Rudy has released the videos of his speech at the Club for Growth Annual Winter Conference. It shows Rudy has strong grasp on the economic issues of our time. Here are many great quotes but here is my favorite: "What I am for is Freedom. More Freedom for people here at home, more freedom for people aboard. More security for us which yields more freedom. A lowering of the burdens of government and I think we are on the same page. So I invite you to support me." -Rudy
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Rudy Giuliani Speaks To Club For Growth, Part II
Rudy has released the videos of his speech at the Club for Growth Annual Winter Conference. It shows Rudy has strong grasp on the economic issues of our time. Here are many great quotes but here is my favorite: "What I am for is Freedom. More Freedom for people here at home, more freedom for people aboard. More security for us which yields more freedom. A lowering of the burdens of government and I think we are on the same page. So I invite you to support me." -Rudy
Reason-Be Afraid of President McCain
The significance of the McCain Plan transcended horse-race politics. It was a microcosm of the Arizona senator’s largely unexamined philosophy about the proper role of the U.S. government. Like almost every past McCain crusade, from fining Big Tobacco to drug-testing athletes to restricting political speech in the name of campaign finance reform, the surge involved an increase in the power of the federal government, particularly in the executive branch. Like many of his reform measures—identifying weapons pork, eliminating congressional airport perks, even banning torture—the escalation had as much to do with appearances (in this case, the appearance of continuing to project U.S. military strength rather than accept “defeat”) as it did with reality. And like the reputation-making actions of his heroes, including his father, his grandfather, and his political idol Teddy Roosevelt, the new Iraq strategy required yet another expansion of American military power to address what is, at least in part, a nonmilitary problem.
Saturday, April 14, 2007
Rudy the Catholic
HH: Okay, and Brother O’Leary shows up in some of the stories I find. Who’s he?
RG: Brother Kevin…
HH: Yeah.
RG: That’s how I knew him as. Brother Kevin was a very, very big influence on my life, and he was an English, he was my English teacher and my homeroom teacher in the second year of high school, and he’s the one who really got me interested in reading, in opera, in writing, and sort of convinced me that there was a whole intellectual side of me that I could develop. And I really credit him with that. I mean, he and my mother, my mother was a frustrated history teacher. She always wanted to be a history teacher, and she came through the Depression, and she wasn’t able to go to college, she had to go to work, but she had a great interest in history, and in
English. So I became her singular student. And the two of them probably developed, the two of them probably developed this tremendous interest in learning and reading, and the excitement of it that to this day that I have.HH: And was Rudy Giuliani ever an altar boy?
RG: No.
HH: Okay, just checking on it.
RG: I was a very, I was a very religious kid, and wanted to be a priest for a good deal of my childhood. My real ambitions as a youngster were being a priest, or being a doctor. Those were the two things I went back and forth with during most of my childhood, and then a whole bunch of other ambitions came about, and different things to do, and I was on the verge of going in the seminary when I graduated from high school, changed my mind that summer, and then ended up going to Manhattan College.
HH: What changed your mind?
RG: I think celibacy, to tell you the truth.
HH: Ah, good argument.
RG: At least initially.
HH: Now how is the Catholic faith imprinted itself on you?
RG: Oh, I’m very, very grateful that I…you know, I studied religion through the time I was in college. I took four years of theology in college. At various times in college, I actually thought again about going back into the seminary, almost did at one point in my second or third year, I don’t remember exactly when. It’s been a very, very important part of my life.
HH: Now President Bush won the Catholic vote, the Mass attending Catholic vote in 2004, over Catholic John Kerry, largely on abortion rights stuff, Mayor. Can you keep that majority, given your abortion rights positions?
RG: Well, I hope that people look at the overall record. You know, they look at the overall record, and realize that there’s not ever going to be agreement 100% with anybody that’s running for president. There are going to be issues you agree on, issues you don’t agree on, and then you as the voter have to make the decision what’s most important to me right now. What are the big issues? And I think ultimately, people vote based on who they think is going to be the most effective leader, with the problems that we’re facing at a particular time. And right now, if we predict a year and a half ahead, it looks like the biggest problems we’re going to be facing are the terrorist war against us, which irrespective of Iraq, is going to continue, whatever happens in Iraq. I hope it’s successful. If it isn’t, the same thing is going to be the case. These people are planning to kill us in different parts of the world, and I don’t see their planning stopping in the next year, year and a half, two years. So I think that’s going to be a very big part of the decision. I think that there’s going to be a real difference between the Republican candidate and the Democratic candidate on how to deal with our economy. I think the Democrats want to move it much toward a kind of continental European economy, with government health care, with increases in taxes, increases in government programs, they seem to want to solve the health care consistently by expanding government programs. And my view is, we’re going to need a president who stands up for the private economy, and stands up for the principles of growth, lower taxes, smaller government, market-based solutions to health care. After all, that’s the only way you contain costs, is by making it even more of a private, competitive, consumer-driven system. Government systems always become much more expensive than anyone thinks, and always become much more inefficient than anyone thinks.HH: But I want to stick for a moment on the life issue, Mayor, because do your cardinal buddies, and your bishop buddies, do they ever take you aside and say you know, Mayor, we’ve got to talk about this? And we’ve got to…
RG: I…do I talk? Sure, of course. Yeah, of course. I mean, I have spiritual counsel, but that’s all very private.
