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CPAC & 2012: Can Potential White House Hopefuls Actually Deliver?

Cpac 2011 Splash

LIZ SIDOTI   02/12/11 02:57 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Republicans who want to be the one to make Barack Obama a one-term president are promising big changes should the GOP win the White House in 2012.

"Economic growth, job creation, smaller government, less spending, lower taxes, rational regulation and a stronger presence in the world," as Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour put it Saturday – echoing a slew of others also considering running.

These grandiose pledges sell well to the die-hard conservatives who play an outsized early role in determining the GOP nominee.

But would – could – Republicans do all they say?

Probably not.

The realities of governing often conflict with the rhetoric of campaigning.

Just ask Obama, who often says: "Change is hard."

He had some major achievements in his first two years, including the new health care law. But he failed to make good on other campaign promises – closing the Guantanamo Bay prison for suspected terrorists, for example.

Now in charge of the House, Republican leaders are discovering for themselves that it's not easy to keep pledges made in the heat of a campaign.

They said last fall they would cut $100 billion from the federal budget. Once put into power, they soon scaled back their goal, a concession to the difficulty of slicing into pet projects.

Under pressure now from freshman lawmakers backed by the tea party, they're trying to stick to their original goal.

Countless factors play into the success or failure of making campaign agendas reality after an election.

The political environment often determines which policies are proposed, which become law. Divided government always causes hiccups. Even if one party controls all levers of government, that's no guarantee common goals will prevail.

Tea party-backed lawmakers are causing headaches for GOP leaders today, much as liberals have done for the White House over the past two years.

Unforeseen circumstances – wars, a recession – also can derail the best laid plans.

But all that was lost on the Republican presidential wannabes who auditioned before more than 10,000 people at this weekend's Conservative Political Action Conference, the largest such gathering of the year so far and the unofficial kickoff of the 2012 GOP nomination fight.

One by one, GOP hopefuls sketched out a broad vision of America under Republican rule, hoping to woo conservatives whose support is critical. There was little daylight on the major policy issues. Most emphasized longtime conservative tenets – lower taxes, smaller government, a strong defense – and called for scrapping Obama's health care plan.

"We need to restore American confidence, American optimism, and America's hope for the future. We need to restore the American Dream by restoring American commonsense," said former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, a pitch he seemed to acknowledge was lofty.

"None of this is going to be easy," Pawlenty added.

Still, all suggested they'd bring wholesale change. They found time to bash Obama in the process.

"It's going to take more than new rhetoric to put Americans back to work – it's going to take a new president," former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney said.

So how would Romney bring jobs back and turnaround the economy?

He didn't spell it out, saying only: "The right answer is to believe in America – to believe in free enterprise, capitalism, limited government, federalism – and to believe in the constitution, as it was written and intended by the founders."

South Dakota Sen. John Thune suggested overhauling Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, and changing how business is done in the partisan capital by ending "backroom deals and big government ways." He ignored the fact that others before him have tried – and failed.

Many were short on specifics on how they'd do it all.

Details, to be sure, will come over the next year. No Republican has announced a candidacy though several are gearing up. Once they do, the pressure for specifics will increase.

Several, including Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels and Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, used examples from their states to explain how they would shift the country to more conservative governance.

Aware of the heavy lifting needed, Daniels told an audience demanding purity in their candidates: "We must unify America, or enough of it, to demand and sustain the big change we propose."

Others started to try to distinguish themselves from the pack with proposals that at first blush seem extraordinarily difficult – if not unlikely – to accomplish.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich called for replacing the Environmental Protection Agency – "made up of self-selected bureaucrats, who are anti-American jobs, anti-American business, anti-state government, anti-local control" – with an agency focused on environmental and energy solutions.

One-upping Gingrich was former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson. He pledged to legalize marijuana.

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WASHINGTON — Republicans who want to be the one to make Barack Obama a one-term president are promising big changes should the GOP win the White House in 2012. "Economic growth, job creation, s...
WASHINGTON — Republicans who want to be the one to make Barack Obama a one-term president are promising big changes should the GOP win the White House in 2012. "Economic growth, job creation, s...
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10:34 AM on 02/24/2011
No, they can't and trust me, their personal lives will dispell all the truths, especially Mitch Daniels, he knows why he shouldn't and can not run.....the only cure for this country is summed up in three words: O-BA-MA! Baby!
hagenjr
Shovel ready freeborn son of the Republic
02:09 PM on 02/15/2011
This best thing about this was the lack of alinsky radicals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Don Giovanni
Woody's guitar says it all.
08:27 AM on 02/15/2011
All this idolization of Reagan at CPAC when in reality this President, who has been widely hailed as a hero of the working class, set in motion policies that have been mind-bogglingly beneficial to the wealthy and devastating to working people and the poor.
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realrand
Liberally Speaking...
02:20 AM on 02/15/2011
Donald Trump could do show called "Republican President Apprentice".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Don Giovanni
Woody's guitar says it all.
08:28 AM on 02/15/2011
He's fired.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SequimBob2
11:49 PM on 02/14/2011
Well this group should make any conservative proud
But as for me, I’m moving away from this scary crowd
There’s Haley Barbour who thinks the K.K.K. is not so bad
And Ron Paul, who’s a little bit crazy and a whole lot of mad
Let us not forget Good ol’ Newt, the mighty serial divorcer
And Mitt Romney wants you to know his faith is not a cult, sir
While Timmy Pawlenty pretends he’s not a ninety-pound weakling
And blank-stare Bachmann's trying to look as if she has an inkling
And of Course Silly Sarah who wants America to arm and reload
No princes or princesses here, just the usual suspects, GOP toads
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
collprof
01:34 AM on 02/15/2011
Not one of this crowd will even come close to uniting a party dying to split based on who is more Reagan then Reagan. And even Reagan wouldn't make the crowd.

