The House Majority Leader's Race And An Attractive Candidate

By Pejman Yousefzadeh Posted in Comments (13) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »

Readers familiar with the travails of the Republican Party in the House of Representatives know that since the resignation of Tom DeLay as Majority Leader, the House Republican Caucus appears to have lost much of its sense of direction. This is evident in votes lost and votes where the Republican leadership pulled back instead of fighting for a floor win.

Much of the blame for this lack of direction has been laid at the feet of Acting Majority Leader Roy Blunt--who may be handicapped by the fact that he was pretty much pressed into duty after the DeLay resignation and that the word "Acting" is in front of his title. In either event, many a soul believes that Blunt is not and should not be long for the leadership and that Republicans need a new captain at the helm.

Which brings us to Mike Pence

If the Republican majority in the Senate and House can somehow stave off a newly energized Democratic assault in the mid-term elections next November and preserve their governing status, they may well have Indiana congressman Mike Pence to thank.

It has been Pence and his roughly 100 colleagues in the House Republican Study Committee (RSC) who have almost single-handedly stopped the chronic GOP overspending of the past five years and forced the first full-fledged budget-cutting bill since 1997. In doing so, Pence and his dedicated band of principled House members have begun to force the GOP back to the first principles of lower taxes, limited government, a strong defense, and a fierce dedication to moral authority—including preserving the rights of the unborn.

For these reasons Pence has been chosen as the HUMAN EVENTS Man of the Year. As legislation is slowly rolling through Congress to restrain spending and extend vital pro-growth tax cuts, Pence and his pals have changed the thinking of their own House leadership as well as the President himself.

Recent polls suggest that this Republican rejuvenation is already posting dividends. Of course, the new budget is itself just a bare-bones beginning, but you have to start somewhere. Big-government conservatism has up to now ruled the roost during the Bush years in Washington, but Pence and his friends refuse to accept the notion that big government—or the siren song of central planning—will ever work any better under Republicans than it did under Democrats, whose policy past is littered with failure after failure.

Pence regards himself as “an unregenerate supply-sider” who believes in pro-growth and free-market economics. “Ronald Reagan got me into politics,” says Pence. “He was my role model.” That’s a good start. But Pence also counts economists Joseph Schumpeter, Henry Hazlitt, Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman, and Adam Smith among his tutors. His central aim is to marry supply-side tax reforms with strict spending restraint in order to expand the economy and get the budget into balance. That may put Pence and his comrades in the Washington minority these days, but the momentum just may be shifting their way.

Pence is a third-term congressman from Indiana’s 6th District, in the middle of the state. He ran twice unsuccessfully and then became a popular radio talk-show host, finally winning his seat in 2000. Like his friend and RSC colleague Jeff Flake from Arizona, Pence ran a regional policy think tank–in his case the Indiana Policy Review Foundation, while for Flake it was the Goldwater Institute. Like so many of the RSC members – people such as Jeb Hensarling, John Shadegg, Marsha Blackburn, and many others–successful political style is inseparable from policy content. That’s always a good combination for revolutionaries.

Whatever one thinks about the "Republican rejuvenation," the need for said rejuvenation and the policies underlying it, it is clear that Pence is a mover and a shaker in the best sense of the word. People may agree or disagree with him, but they are bound to take him seriously as a man of ideas and as a public figure with a serious interest in the issues. Of course, this interest comes with his responsibilities as the head of the RSC and of course, pragmatism will oftentimes have to triumph over ideological purity should Pence ascend to further heights in the House Republican leadership.

Still, it could fairly be said that Republicans could do worse in any upcoming leadership race than to turn to Pence. It is up to him to decide whether or not he wants in but if he does, he deserves every consideration. And in the event you are interested--and I know you are--another profile of Pence can be found here.

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The House Majority Leader's Race And An Attractive Candidate 13 Comments (0 topical, 13 editorial, 0 hidden) Post a comment »

The only drawback is that the man is presidential material. Making him House Majority Leader would jeoparize that by making him a lightning rod for the left.

But sometimes you need the right man for the job and Pence seems to be one of the last true believers in D.C. sometimes. He is a great man and a great conservative.

 

Absolutely Not, Pence should rise no higher than Whip!

If you want Ideal candidates in the leadership elections, look no further than:

Speaker - Dreier (CA-26) - I went to college in his district (www.pitzer.edu), and I've stayed registered there because he's one of the smartest members of the house (on economics) and it's a swing district.

I support him because he's a strong conservative who is articulate and can defend conservative values under fire.  He's done it since he's been in congress.

He's been a major leader on trade and he's the head of the zero cap gains tax caucus.

Maj. Leader - Blackburn (TN - 7) -- What's the one thing better than having an articulate conservative who understands the value of limited govt?  Having an articulate conservative who understands the value of limited govt. AND happens to be an attractive Southern woman who would contrast perfectly w/ Nancy Pelosi.

Seriously, GOPers have solidified the vote among men.  If they were to contrast Blackburn v. Pelosi, they'd get women as well.

...won't only know policy, she'll be articulate and look good on TV.

When the most attractive woman in Congress is also a conservative stalwart, I don't see how we can lose by making her majority leader.

I wanted to write about why Mike Pence wouldn't work in leadership, but I fell asleep thinking about Mike Pence.

Dreier for Speaker; Blackburn for Maj. Leader.

They both understand policy.  Unlike our current leaders (Fat, you know what, Hastert and Beaten with an ugly stick Blunt), the camera also loves those two.

Let's be Media Savvy with our House Leadership for once.

In arguing against this suggestion, some may see Cousin Mike as merely man of the hour or flavor of the month, but there is something to be said in having an actual, substantial, intelligent, fiscal conservative in the leadership. That said, his presidential aspirations would better be served with a title like Senator or Governor, not as a constant target of the minority.

Of course we could just follow the trolls who vote illegally for "pretty" folks who are most likely to get voted out of office, more so if they have a leadership title. Mike's opponent, on the other hand, thinks he's running for geographic strategist.

One thing to add to this biography is that Mike hosted a radio show in Indiana and was considered the Limbaugh of the Hoosier state.  He is an excellent choice.

All these people sound good.

One thing is clear. It is time for a shakeup.

I just signed up say that you are obviously a Democrat troll.Your post is some of the craziest talk I have EVER heard.Mike Pence is great.He is the Leader of the Movement and we should all thank the Lord that we have him.

Rep. Blackburn is "hot" but you are nuts.Pence is a real leader and if he bores you then you have not been paying attention.

No one is more media savvvy in "our" caucus than Pence.Even his honest critics admit this.

Darn, Pence looked good with that gavel in his hand.

And media savvy? You bet. That was a red tie he was wearing.

Of late, I too have been reading of Mr. Pence and have been impressed by his genuine and honest character. These are qualities especially needed in a party beset by a public perception of declining integrity.

Although we moved to WA in 2004, we were Hoosiers for the 30 preceding years.  Mike Pence is a familiar figure.  He's media-savvy, with plenty of talk-radio experience.  He wears his religion openly, with a leaning to the evangelical.  He's an officer in the Reserves, which caused a slightly awkward situation a couple years ago when he announced he was being activated to the Middle East, only to have the Army apparently change its mind and he had to retract his announcement.  He's forceful and direct, reminiscent of DeLay and Armey.  His district has significant unionized blue collar representation, but obviously not enough to be reflexively Democrat.  Unlike some comments above, I don't see Pence as a Presidential candidate, in part because of Indiana's few electoral votes and the degree to which they are already a Republican lock.  Might there also be some geographic balance concerns for House leadership for Pence with Hastert being from next-door Illinois?  IMO on his merits Mike Pence deserves a promotion of some kind.

 
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