Haley Barbour vs Obama in 2012 Presidential Election
The 61-year-old Barbour has had many incarnations: director of the Mississippi census at the age of 22, lawyer in the family law practice, failed Senate candidate, Reagan White House official. Now, after a successful lobbying stint at the BGR Group—started as Barbour, Griffith, and Rogers—and with a respected record as governor, Barbour is back on the Hill. He testifies on cap-and-trade legislation and chats about Russia with Sean Hannity. He rides the airwaves slamming the Obama administration’s spending habits, casting them exactly as he did the Clinton economic package in 1993—Obama, like Clinton, could “charm the skin off a snake.”
All of which prompts conservatives to cry, Haley’s comet is streaking! He’s a strong voice in a leaderless party, and as leading 2012 contenders self-destruct, flirt with fringe theories, and attack one another, there sits Mr. Fix-It, now a successful elected executive, conveniently term-limited in 2011. Even opponents are impressed, or at least they say they are. “He’s an unusual combination of someone who’s really good on policy, really good on politics, and really good on TV,” says Democratic lobbyist Anthony Podesta. “And everybody likes him.”
Here’s the problem. Over three decades in politics, Barbour may have accumulated too much baggage to withstand the scrutiny of a presidential campaign. Besides, he is way too good a vice presidential candidate to waste at the top of the ticket.
Do you believe Mitt Romney is too ill tempered for the White House?
Hey, not trying to hate but with that recent flare up with that reporter who questioned him about lobbyist running his campaign, do you believe Mitt Romney is too much of a hot head to effectively handle Congress and International affairs as President?
It just seems when he gets a curve ball, it makes him a little too testy.
CNN
Can Mitt Romney re-enter the Republican presidential nomination race?
Let’s suppose that either…
1. The new accusations regarding John McCain and a female lobbyist cause his Presidential campaign to nosedive, or
2. McCain ends his Presidential campaign for whatever reason (health issues, scandal, etc.)
Can Mitt Romney jump back into the race? From what I recall, he technically “suspended” his campaign.
What would happen to McCain’s delegates if McCain ended his campaign?
If McCain did not end his campaign, could his delegates bail on him?
Obama






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