By The Prowler on 4.9.07 @ 12:09AM
All signs pointing to Fred coming to a decision soon. Tommy might regret some of his decisions.
FRED
The signs are getting larger and louder that former Sen.
Fred Thompson is moving toward a decision to get
into the 2008 presidential race. His recent posting on the popular
conservative community site RedState (on a Saturday no less)
garnered a surprising amount of traffic, and the fact that Thompson
is reaching out so readily online suggests he's looking to do
something more than blog.
Another sign: other campaigns appear to be getting nervous.
Increasingly minions for the Mitt Romney and
Rudy Giuliani camps have been extending a
whispering campaign against Thompson, both online and
elsewhere.
Sometimes it isn't even a whisper. The former Massachusetts
governor has taken to dismissing Thompson as a "TV personality" and
nothing more.
Beyond attempting to diminish Thompson in the minds of voters,
both campaigns -- and their online messengers -- are taking up two
lines of attack: that Thompson is a flip-flopper like Romney on the
abortion issue, and that Thompson's support of campaign finance
reform somehow makes him less of a conservative.
According to Thompson supporters who have been reviewing his
Senate records, there is no evidence that Thompson took a
pro-abortion position during his time in Washington.
"As far as we can tell, Senator Thompson never cast a pro-choice
vote in his eight years in the Senate," says an aide to a current
Republican U.S. Senator who asked that his staff look into
Thompson, perhaps with an eye to an endorsement down the road.
In fact, The American Spectator's Philip
Klein reported
that back in 1994 National Right to Life executive co-director
Darla St. Martin interviewed Thompson leading into
his Senate campaign and confirmed he was pro-life.
"I interviewed him and on all of the questions I asked him, he
opposed abortion," St. Martin told Klein. "He has a consistent
voting record that is pro-life," she said.
Some believe that where confusion has arisen is not on his votes
-- which are clean and straight pro-life -- but on his lack of
enthusiasm for a Constitutional amendment banning abortions.
"Thompson was a pretty clear cut state-rights guy, so it follows
that he'd be supportive of Roe being overturned and
everything being tossed back to the states," says a longtime Senate
staffer familiar with Thompson's Senate career. "A constitutional
ban wouldn't have been something he'd be particularly warm to, I'd
think."
Something else Thompson wasn't warm to was piles of soft money
and the kind of anything-goes fundraising that President
Bill Clinton and Vice President Al
Gore were undertaking back in the 1990s. That's why he
supported McCain-Feingold. He explained it this way on Fox News
Sunday several weeks ago:
THOMPSON: I came from the outside to Congress. And it
always seemed strange to me. We've got a situation where people
could give politicians huge sums of money, which is the soft money
situation at that time, and then come before those same politicians
and ask them to pass legislation for them.
I mean, you get thrown in jail for stuff like that in the real
world. And so I always thought that there was some reasonable
limitation that ought to be put on that, and you know, looking back
on history, Barry Goldwater in his heyday felt the same thing.
So that's not a non-conservative position, although I agree that
a lot of people have interpreted it that way.
Thompson has been straight enough to say that what he voted for --
and President Bush signed into law -- hasn't worked out so well.
Would he do it again? It would appear not, but that's something
Thompson will have to detail on his own.
"But the fact that these other campaigns are focusing on a guy
who isn't even in the race is remarkable to me," says a political
consultant who is nonaligned in the race. "Romney ought to be
focusing more in his own problems and less on distinguishing
himself from someone else. When you're at three percent in the
national polls, that's the kind of advice someone should be giving
him."
TOMMY
The decision by former Wisconsin governor and Health and Human
Services Secretary Tommy Thompson is considered a
headscratcher by a number of Republicans. Thompson, a Roman
Catholic, who has been good on life issues and is married to an
ex-nun, has kept a low profile since leaving the Bush
Administration.
In the 1990s Thompson was part of the high-profile gubernatorial
brain trust -- along with governors John Engler
and George Pataki -- that was viewed as the future
of the Republican Party, until W came along.
Engler has never expressed a desire to get back into politics,
Pataki has apparently abandoned hopes for a presidential run, so
now it's Thompson. But he has some issues to deal with, among them
a couple of ethical scrapes. Most recently, investigators from the
General Accounting Office determined that Thompson violated federal
law by using $9.5 million in Health and Humans Services funds -- in
other words, tax payer dollars -- to promote changes to Medicare.
The GAO determined that some of those changes would have benefited
companies that Thompson has a financial stake in. One of the
companies was VeriChip, which is marketing an implantable microchip
that would contain data that would help healthcare facilities
quickly assist patients with proper treatment.
As well, Thompson oversaw the Medicare overhaul plan, which
turned out to cost $150 billion more than expected. The GAO found
that Thompson aides worked behind the scenes to hide the true cost
of the reforms.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Abortion, Constitution, Law, NATO, Medicare