Fred Quits

From Fred08.com:

Today I have withdrawn my candidacy for President of the United States. I hope that my country and my party have benefited from our having made this effort. Jeri and I will always be grateful for the encouragement and friendship of so many wonderful people.

Sigh. The Thompson campaign will go down as one of the worst run Presidential campaigns in living memory. Thompson had the fewest flaws of any of the major candidates and should have been able to unite the base. A late start, a lacksidasical approach to campaigning, and an absence of the fire in the belly seemingly doomed him. Now he’s even forfeited the chance to be a kingmaker.

Thompson’s decision leaves a lot of us with no logical place to go.


  • McCain: McCain-Feingold, opposed the Bush tax cuts, supported raising Social Security taxes, Iraq

  • Giuliani: Pro-death penalty, pro-abortion rights, Iraq, authoritarian streak

  • Huckabee: lousy economic record as Governor of Arkansas, wowser, anti-Mormon bigot, hangs out with Christian Reconstructionists, odd comments on amending the Constitution, pro-death penalty

  • Romney: Serial flip flopper, serial panderer, Mittcare = Hillarycare

I’ve said it before and I’m going to keep on saying it: all four are fatally flawed. The question for Fredheads will be whether there’s any one of the 4 for whom it will be worth holding one’s nose and taking the plunge.

Update: Typically, Jim Geraghty’s take is worth checking out:

Thompson more or less “debuted” with the 60 second video responding to Michael Moore, one of the most brilliant media messages we’ve seen in a long while from a conservative.

I think one of the reasons that video struck a chord with so many righty bloggers was because we’re constantly seeing, and confronting, insane political rhetoric from the left. It’s maybe even a an obsession of righty bloggers, or perhaps we give it more attention than it deserves. But every time Michael Moore, Rosie O’Donnell or Cindy Sheehan spout off, or Charlie Sheen goes off on his 9/11 conspiracy theories… every time Nancy Pelosi goes to meet with a dictator, or a prominent Democrat refuses to acknowledge progress in Iraq, or somebody on either side of the aisle suggests that wanting immigration law enforced is inherently racist, every time somebody puts out some insane conspiracy theory that suggests President Bush is behind terror attacks…

We on the right hear it, we get driven up the wall by it, we try to push back in our own limited way, and we’re waiting for somebody with a bigger megaphone than us to push back. Very few high-profile Republicans give a full-throated pushback because A) they don’t see it if they’re up to their noses in legislative work on Capitol Hill or in the White House all day and B) they probably see responding to some fat propagandist or screeching antiwar widow-turned-celebrity as beneath them. (I realize this is a separate issue, but this helps explain some of Ann Coulter’s appeal even when she goes too far - there is nobody on the left she won’t take on).

Along comes Fred, who doesn’t act as if rebutting Moore’s propaganda is beneath him, and he points out that Moore likes to snuggle with censoring, brutal dictators, he suggests Moore is mentally unstable… and we loved it. We’ve been looking for this combativeness from a conservative for years, and it makes Giuliani’s “I don’t need Michael Moore to tell me about 9/11” sound like Marquess de Queensbury rules. To quote Frank J, we’ve been looking for somebody to “punch the hippies.”

Alas, there was little to none of that from Fred once he became a candidate. It became a fairly ordinary campaign, despite having some good folks around him.

Posted on Tuesday, January 22 2008 | Permalink

I wish Sen. Thompson and his wife and family the best.  I am sorry about his mother and hope she has a speedy recovery.

Posted by  on  01/23  at  09:33 AM

"The Thompson campaign will go down as one of the worst run Presidential campaigns in living memory.”

Gee, one of the laziest Senators in living memory runs one of the laziest campaigns in living memory.  Who’d have thunk it?

Let’s face it, Thompson was a horrifically bad Senator - he was handed the Clinton campaign finance hearing on a platter and proceeded to completely bungle them, he was a do-nothing Senator with virtually no legislative accomplishments, and he was a huge fan of McCain-Feingold (to the point where he co-sponsored the issue ad restrictions and filed a brief in the Supreme Court defending them).  He was a big time K Street lobbyist (including on behalf of dictator Jean Bertrand Artistede), so electing him would perpetuate the terrible Repblican connection with K Street.  Oh, and Fred has flip-flopped on abortion just like Mitt has - in his first runs for Senate, he was pro-choice.

No real conservative should have supported Fred Thompson.  Good riddance.

Posted by  on  01/23  at  12:34 PM

I was an early financial supporter of Fred and now feel that he squandered the money and didn’t do a thing on behalf of his own candidacy.

Posted by  on  01/23  at  03:07 PM

I liked Fred a lot on the issues, but as I’ve decided that more Christianity would be better for the Reps, I’ve begun to favor Huckabee more.

And Fred leaving probably helps Huckabee the most, tho I think McCain-Huckabee 2008 is more likely than Huckabee plus #2.  (I hope I’m wrong)

Now to absentee vote Huck for CA for Feb.

All the flawed Reps can win in 2008, tho also lose if they run poor campaigns.  None, not even Paul, is fatally flawed.

But I don’t read much thoughtful criticism of Obama’s actually written positions…

Posted by Tom Grey  on  01/23  at  07:46 PM

Steve,

Out of sincere curiousity, why didn’t Thompson’s support (only 1 or 11 Reps) for McCain-Feingold cause problems for you in terms of support?  Plus, was Thompson’s views on Iraq really all that different from McCain’s?

I ask because I am honestly perplexed by the fact that many who preferred Thompson vociferously oppose McCain, yet I have always perceived the two to be in a similar wing of the party.

S

Posted by Steven Taylor  on  01/24  at  11:43 AM
Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.

Introduction


Recent Punditry Entries


Hot Topics on Food & Wine

Hot Topics on Law & Business


Punditry RSS Feed

Flickr

Archives

My Books



Blogroll