HH: Okay…
RG: You want to know my position on abortion?
HH: Yeah.
RG: My position is that I hate it, I don’t like it, I would advise anyone on a personal basis that they’d be better off using the option of adoption if…but ultimately, it’s an individual’s choice that I don’t see dealing with by trying to put somebody in jail over it.
HH: Would you like to see Roe V. Wade reversed, Mayor?
RG: I would…[pause, not indicating agreement]...what I’d like to see are abortions
reduced, and adoptions increased. And I reduced…abortions declined about 15, 16%
while I was Mayor, I think more than the national average. But most importantly,
adoptions went up over 60%.
HH: But would it be a good day or a bad day for America if Roe V. Wade was reversed by the Roberts’ Court?
RG: Oh, I think that’s something the Court has to decide.
HH: All right.
RG: And I think that I would appoint strict constructionists as judges, I would not have a litmus test, there’d be a general test, a philosophical test, and that is are
you going to interpret the Constitution as best you can based on what it means,
not what you’d like it to mean? I can see conservative, strict constructionist
judges coming to the conclusion that it should be overturned, or I could see
some of them coming to the conclusion that it’s been the law for a substantial
period of time, it is precedent, and applying stare decisis. So it’s not a
litmus test.
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Four Pillars Of American Prosperity
1. Reduced spending growth. Fiscal conservatives understand the value of controlling the size and cost of -- government. Controlling spending makes -- government more efficient and more effective ...
2. Lower Tax Rates. ... Taxpayers deserve the lowest possible tax rates, simplification and certainty about what those rates are likely to be -- not the gimmicks and tricks Congress imposes.
3. Regulatory Reform. The US currently has a regulatory black eye. We are being hurt by heavy-handed regulators, laws such as Sarbanes-Oxley and an environment of hyper-litigation and shareholder lawsuits … We now need to reform the unwise excesses of the initial reforms. When regulation becomes too burdensome, it weighs on us like a tax. ...
4. Sound monetary policy. A strong economy and a sound monetary policy are intertwined. The Federal Reserve Board is the ultimate, independent arbiter of monetary policy. It is essential that its appointees ... understand that stable, low inflation is an input -- not an impediment -- to … stronger economic growth. ...
Rudy on a Roll in SC
Rudy-29%
McCain- 16%
Mitt Romney- 8%
Well it looks like the only way Romney is going to win is if he pays everyone in the state to vote for him.
Monday, April 2, 2007
Hannity and Colmes
California=Rudyfornia
Republicans
Giuliani 43 (trend vs. March 5 poll = +2)
McCain 24 (+1)
Romney 7 (-1)
Gingrich 10 (-2)
Also a Florida poll came out recently
THE NUMBERS - REPUBLICANS
Rudy Giuliani 35 percent
John McCain 15 percent
Newt Gingrich 11 percent
Fred Thompson 6 percent
Mitt Romney 5 percent
Saturday, March 31, 2007
Free Markets = Free People
Rudy Giuliani is the real fiscal conservative in the 2008 presidential race.
That's why I'm endorsing him for president. Less well known is the mayor's fiscal record. Nonetheless, conservatives will find it impressive. He built New
York's resurgence not just on fundamental police work, but also on a foundation
of fiscal discipline. He cut taxes and the size of government and turned an
inherited deficit into a multibillion dollar surplus.Mr. Giuliani entered office in 1994 with a $2.3 billion budget deficit handed to him by his predecessor, Mayor David Dinkins. Liberal conventional wisdom held that the only way to close the gap was to raise taxes while cutting back on basic city
services such as sanitation. The new mayor rejected this advice--in fact, he
famously threw the report recommending tax hikes in the trash! Instead, he set
out to restore fiscal discipline to the "ungovernable city"--and achieved
results that Reagan Republicans can applaud.
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
LIBERTARIAN POLITICS LIVE
I also maybe making an appearance today. You can listen live or archived, here!
The Northern Strategy
Monday, March 26, 2007
Rudy Giuliani with Larry Kudlow
"(The government) needs to make it clear that we're going to extend the tax cuts, that it's not just a temporary thing, so people can look forward to long-term planning. The government needs to reign in spending. We haven't done that in a while in a concerted way and it seems to me that is how the federal budget can have the best impact on the private economy."
"Globalization and free market economics is the way to go for the United States. If we challenge ourselves, it gives us the hope for growth, and we should always be pointing towards growth."
"I started with a $2.3 billion deficit, and by lowering taxes we cleared that deficit and started building a pretty big surplus."
"If some mistakes were made in being too aggressive, that sometimes creates overinvestment and bad decisions. That's kind of a natural thing in a market, so I would rather have it correct itself rather than have Congress correct it. There (are) always going to be cycles … that's the nature of a free economy."
And They Just Keep Coming
"As the U.S. attorney in Manhattan, I think he single-handedly deserves the credit for breaking organized crime in New York. That took a lot of guts," Rep. Jack Brandenburg said. "As a mayor, he showed fiscal toughness. He's a real leader."
