOP establishment and disrupt their vital mission of moving the Republican Party further to the left, so that they can finally win... not that such a pyrrhic victory would matter:
If Hoffman -- somehow -- wins with her help, she will have alienated a GOP establishment desperate to reconstruct past majority coalitions that included moderates, both because she will have hurt their cause and because they will fear her influence among true believers. In return, she might continue to appeal to some far-right primary voters in 2012, but that only gets you so far (a possible victory in Iowa, owing to the heavy social conservative vote in the caucuses there, and perhaps respectable showings in the South). In other words, in this best-case scenario, she will have begun to lay the groundwork to be the Mike Huckabee of 2012. Except in 2012, she will probably be running against, well, Mike Huckabee....

More than anything, though, Palin’s endorsement probably makes an Owens victory more likely. That would not just be a humiliation for Palin. It would be a notable loss for her party as it is trying to shake off years of electoral debacle.
Heh. I always love it when liberal Democrats give Republicans and conservatives helpful advice on getting our mojo back. (For further amusement, the blog Stromboli, or whatever his name is, writes for is titled "PostPartisan"!)

I suspect that if Palin draws the ire of liberals by endorsing Hoffman, she's on the right track.
We agree with our Big Lacertilian colleagues. Liberals are always, it seems, trying to give Republicans advice. You know that the left only has the GOP's best interest at heart. And if you believe that, I can get you a good deal on some Chrysler stock to fill out your portfolio...

Palin is right on target, like a B-24 Liberator bomber taking flack. Mr. Stromberg has apparently been given some bad information. He has heard Sarah Palin's thunder and is trying to pass it off as blunder. We refer him to our recent post where we pointed out:
Since her name first came to national attention, those who know Sarah Palin well -- both friend and foe alike -- have warned that her opponents who underestimate her do so at their own peril. Those who have tried to destroy her and have failed should have listened.
- JP

Reaction to Sarah Palin's Doug Hoffman endorsement, Part 3

Shannon Bell:
"Sarah Palin’s endorsement of Doug Hoffman will surely be a test for her; a test to see if her name carries as much weight as I and a lot of others thinks it does. Backing Hoffman means going against the Republican establishment. But it also means standing for Conservative principles; the one thing lacking in the GOP right now."
The Note:
"If there's a Republican who commands a bigger army [than Sarah Palin] at this moment in American politics, name her or him."
Adrienne Ross:
"We have been waiting for this endorsement. Here it is, and as a New Yorker, I am especially pleased to report that Sarah Palin has endorsed Doug Hoffman for the 23rd Congressional District of New York."
David Weigel:
"The first repercussion of Palin’s move? Last time, reporters got a chance to ask Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R-Minn.) if he’d make an endorsement in the race, and Pawlenty said he hadn’t been following it."
Tom Bevan:
"If that is any indication of Pawlenty's style and the kind of approach he takes to the 2012 GOP primary, I'm not sure how inspiring he'll be to the base of the Republican party..."
Voting Female Speaks:
"Sarah Palin takes off the gloves and withholds support for the Republican RINO, Dede Scozzafava and the GOP Washington establishment who now feels the Palin heat of disapproval in the New York special election for the 23′rd District seat in the US House of Representatives."
Mark Tapscott:
"Prediction: Not being identified with 'any political machine' will be the most important asset a congressional candidate can have in 2010."
Reagan to Palin:
"It’s obvious that despite the liberal media pundits predicting her political demise, Palin has come out swinging with integrity and conservative conviction."
Michelle Malkin:
"Attention, GOP establishment: Can you hear conservatives now? ... Sarah Palin is listening."
Mike Volpe:
"Dede Scozzafava has become the symbol, for many Conservatives, for what is wrong with the Republican Party. The Tea Party movement has decided to draw a line in the sand and flex its muscle electorally. Political heavyweights like Fred Thompson, Sarah Palin, and Dick Armey have all weighed in."
Dave's Notepad:
"[Palin's] endorsement of a conservative third-party candidate was not just a slap at the always-meandering Newt Gingrich, but a shot across the bow of the Republican Party itself. I hope Michael Steele is paying attention..."
Don Surber:
"Sarah Palin needed no prodding in endorsing [Hoffman]. It is a gimme. Once again she bucks the Establishment and bolts the party... Call it post partisan."
Just a conservative girl:
"Sarah had said she was going to stand by conservative principles before party. Today she did just that."
Eternity Road:
"GOP-NY's power-brokers are aghast that this outsider, this Alaskan woman, could upset their applecarts so easily. They confront the prospect of irrelevance before a superior power, and it frightens them."
Michael Rulle:
"This will not win [Sarah Palin] 'friends'– now that is — in the Republican Party. Plus she is putting the GOP on notice. She’s throwing her influence around, so to speak. She is trying to force the center of gravity of the party toward her views."
- JP

