Bill Kristol went on MSNBC with Joe Scarborough Tuesday morning and I tuned in to see if he would respond to the rodeo clown, but he wouldn’t address his dust up with Glenn Beck on MSNBC. He did however admit to be very disappointed in Sara Palin’s performance after she quit being governor in Alaska and now is picking either Paul Ryan (WI) or Chris Christie (NJ) as his top choices to be the GOP’s 2012 presidential candidate with Marco Rubio as VP. How the mighty Palin has fallen. Kristol was the man who touted her to John McCain and has been an avid Palin supporter ever since. Conservatives see Rubio as a bridge into the Latino population while Republicans still vilify their community at every turn. (rough transcript via MSNBC ) Q: Do you feel like you overestimated her and do you feel like she is fit to be a national Republican leader? — Kristol: I have a high regard for Sarah Palin, but I have to say I’ve been a little disappointed since she’s resigned from governor. I thought she had a real chance to take the lead on real policy issues, to do a little more in terms of framing the policy agenda. I don’t think she’s particularly done, but she’s shrewed, I wouldn’t underestimate her. Q: Has she lived up to the potential that you saw in Alaska? Kristol: Maybe not quite, but she’s young and she can do it in this campaign or she can do it four or eight years from now. Kristol has always been enamored with Barbie Doll looking politicians since he was the chief of staff for Dan Quayle (He was called Quayle’s Brain) and saw him as the poster boy for Conservatives because of his looks rather than substance , but as we know he flamed out completely. That’s why Kristol fell in love with Sarah Palin on a 2007 cruise. In June 2007, a cruise hosted by the political journal The Weekly Standard set anchor in Juneau, Alaska. Standard editors William Kristol and Fred Barnes then lunched with Governor Sarah Palin. It was a moment of discovery to equal Hernando Cortez’s landing at Veracruz. The Daily Telegraph’s Tim Shipman saw this encounter as the launch of a Neoconservative project surrounding Palin. He interviewed a former Republican White House official now at the American Enterprise Institute about Palin: “She’s bright and she’s a blank page. She’s going places and it’s worth going there with her.” Asked if he sees her as a “project,” the former official said: “Your word, not mine, but I wouldn’t disagree with the sentiment. Kristol appeared on Fox News on June 30, 2008, confidently predicting that McCain would select Sarah Palin and as a public display of support, oil prices would miraculously fall. Kristol can fairly lay claim to having “discovered” Palin for Washington political circles. Palin’s name appeared in 41 Weekly Standard articles since the Juneau meeting—starting with a paean entitled “ The Most Popular Governor ” that ran right after the reception. He did help create a money making Conservative personality in Palin that attracts only the base of his party so he failed again with his agenda. The polls all tell the same story with her super high negatives and that’s why he’s switched to one of the youngsters of the Conservative gibberish movement in Paul Ryan and a nasty debater in their new love—Chris Christie. Will Kristol be Facebooked by now that he’s bailed on her and said as much on MSNBC? UPDATE : Salon has more: Now we know Palin has no chance in ’12
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Just prior to the commercial break preceding this interview, John King touts it as a “rare CNN conversation with the former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who would like to replace President Obama in 2012.” Apparently all of the potential 2012 Republican presidential candidates who are working for Uncle Rupert aren’t supposed to be giving interviews to CNN anchors. I just wonder when they’re finally going to get off of his payroll if they’re actually going to run. King seemed terribly excited to have a chance to pretend like anyone should be taking Gingrich seriously as a presidential candidate in 2012. He also allowed him to get in plenty of shots at President Obama, pretend like the Republican Party cares about the unemployed and the poor, and of course throw in some good old fearmongering about the scary Muslims that want to kill us all to boot. We could have just as easily been watching him in one of his countless interviews on Fox where those appearances are anything but “rare.” KING: When it comes to covering the early maneuverings of the 2012 presidential race, we at CNN have what I’ll call the FOX problem, Sarah Palin, Mike Huckabee, Newt Gingrich all possible candidates, all contractual contributors to FOX News, so they’re not supposed to sit down for interviews with CNN. So when I was out at the Reagan’s Centennial yesterday in Simi Valley, California and I saw the former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, I