ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Politics

A Look Ahead to 2008 (Part I)

Author : Terry Mitchell
Just as everyone has breathed a sigh of relief at the end of 2004 presidential campaign, I would like to take a quick look ahead to 2008. Unless George W. Bush is unable to complete his second term, 2008 will bring the third open presidential election (no incumbent running) in 20 years. Even though that's still four years into the future, the campaign will be unofficially getting underway almost immediately. Therefore, many of the potential candidates can already be identified and there should be no shortage of them on either side.

Today, I will be taking a look at the potential Republican candidates. Among them are Arizona Senator John McCain, Tennessee Senator Bill Frist, Florida Governor Jeb Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum, Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge, Virginia Senator George Allen, and National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice.

John McCain is probably in the best position to capture the GOP nomination, should he decide to run. He was beaten by Bush in the 2000 primaries, but he has since been one of the President's most loyal supporters, despite some differences of opinion. McCain is one of the most popular politicians in the U.S. and won re-election to his Senate seat last week with more than 70% of the vote! Unlike the Democrats, the Republicans have a history of sometimes awarding their nomination to someone who has waited his "turn." A case in point is Bob Dole, who was rejected in his bids for the nomination in 1980 and 1988, only to finally get it in 1996.

Bill Frist is a surgeon is who was first elected to the Senate during the "Republican Revolution" of 1994. He is now the majority leader of the Senate and should benefit from the GOP's pick-up of four additional seats in this election cycle. Frist seems to be well liked by all factions of the party. He would probably have the inside track to the Republican nomination if McCain decides not to run.

Jeb Bush would like to continue a streak that the Republicans currently have in place. Since 1976, they have featured either a Dole or a Bush on every national ticket. That's eight straight presidential elections! The fact that he was able to help his brother do better than anyone expected in Florida (winning by five percentage points) bodes well for him. That alone should greatly improve his stature within the Republican Party. Having family ties to the White House won't hurt either.

Dick Cheney has said he probably will not run for president (and there are even rumors that he might even resign before the end of Bush's second term). If he doesn't run, or if he does run and subsequently fails to get the nomination, the 2008 election would be the first without the inclusion of a sitting president or vice president since 1952. However, politicians have been known to change their minds. I still think he might ultimately decide to run. If he does, unlike most sitting vice presidents, he will have an uphill battle for the nomination. However, his popularity with the far right wing of the party would play to his advantage and could ultimately give him the edge he would need. There's still a question mark as to how evangelicals within the party would react to his support of his gay daughter.

Rudy Giuliani rebuilt his image with his handling of the 9/11 aftermath. Previously, he had to withdraw from a potential Senate race against Hillary Clinton, because of health problems. That was the official line, but most people believed it was because of a nasty divorce and rumors about extramarital affairs. He is now a very popular politician, but whether he is conservative enough to win the Republican presidential nomination is questionable at best. He will likely be opposed by the evangelical wing of the party.

Before being elected governor of Massachusetts in 2002, Mitt Romney headed up the Salt Lake City Olympic Organizing Committee earlier that same year. He had also made a run for the U.S. Senate against Ted Kennedy in 1994 and lost. However, he did so much better against Kennedy that most of his previous challengers had done, that his loss actually helped boost his political career. Since being elected governor, he has become one of the bright young stars of the Republican Party. His father, the late George Romney, served as governor of Michigan and sought the Republican presidential nomination in 1968 but lost to Richard Nixon. His father's remarks made during the nominating process about having been "brainwashed" about Viet Nam ultimately cost him the nomination. Should Mitt Romney decide to run, he will want to avoid that kind of blunder.

Like Frist, Rick Santorum was first elected to the Senate in 1994. As Conference Chairman, he is now the third highest ranking Republican in the Senate. Santorum is a favorite of the Christian Right with his strong anti-abortion and anti-homosexuality views. However, pragmatic primary voters might shun him, feeling that he may be a bit too extreme to win a general election. Of course, four years before the 1980 election, many Republicans expressed those same sentiments about Ronald Reagan.

Tom Ridge was a very popular and effective governor of Pennsylvania before taking over Homeland Security. He was in his second term as governor when he resigned to take over that post. Prior to being elected governor, he served several terms in the U.S. House of Representatives. Ridge is more of a moderate Republican, but unlike Giuliani, seems to have some appeal to the party's conservative base. Whether he has enough remains to be seen. He is pro-choice, so he will get some opposition from the Christian Right, should he decide to seek the nomination.

George Allen is another rising star within the Republican Party. A former state delegate and son of the late Washington Redskins' coach of the same name, he was elected to Congress in 1990. However, his district was redrawn and he ended up in the same district as another, more established Republican congressman, Tom Bliley, by the end of his first term. He decided not to seek re-election in 1992 and was elected governor of Virginia in 1993 and then elected to the U.S. Senate in 2000. He headed up the GOP's Senate Election committee for the last two years. The extra seats that the Republicans picked up in the Senate last week will be a feather in his cap. He has strong conservative credentials but is relatively unknown nationally.