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Reaction to Sarah Palin's Doug Hoffman endorsement, Part 2

Here's some more reaction to Sarah Palin's endorsement of Doug Hoffman in NY-23...

Gates of Vienna:
"Let’s see if Scozzafava’s husband calls the police on Sarah Palin, hmmm?"
Joshuapundit:
"This is a good example of [Sarah Palin] understanding something that seems lost on most politicians. The tea party movement and the general disaffection of the electorate isn't necessarily pro-Republican, and unless the GOP realizes that and start standing for principle, they are simply going to continue to be marginalized."
Libertas:
"Sarah Palin is embarking on a journey that may ultimately lead, I believe, to a massive new rebirth of freedom, liberty and revival..."
Chris Cillizza:
"Sarah Palin's decision to endorse the Conservative Party candidate over the Republican nominee in a special House election in upstate New York is the latest example that the former Alaska governor's allegiance is to her conservative principles rather than the edicts of the party."
Clarice Feldman:
"The Revolution is On!"
Doctor Zero:
"The rising star of Sarah Palin passes over the melancholy ruins of Newt Gingrich, who spent the last of his credibility endorsing Scozzafava."
Dan Riehl:
"Sarah Palin puts forth her argument for her NY - 23 position on social media site, Facebook. Newt, otoh, has his posted internally on his own association's site. Does that tell us anything about where both are coming from today, about which is actually more in step with today's culture and electorate?"
John Fund:
"Sarah Palin's decision to endorse the Conservative Party candidate in an upstate New York special election for Congress has dramatically raised the stakes in the race."
Sheldon Alberts:
"Her decision to go against the GOP establishment in the New York campaign underscores yet again her determination to position herself as a party outsider, with an eye on a possible presidential run in 2012. And her bet is that the party's going nowhere if it appeals to the same political middle ground that helped Barack Obama win the White House."
John Winder:
"With every new Facebook entry, both the DNC and GOP cringe, then deny that Palin matters. It must genuinely irk them to no end that Palin can get border to border and coast-to-coast coverage from a single Facebook entry. This must keep the Obamas and their TV scheduler up at night."
Jennifer Rubin:
"Newt Gingrich has himself tied up in knots explaining why Dede Scozzafava — a pro-card-check, pro-gay-marriage, rather liberal Republican (think Olympia Snowe)... is really the 'practical' choice for Republicans. Tim Pawlenty says he 'doesn’t know anything about it.' Sarah Palin is backing the insurgent Republican Doug Hoffman. That will tell Republican voters something about all three potential candidates for 2012."
Perry de Havilland:
"Palin right, Gingrich wrong"
Virginia Virtucon:
"Palin even worked in a line about this once again is 'a time for choosing,' a phrase made famous by Ronald Reagan. (The more she remains focused on these core elements... the clearer it becomes that she will be the true heir to Reagan in 2012. If 2012 is a repeat of 1980, expect Mitt Romney to play the role of George Bush in the primaries as the establishment candidate.)"
Mondo Frazier:
"Every time squishy Republicans and Democrats see a conservative threat on the horizon–whether it’s just a commentator like Glenn Beck or a politician like Sarah Palin–their undies get twisted into the most odd shapes. This causes them to lose not only their composure, but their good sense."
Doug Hoffman:
"Sarah stands up for what she believes in and is a commonsense conservative, a Reagan Republican."
- JP