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CPAC: Conservatives Cautious On 2012 Pick

Cpac 2011

First Posted: 02/12/11 10:53 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

(AP) - Conservatives are fired up to defeat President Barack Obama. Now the hard part: finding their candidate.

A year until the Iowa caucuses, this important part of the GOP base hasn't rallied around any one person and it doesn't seem all that enthusiastic about its options - even though more than a dozen Republicans, and counting, are considering candidacies.

The polite - but hardly overwhelming - receptions for auditioning Republican hopefuls and the wary voices in the audience at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference this week underscored the challenge facing those weighing bids and the predicament facing a GOP searching for a nominee strong enough to overtake an incumbent president.

Such restiveness among conservatives also portends a volatile and unpredictable nomination race as Republicans with similar policy positions try to convince skeptics they alone can unite a cultural, economic and security-focused right - and win.

"I know what I'm looking for, but I haven't found the whole package yet," says CeCe Heil, an attorney in Virginia Beach, Va. "My candidate would be a mixture of what we've got. If you took a little bit of each one, that would be my candidate."

So, what does the GOP base want?

Ask anyone attending the gathering, and you'd hear something like this: a dynamic conservative with a backbone who can win.

"That's it. But there's nobody who meets that criteria," added Bill Hemrick, a Nashville, Tenn., businessman who founded Tea Party HD, a conservative media company. He said the only two who even come close - former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann - "aren't electable."

In short, no one is like Ronald Reagan.

"There may not be a next Ronald Reagan among you, but we sure as heck are going to make you act like him," Ryan Hecker of the Houston Tea Party Society warned, giving hopefuls a road map for winning over conservatives like him.

Stated or not, there's a concern among GOP insiders that it may take someone of Reagan's caliber to beat Obama, who remains personally popular despite stubbornly high unemployment and a series of divisive legislative accomplishments.

It says a lot about the likely field, for instance, that conservative pundits and right-leaning activists keep encouraging Republicans who have ruled out 2012 bids to get in the race, including former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

Also telling: Billionaire reality show star Donald Trump and Texas Rep. Ron Paul, a once failed presidential candidate who is leaving the door open to a reprisal and is a hero to libertarians, were the biggest hits at the conservative confab among Republicans trying out for the chance to take on Obama.

"I don't see anybody really starting strong with conservatives, corralling them and leaving the rest of the field in the dust," said Al Cardenas, the new head of the American Conservative Union, which sponsored the gathering. "This time, they are being very cautious because of the stakes. No one wants to make a mistake. People will be shopping for a longer time."

He dismissed the notion that the prudence among conservatives had to do with the quality of the would-be candidates and rightly noted that all were well-received at the year's first major gathering of likely Republican candidates.

It's no wonder. All went after Obama and filled their speeches with zingers tailor-made for their conservative audiences. The responses varied.

A veteran on the national stage, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who lost in 2008 but is gearing up for a second bid, robustly delivered a general election-like speech that was almost exclusively an indictment against Obama. "If I decide to run for president, it won't take me two years to wake up to the job crisis threatening America," Romney said, earning standing ovations and hearty applause from a capacity crowd.

He ignored what conservatives consider arguably his biggest black mark - the Massachusetts health care law that Obama partly modeled the national one after.

Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, who also is likely to announce a run soon, delivered a speech equal parts assailing Obama's policies and promoting his own positions. He drew cheers throughout from the standing-room-only audience, including when saying: "We need more common sense and less Obama nonsense."

He also emphasized his efforts to keep taxes low, seeking to subtlety counter a blemish on his record that he didn't mention - backing increases on cigarettes.

A packed hotel ballroom also gave a warm reception to South Dakota Sen. John Thune, who is said to be less certain than others about running. The lone senator among the crop, Thune said he'd continue to be "on the front lines voting no" when Democrats try to push a liberal agenda; it's a pitch that could either serve as his argument for or against a candidacy.

He didn't address a top problem for conservatives - his support of the Wall Street bailout.

Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels clearly entertained a dinnertime audience, with a policy-heavy address that was peppered with lighter moments as it drew on lessons learned in his state.

He didn't back down from his remark maligned by conservatives that the next president facing economic crisis "would have to call a truce on the so-called social issues." Rather, he encouraged conservatives to broaden their reach, saying: "Purity in martyrdom is for suicide bombers."

Others fell flatter.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich's professorial side came out when he spoke to a filled ballroom. It was a third empty for former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum's address.

Still, for all the hand-wringing a year before the contests, conservatives are certain to rally around someone. They always do - eventually.