Race to be Endorsed
Rudy's Endorsements (with RLC grade)
Pers% | Econ% | Comb% = Class
Rep. Mary Bono (R-Calif.) p: 55 e: 74 c: 64.6 = Enterpriser
Rep. Charlie Dent (R-Pa.) p: 40 e: 80 c: 60.0 = Conservative
Rep. David Dreier (R-Calif.) p: 60 e: 79 c: 69.5 = Enterpriser
Rep. Vito Fossella (R-N.Y.) p: 57 e: 81 c: 69.1 = Enterpriser
Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.) p: 49 e: 66 c: 57.6 = Centrist
Rep. Candice Miller (R-Mich.) p: 42 e: 70 c: 55.9 = Conservative
Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) p: 41 e: 78 c: 59.5 = Conservative
Rep. Ed Royce(R-Calif.) p: 64 e: 91 c: 77.1 = Libertarian
Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas) p: 61 e: 81 c: 70.8 = Enterpriser
Rep. David Vitter (R-La.) p: 61 e: 78 c: 69.7 = Enterpriser
Rep. Jim Walsh (R-N.Y. p: 47 e: 58 c: 52.7 = Centrist
Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. p: 60 e: 78 c: 69.1 = Enterpriser
LiberGraph Classifications
Libertarians advocate the maximum amount of Personal and Economic Liberty, consistent with the defense of individual rights. Fiscally conservative yet socially tolerant, libertarians favor lower taxes, free trade, individual rights and limited government.
Enterprisers advocate a moderate amount of Personal and Economic Liberty, with "good" government programs. Enterprises usually support free markets and usually oppose restrictions on individual civil liberties.
Centrists advocate compromise on all issues of Personal and Economic Liberty, prefering to avoid any partisan or principled positions. Centrists tend to support any "middle-of-the-road" position between the "left-right" and "liberty-tyranny" political spectrums.
Conservatives advocate a large amount of Economic Liberty, but favor a large government role in social issues. Conservatives usually support free markets, private enterprise, strong police powers and cultural norms in social behavior.
2 New Polls
The insider poll asked 82 beltway democrats who would be the strongest Republican in the general election. The results:
March 2007 December 2006
Rudy 39% Rudy 12%
Romney 20% Romney 11%
McCain 17% McCain 73%
Thompson 9% Thompson 0%
Then in Ohio the Summit County party’s annual Lincoln Day Dinner held a straw poll of the 752 guests.
The Results:
Rudy Giuliani - 31%
John McCain - 26%
Fred Thompson - 12%
Mitt Romney - 8%
While not a scientific poll, I think it adds to the mounting evidence that Thompson candidacy would be devastating to Romney.
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Moving on Up
There are three distinct camps among those Republicans who don't think Giuliani will win the nomination: the McCain camp, the Huckabee camp and the Arlington camp. The McCain camp believes questions about Giuliani's business practices and his personal character will disqualify him, and that his liberal positions on issues will be the coup de grace. The MSM is mostly in this camp. The Huckabee camp believes Giuliani is objectively too liberal to be the nominee and will not vote for him. The Arlington camp doesn't know whether Giuliani will be elected but worries -- for the sake of its organizations' bottom lines -- how a social liberal would affect the power and influence of organized conservative interests. If the election were held tomorrow, Giuliani would win. He doesn't have McCain's organizational strength, money, or endorsements, but he has a solid and growing lead in national polls. And so far, he's repelled some fairly devastating attacks (like the notion that he does not speak to his son).
They also estimate his fundraising projection to be $15 million behind both John McCain (20 million) and Mitt Romney (25 million). Still Rudy is gaining traction even in that arena with many "big donors" catching a ride on the Rudy bangwagon, including Richard Blackenship who switch just this week from the Romney camp.
Saturday, March 24, 2007
NYT: Giuliani Strikes a New Tone on Guns
But as a presidential candidate, Mr. Giuliani now talks very differently about guns as he tries to allay the concerns of Republican primary voters. He says he supports the right of individuals to bear arms, and that states — and generally not the federal government — should decide whether to put some limits on that right. He also spoke in favor of a federal appeals court ruling this month that struck down a District of Columbia ordinance barring people from keeping handguns in their homes.
While I would not call it a full on flip-flop, he is obviously taking a very different tone on the issue. This should be good news, since the central idea of his philosophy on the 2nd Amendment seems to be state's rights, as it should be, so the impact he would have on this issue would be at worst neutral. I would argue that it would be positive since now that the courts are taking a more active role in defending our right to bear arms, Rudy's strict constructionist appointees would add to our new legal crusade.
Interview-Mike McKeon
I think that at the end of the day, Rudy Giuliani is a guy who’s going to trust the American people and trust that when they take a full look at his record, will get it. That in an overwhelmingly Democratic city, with overwhelmingly Democratic city council, with a lot of people who are self-described very liberal legislators, he was able to cut taxes twenty-three times, he was able to reduce the size of the welfare rolls by a historic amount, he was able to reduce the size of government.
To read the rest of the this terrific interview click here