Before taking her current post, Condoleezza Rice had previously served on the National Security Council under President George H. W. Bush. She is not a career politician or lawyer, but comes from an academic background - she has been a member of the Stanford University faculty for over 20 years. She has never held elective office but has sometimes given indications that she has presidential ambitions. She has been a very loyal member of the Bush Administration and that has earned her a great deal of respect throughout the party. Where she stands on social issues is still uncertain. She might ultimately prove to be a better prospect for vice president than president.

Next week I will continue my look ahead to 2008 with the potential Democratic presidential candidates.

About the Author

Terry Mitchell is a software engineer, free-lance writer, and trivia buff from Hopewell, VA. He operates a website, http://www.commenterry.com, on which he posts commentaries on various subjects such as politics, technology, religion, health and well-being, personal finance, and sports. His commentaries offer a unique point of view that is not often found in mainstream media.

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Anarchy: Law, Order, and Authority
  2. Internet in Russia and Ukraine - Part 1. General Information and Statistics
  3. Rule of Thumb For Exporting Technology
  4. Increasing Evaporation in Ocean to Defeat Droughts
  5. The New Goo Review is Coming Right At You
  6. So How Far Have We Come? Here are some of the 2001 Anti Terrorist Projects
  7. Using a Meteor Shower as Decoy for ICBM Attack
  8. Stopping a Nuclear Bomb on a Hydrofoil
  9. Harmonic Beams to Pre-Detonate Shoulder Launched Surface to Air Missiles
  10. Defending Middle Eastern Oil Refineries and Assets
  11. Technology and International Terrorism
  12. Screening Trucks and Containers Coming Into Our Country
  13. Let me throw out a random thought on Homeland Security Leadership Structure
  14. Tracking Over The Road Trucks from Canada
  15. What are the benefits of Nuclear War again; I must have missed that point?
  16. Chinese Military Build Up - Sun Tzu and Chinese War Machine
  17. Cloaking Giant Airships is Possible, Why Stop There?
  18. Canning International Terrorists? Literally
  19. Self Destruct Strategies in UAV Construction
  20. UAV Decoy Stategies, Theories and The Modern Art of War
  21. UAV Materials and Thoughts on New Technologies and Keeping Up With Our Opponents
  22. UAV Targets, Aerial Dog Fights, Interception, Future of War Intelligence
  23. Anglo-Israelism and the Flesh
  24. Israel Termed A ‘Nuclear Power’ By US Officials
  25. Another Round of EU-Iran Talks Starts April 10 - Will Iran Be Referred To The UN Security Council?
More related feeds
Looking Back As We Look Ahead
As we await the approach of training camp (13 days until the first practice), a look back at the 2007 season. Here's hoping that Brown and Curtis can show some of these skills game in and game out in 2008. They actually look like NFL ...

Homecoming 2008: Part 4
“That sounds like your father talking.” She had darted a coquettish look at Winters. “Lewie was never treated very well by my ex-husband. That’s part of the reason why I left him,” she added in tones of false conspiracy. ...

Adventures of the past kind! - Natalie - Granada Summer 2008
Up further ahead though, was the huge tombs themselves. (You can do a quick google search to see what they look like!) Large engravings of Ferdinand and Isabella, as well as their daughter Juanita la Loca and Felipe el Guapo. ...

A look ahead to the 2008 UEFA European U-19 Championships
... Merida and Kieran Gibbs will be at the UEFA under-19 Championships in Czech Republic which kick off a week tomorrow and run until July 26th. Read on for an in-depth preview of the tournament as well as the players to look out for. ...

Comic-Con 2008 Schedule released
Dark Horse editors Scott Allie and Shawna Gore and a handful of our top creators take a look ahead at their spookiest projects for 2008, including a sneak peek at the 25th anniversary edition of Bernie Wrightson’s Frankenstein and a ...

Comic Con 2008’s Complete Thursday Schedule
3:00-4:00 DVD/Blu-ray Producers 2008. Bill Hunt, Todd Doogan, and Adam Jahnke (The Digital Bits.com, Geek Monthly) discuss the latest DVD and Blu-ray Disc developments and look ahead at upcoming releases. Panelists include Javier Soto ...

A look ahead at 2010
* This appeared in a downstate column over the weekend about possible gubernatorial contenders… Chicago Mayor Richard Daley’s brother, Bill, also has popped up on the scene, but we’re guessing that’s more about the mayor toying with Gov ...

Part 2: Ross Island, Chiriyatapu and the return - Port Blair, India
Life as it is on island can be witnessed in another interesting little museum up ahead. From drawings and photographs to letters written by the inhabitants to their loved ones back in England, it's as good a walkthrough of those times ...

A Look Ahead
A Look Ahead (And Behind) By normxxx | 7 July 2008 Impaired institutions are likely to experience failures in the course of this year. There will not likely be more bailouts like Bear Stearns (the coffers are empty). ...

2008 Update, Part 2
Speaking of Reason Number Three: commodity prices will also reliably increase in the years ahead because government is keen to help solve the problem. That is another way of saying that the free market will not be allowed to solve the ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved