Well… It’s on. Ames straw poll on Saturday, the first genuine debate today. The Republican primary is off and away. Eight or nine competitors starting late need to shake up the field in short order and pick a few leaders, the money is waiting to see who comes out of the starting blocks in front. Who’s it going to be?:
The contest for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, until now a sleepy, shapeless and uninspired affair punctuated by comedic interludes, turns serious this month. A debate, a straw poll in Iowa and the possible entry into the race of Texas Gov. Rick Perry are likely to make the coming weeks the most consequential yet in the campaign.By the end of August, more will be known about almost every aspect of the race, including the identity of the politician best positioned to challenge the front-runner, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, the staying power of Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) and former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty and the likely final makeup of the field.
Dan Balz – August will shake the 2012 Republican presidential field Washington Post 7 Aug 11
Is our pool still open? Time to pick a winner folks. Update: Ames straw poll results just in:
@FixAaron: Results: Bachmann 4823, Paul 4671, Pawlenty 2293, Santorum 1657, Cain 1456, Romney 567, Gingrich 385, Huntsman 69, McCotter 35 #iastrawpoll
If nothing else surely the end of any reasonable speculation of Palin’s candidacy. Bachmann beat Pawlenty 2:1, that’s got to be a problem for his campaign.
Update: A defining moment regarding the policy outcomes of this debate which has been perhaps overlooked (h/t David Weigel):
Who up on the stage would agree to a package of 10:1 budget cuts to tax increases, with the stipulation that the cuts are “real”? The answer: nobody. One can say that this was merely politicians playing to their base and some of them know better. And perhaps it was, but it’s extremely difficult to turn around and break a promise like that. So you have the entire Republican Party committed to the view not only that tax increases are undesirable, but that it’s unthinkable to include even small increases in a bipartisan bargain for large spending cuts.Matthew Yglesias – The New Tax Orthodoxy: No Revenue, Nohow, Never Think Progress 12 Aug 11
This has a bearing on more than a primary election outcome, it compromises America’s ability to govern.
[poll id=”
76
“]
242 comments