jumped at the opportunity to sneak in a few questions about whether he’s going to run. (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) KING: You have been a leader of the Republican Party as the speaker of course, but there are many who think right now your goal is to become the leader of the Republican Party as its presidential nominee. Is there a Reagan lesson in this for you go about this? GINGRICH: Yes, to be very patient and tell you cheerfully, Callista and I will make a decision at the end of February, and that — and march to your own drummer. I mean, to realize that you need to do — Reagan did what he believed in when he thought it was right. He ran against Gerry Ford and lost very narrowly. He came back at a time when many people thought he was too old, and he ran a campaign his way. He made a mistake frankly of not campaigning in Iowa more, came back in New Hampshire, but it was a long campaign. George H.W. Bush gave him a real race for the nomination. KING: You could look at your race or your thought process two ways. You could say here’s a guy. He’s a provocative guy. He’s an ideas guy. He’s a known entity, so when it comes to the fundraising part, you probably have a good advantage over many, if not all of the others out there. Others would say wait, does the Republican Party want to go back? Newt Gingrich was a fairly polarizing figure, was involved in some pretty polarizing debates at the time. Does that — how does that weigh in when you’re traveling and talk to people? GINGRICH: I think we’re as a country in real trouble. I think we have had the longest period of over nine percent unemployment since the Great Depression. The news last month that we have 45 percent African-American teenage unemployment should sober every American. We have real dangers in the world. The fact that 126 people have been indicted in the U.S. for plotting terrorism in the last two years, what’s going on in Egypt, Afghanistan, none of this should make us feel good, and I think having somebody who tells the truth — you know, sometimes telling the truth is polarizing. Camus wrote that a man who says two plus two equals four can sometimes be killed because they authorities can’t understand the truth. And sometimes — what Reagan did — and I frankly tried to study Reagan and Thatcher and Lincoln because I think they were the great truth tellers of modern politics. Sometimes when you tell the truth, people in the establishment go nuts because it’s not the truth they want to hear. KING: I’m going to ask you lastly, this is a place that just evokes presidential leadership, it makes you think about big decisions. The president of the United States now is involved in one probably of the greatest foreign policy crises, watching what happens in Egypt and the potential domino effect in the Middle East. Governor Palin last night said it was his 3:00 a.m. phone call and it went to the answering machine. Do you agree with that? GINGRICH: Look, I think the fact that they appointed a very able diplomat, Frank Wisner, and within two days, we’re publicly contradicting him, is, you know, it’s so amateurish. I was with John Bolton last night, he said it’s inconceivable that they would be this clumsy and this out of sync with — I mean, just with themselves, forget the Arab world. They can’t even get the White House and their special envoy to be on the same page. I am very concerned. We want to help the people of Egypt achieve democracy, and I’m very concerned that — Secretary Clinton apparently said that we wanted to reach out to the Muslim Brotherhood. I think this is absolute, total misreading of history. The Muslim Brotherhood is a mortal enemy of our civilization. They say so openly. Their slogan says so openly. Their way is jihad, their method is death. For us to encourage in any way the inclusion of the Muslim Brotherhood is fundamentally wrong. And I think that what we want to do is walk a narrow line between — we don’t want to betray somebody who’s been with us for 30 years as an ally. We do recognize his time may well have gone. We want to treat him with dignity, because he stood by us in very tough times. We want to help the Egyptian people achieve self-government, but we want to isolate and minimize the risk of the Muslim Brotherhood. This administration, I think, does not have a clue about those realities. KING: Mr. Speaker, thanks for your time. GINGRICH: Thank you. KING: Pleasure. (END VIDEOTAPE)
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Continue reading …Photo: Rule Hibernia And the federal invest-a-thon in clean technologies continues — first a smidgen for solar , then a huge boost for high speed rail , and now, a decent investment in offshore wind. The Obama administration announced plans to sink $50.5 million into research and development for offshore wind power … Read the full story on TreeHugger
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