• Polling,  President 2012,  Rudy Giuliani

    President 2012 Poll Watch: Rudy Giuliani the Best GOP Chance to Beat Obama?

    New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi, second from left, and Rudy Giuliani, center, joins Nick Swisher, lower right, in congratulating Eric Chavez (12) on his second-inning solo home run off Houston Astros starting pitcher Nelson Figueroa in their spring training baseball game at Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Fla., Friday, March 25, 2011

    According to the latest Harris Poll:

    Taking the same list of 11 potential Republican nominees and pitting them against President Obama shows some interesting results. While he only garners 8% of overall adults and just 7% of Republicans in the primary field, Rudy Giuliani is the only candidate on the list who edges out President Obama in a head to head match-up, 51% to 49%. The next two Republicans make it a close race but President Obama edges out Mitt Romney (51% to 49%) and Mike Huckabee (52% to 48%).

    Among the next tier of candidates, it’s anywhere from a 10 point margin (Trump 45%/Obama 55%) to 12 point margin (Gingrich, Daniels and Pawlenty 44% versus Obama 56%) to a 14 point margin (Santorum 43%/Obama 57%). The third tier of candidates would be a relief for the current White House as President Obama is ahead by 16 points on Sarah Palin (58% vs. 42%) and 18 points ahead of Haley Barbour and Michele Bachmann (59% vs. 41%).

    One problem – look at the photo above and tell me where America’s Mayor would rather be?

    No, Rudy Giuliani will NOT be a candidate for President in 2012 although he would be a great general election candidate. He would give President Obama a run for his money.

    Interesting too is the fact that Mitt Romney is so thin-skinned that he has one of his minions writing how horribly Rudy ran his campaign in 2008.

    Candidates who do best in New Hampshire are those who campaign in the traditional way, making themselves available to primary voters at party events, town hall meetings and house parties. That’s what Romney did, and how he earned a second chance. Newcomers Tim Pawlenty and Rick Santorum have already spent more time campaigning among the grassroots than Giuliani did.

    Most of us know the experience of having had a bad first date. Usually both participants recognize it didn’t work out, but sometimes the guy doesn’t get the message, calls again, and needs to be told bluntly: Sorry, Rudy. You had your chance, and much as we respect your resume, we’re just not interested in going out again.

    I guess, Rudy travels to New Hampshire, threatens Romney, polls well and then the knives come out.

    Gee, maybe Rudy should reconsider running – just to piss off Mitt Romney. He certainly would make a better President.

  • President 2012,  Rudy Giuliani

    President 2012: Rudy Giuliani to Run to Stop a Right Wing Presidential Candidate?



    Rudy Giuliani speaking today in Palm Beach, Florida

    I doubt it.

    Former New York Mayor and 2008 Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani left the door open for a 2012 run tonight, saying he’d think about launching another White House bid if it looks the GOP might otherwise pick a nominee who is too right-wing.

    Giuliani backed away from his previous suggestion that he’d be more likely to run if Sarah Palin got in the race. He said another potential 2012 GOP candidate, Mitt Romney, should declare the health care plan he championed as governor of Massachusetts was a mistake.

    Giuliani spoke for about 90 minutes to a Palm Beach Republican Club crowd of about 200 at The Colony hotel.

    During a Q-and-A session, he was asked about his January comments on CNN that he’d be tempted to run if Palin were a candidate. Giuliani called that remark rash. But he said his fears of the GOP choosing a nominee who can’t win a general election might prompt him to run.

    If all we are faced with are candidates that are too far right so that they can’t win the general election, then that’s when I’d reconsider doing it, Giuliani said.

    Again, there has been no sign from the Bat Cave to former 2008 Presidential campaign staffers. But, Rudy would be a good Vice Presidential pick or campaign surrogate for the GOP in 2012.

    And, this will be Rudy’s role next year.

  • Chris Christie,  Polling,  President 2012,  Rudy Giuliani

    President 2012 Poll Watch: Who’s HOT and Who is NOT – The National Thermometer

    Quinnipiac University National Thermometer poll is out.

    The Quinnipiac University poll asked voters to rate leaders from 0 to 100 degrees on a “feeling thermometer,” with the highest numbers reflecting the warmest feelings. The mean scores and the percent who said they did not know enough about the people to rate them are:

    The most interesting HOTS to me are Rudy Giuliani and Chris Christie. The other potential GOP Presidential candidates are NOT so hot.

  • President 2012,  Rudy Giuliani

    President 2012: Will Rudy Giuliani Run for President?

    I don’t think Rudy will pull the trigger but with him, you never know.