I am so looking forward to their announcements of who is running and the front runners. Don't forget Palin and Wannabe, if announced runners, must leave Fox news and fore-go all that free publicity.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bosse
09:26 PM on 02/14/2011
Glad, you put up the photos of those President wannabees, who we will be privileged to watch ad nausea um the next 23 months. But you left out the pink, or was it ornagish yellow golden.haired rich man, lets say Mr T for short, who is most likely be our next Prez.
I heard his quick solution for our unemployment, and for regaining our respect all over the world.
Chinese goods to be taxed 25% and scare them , they will come to negotiate.
Do not worry, the 1billion Chinese buyers of our industrial and agricultural products, may stop buying American or, the Wall Marts will charge 25% more and will be empty soon, both of customers and sellers! And the sales people will be on our unemployed benefits roll, and once again our economy will perish!
We can put up factories to employ Americans to make 50 cents radios, with batteries (included). penny note books and one dollar shoes. Of course they will be happy to be paid dollar a day, because the Mexicans will not take those jobs.
Wise guys like this anus faced fake billionaire that comes out every four years, has his name on high rises that are empty or Casinos that lose money, Japanese money that is...ought to stay chasing young girls who want to be queen of something.
08:29 PM on 02/14/2011
What a Lineup!
08:45 PM on 02/14/2011
Snap, Crackle and Pop.
zatonoichi
the blind swordsman
09:04 PM on 02/14/2011
Squish, blattt, and thud!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
From the Raft
11:10 PM on 02/14/2011
Would love to see them compete as NHRA drivers!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
keramos
Guns don't kill, bullets do. Tax the bullets
11:42 PM on 02/14/2011
With or without safety harnesses.  Wait.  That's it.  Harnesses are a government overreach.  Therefore, the answer must be - without.  Sorry to bother you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TXOBAMAGIRL73
We got the down,but not the trickle~ RevAl
06:57 PM on 02/14/2011
CPAC (Crazy Pompous A$$tray Convention) start with crazy and ended with crazy!!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
05:39 PM on 02/14/2011
Sorry but our 18th century founders would not have a clue as to how to deal with our 21st century world. They knew nothing about decades of U.S.  adjustments to Arab world leaders that has culminated in a general backlash against U.S. interference. The country they started no longer exists.  The warnings given about letting the corporations garner too much power went unheeded. They would be aghast at what we have become. We, the people, mean nothing these days for the conservatives will not allow the present administration to spend a dime of the people's money on themselves. The only entities worthy of getting the people's money are the rich and super rich corporations.  That is not why the country was founded and that was never the purpose of our fight.

What is the original purpose of our country?  The preamble to our constitution sets forth six noble reasons to create this country.  Justice, peace, common defense and general welfare, and liberty most of all.

And what about the tax argument?
"A means of silently lessening the inequality of property is to exempt all from taxation below a certain point, and to tax the higher portions or property in geometrical progression as they rise. Whenever there are in any country uncultivated lands and unemployed poor, it is clear that the laws of property have been so far extended as to violate natural right."
- Thomas Jefferson, 1785
And later on he said:
"I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations, which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the laws of our country."
- Thomas Jefferson, 1816

We need to start paying attention to reality and stop gawking at the shiny objects dangling from the politicians noses.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Elbrando
The dream shall never die - Ted Kennedy
04:56 PM on 02/14/2011
A chicken in every pot and a million dollars in every rich person's mattress.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
keramos
Guns don't kill, bullets do. Tax the bullets
11:43 PM on 02/14/2011
That's a chicken for every doctor bill, isn't it?
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
04:48 PM on 02/14/2011
Politicians are like diapers.

They should be changed on a fairly regular basis..............

for exactly the same reasons.
04:42 PM on 02/14/2011
Anyone remember the 2010 GOP midterm election promises/platform?
"Help us take our gov. back so we can bring jobs to America!", etc, etc...

Yet more GOP hypocrisy as evidenced by the article's first 2 paragraphs:
"Economic growth, job creation, smaller government, less spending, lower taxes, rational regulation and a stronger presence in the world," as Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour put it Saturday – echoing a slew of others also considering running.

So, how many elections does the GOP need to win before introducing job creation initiatives?

Look upon their mighty works, and despair!
1. repeal Glass-Steagall
2. Nt'l security failures (9/11,Iraq WMD,Bin Laden@tora bora
3. Millions of jobs gone forever under GWB
4. Record # of filibusters during Obama's first 2 yrs
5. Bush tax cuts
6. attempt to cut SS, Medicare, Medicaid
7. 2008 Wall St. bailout
8. 80's S&L disaster
9. Iran-Contra
10. Nixon promotion of communism, validates it as "accepted" by the USA, forever damaging the American ideal. (all downhill from this point)
...etc, etc....

Somebody PLEASE tell me how the GOP has every helped the Americans who actually hold this entire country together! (lower & middle class people citizens)
If our government isn't in the business of helping the majority class, why bother with a democratic government at all?
Independent/GOP voters, you ARE voting against your (and Americans') best interests when electing these power-hungry crooks!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AP209
04:13 PM on 02/14/2011
Heh...someone in those photos likes to spray tan!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BannedFromCommenting
♼ ♼ PLEASE RECYCLE TROLLS ♼ ♼
05:09 PM on 02/14/2011
No kidding! I am waiting for the hair to turn green.
08:30 PM on 02/14/2011
Which one?