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(AP) - Conservatives are fired up to defeat President Barack Obama. Now the hard part: finding their candidate. A year until the Iowa caucuses, this important part of the GOP base hasn't rallied ar...
(AP) - Conservatives are fired up to defeat President Barack Obama. Now the hard part: finding their candidate. A year until the Iowa caucuses, this important part of the GOP base hasn't rallied ar...
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toocoolfoschool1234
Stab your television. Get a guitar.
06:28 AM on 02/17/2011
Ron Paul is 10x better than all the other GOP.
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iconoclast6
This is my BOOM stick!
05:24 PM on 02/14/2011
In the end, they will drop trou and get behind whomever the real power brokers of their Party choose to nominate.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
warriorwoman73
08:30 PM on 02/16/2011
Bingo. Faved.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R U Sirius
Retired educator, trainer; writer/editor
10:27 AM on 02/13/2011
Has anybody seen a single cogent idea or shred of common sense that has come out of this media circus? I'm still waiting for something of substance to listen to and consider from these self-important mediocrities.
12:13 AM on 02/13/2011
All Dems should cross over and vote for Sarah Palin in the primaries, just to screw the GOP even more
12:10 AM on 02/13/2011
This circus will be in town for more than a year
10:02 PM on 02/12/2011
What is up with Bachman's lizard eyes?!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R U Sirius
Retired educator, trainer; writer/editor
10:28 AM on 02/13/2011
Hadn't you heard? She IS a lizard.
07:28 PM on 02/12/2011
As has been noted elsewhere,
there was not a single mention of what was going on in Egypt
during this whole futile exercise they call a convention.

Just the usual attack Obama.
What planet ARE these people living on?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
goingstrong
I intend to live forever. So far so good
03:52 AM on 02/13/2011
Planet clueless and self absorbed
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
littleolwinemakerme
Put A Cork In It!
05:35 PM on 02/12/2011
More than just needing a candidate they have to act like they can DO something, which we all know they can't.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
xlntcat
05:12 PM on 02/12/2011
For the past couple of years, I have wondered why the democrats don't have 14 different organizations and converntion that attracts the media attention given to the GOP and their many different sects that primarily all the same people show up to seize the press time?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Watcher from outside
05:07 PM on 02/12/2011
Nasty comments....not one god idea among them

This is NOT what the country needs

And stop with the Regan already

That was different day and time and era

Like watching snakes eat their own ....which ever one is left standing will their great leader...lol

Seem to forget ' THAT ONE' will be running against them and this is NOT a mid term
05:03 PM on 02/12/2011
Herbert Hoover....Richard Nixon... Gerald Ford.... two-face Ronnie.... Bush-Cheney,, no wonder they are desperate for a Hero.... make one up just like Reagan.
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
05:02 PM on 02/12/2011
Haley is OK'ing a commemorative KKK license plate in Mississippi ....

now thats change you can believe in ....
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
samidean
05:15 PM on 02/12/2011
If he runs, I hear there will be a huge sale on white sheets at Walmart.
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Matt Herren
"Human action is purposeful behavior."
05:36 PM on 02/12/2011
Yes... that is an ill advised decision on Mr. Barbour's part... but the plate is hardly a "KKK license plate" as you stated... the link you provided specifically states it is for a Confederate General who happened to join the KKK after the Civil War. That hardly equates to a plate 'honoring the KKK' as you clearly wanted people to think with your post.

Robert Byrd was a member and a Democratic Party leader.

We can do better than this kind of attempts to intentionally mislead.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
beckpod1
04:51 PM on 02/12/2011
The best and the brightest....40 watt dim bulbs....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
allwarisbad
03:32 PM on 02/13/2011
The Dems aren't any better - need someting like Egypt if this country is to survive ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
modernman55
Just a sample of carbon-based wastage
04:51 PM on 02/12/2011
I have been watching CPAC on C-SPAN, and I have to admit, the conservatives in this country are completely disillusion. Yammering on about spending, then talk about how we need to reestablish our might in the world, as if the two are not connected and that domestic spending is the only thing effecting the budget. They have this blind faith in the private sector which is either naive, or an act instilling a broader naivety in the American public. I want a Republican like Teddy Roosevelt, one who knows when industry/corporations are ruining the country and reins it in. Deregulation is not going to create jobs, its just gonna increase profit margins. I don't trust a board of directors whose bottom line is profits. Obama went so far as to beg them to get in the game. Lets see how that works out.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
modernman55
Just a sample of carbon-based wastage
04:53 PM on 02/12/2011
*Delusional, not disillusion.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
BoyInBOYCOTT
04:51 PM on 02/12/2011
C-PAC's finest moment belonged to Andrew Breitbart for his half hour trumpet solo, blowing his own horn....of his triumph over the Left, and doing it on his rollerblades,(color me impressed in the 1990's)
Kinda sad, his half hour video playing on his own website.....got FOUR comments....ouch.
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
05:03 PM on 02/12/2011
conforming that he is a nobody ... unless he is lying ....