    Four years ago, Giuliani was the national frontrunner. That luster fizzled as Giuliani campaigned in fits and starts in the early states then abandoned them for Florida, his make-or-break primary. It broke him.

    In recent weeks, Giuliani and his allies have quietly been talking to activists to see just how much damage he dealt himself among the political class who view their first-in-the-nation role as sacred. Giuliani has scheduled a visit to New Hampshire in March and has hinted he may seek the nomination again if his party appears poised to nominate someone he views as too extreme, such as Sarah Palin or Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota.

    Rudy views Mitt Romney as a slick light-weight, does not like him personally, considers him a holier than thou POL and refused to go negative against John McCain (his friend) in New Hampshire in 2008 so that anybody could stop Mitt from winning. Rudy miscalculated.

    He thought he could beat McCain in Florida and the later primaries, like California. Then, Florida Governor Charlie Crist double-crossed Rudy and endorsed McCain – at the time Crist was still a Republican and popular. Giuliani lost Florida and promptly withdrew from the race, endorsing eventual nominee John McCain.

    There has been “no signal from the bat cave” to former Giuliani staffers, so a run for President is unlikely.

    But, as I said, you never know and he certainly would make a better President than Mitt Romney et. al..

  • Rudy Giuliani,  Sarah Palin

    Video: Rudy Giuliani: Sarah Palin Can Win the GOP Nomination But Can She Beat President Obama?

    Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani on CNN’s Piers Morgan show

    The but is that it depends upon what President Obama does in the next few months. The headline from CNN is incorrect, since Rudy does not doubt Palin can beat Obama – it just depends. For example, if the stock market were to crash and there are massive layoffs, I could see the public blaming the President.

    Is this scenario likely? 

    Probably not.

    With the President surging in the polls and with the GOP better positioned in the Congress, there will be no sense of urgency for American voters to throw out the incumbent President. Sarah Palin is very young for a Presidential candidate and there is no urgency for her to run and then lose in the general election.

    It is probably better to say at this point that it may be doubtful for ANY Republican nominee to beat Obama, including Sarah Palin.

    I have always maintained that Sarah Palin could beat Mitt Romney in a GOP Presidential primary race, but why bother if your chances of beating Obama are diminished because of the incumbency factor and racial politics.

    Better for Sarah to keep her powder dry for a run in 2016 or later. She has plenty of time.

  • Rudy Giuliani,  Sarah Palin

    Sarah Palin Schedules a New York One Hour Onstage Interview in February

    Former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin

    Sarah will be speaking to New York business leaders on Long Island, February 17, 2011.

    Former Alaska GOP Gov. Sarah Palin has agreed to a high-profile speaking engagement to New York business leaders on Long Island next month.

    Palin will speak to the Long Island Association on February 17 at the Crest Hollow Country Club in Woodbury, New York, the group confirmed Friday.

    Palin is also giving two paid speeches in Nevada at the end of January and is scheduled to speak Jan. 24 at a closed-press fundraiser for the Lubbock Christian School in Lubbock, Texas.

    Wonder if Sarah will be meeting with Rudy Giuliani, if he is in town?

  • Rudy Giuliani,  Sarah Palin

    Video: President 2012: Rudy Giuliani to Run for President If Sarah Palin Does – Palin’s Stalking Horse to Beat Romney?

    Former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani tells CNN’s Piers Morgan that if Sarah Palin Runs in 2012, he’s more likely to as well

    Now, this is interesting and I have not heard from any of Rudy’s 2008 campaign people about a Presidential race by the Mayor. But, maybe he is lying low, unlike the last time.

    On Monday’s hour-long “Piers Morgan Tonight” interview, Rudy Giuliani tells Piers Morgan he’s more likely to run if Sarah Palin runs in 2012. “The more Republicans in which I can show a contrast…the better chance that I have,” he said, describing himself as a moderate.

    But if he does run, Giuliani says he would concentrate on winning Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, sites of the first presidential nominating contests. In 2008 Giuliani focused his resources in Florida, a strategy that that led to the demise of his run after he finished third in the state’s primary.

    However, the former U.S. Attorney said he doesn’t see a frontrunner in the Republican field, which makes for “a fluid situation.”

    “There is no obvious frontrunner right now,” Giuliani said. “I guess everybody is happy with that, because nobody wants to be the frontrunner at this point because it always seems the frontrunner gets all the attention, all of the negative publicity.”

    Well, the Mayor in a three way race with Mitt Romney and Sarah Palin would split the regional GOP alliances. There are many GOP delegates in the Far West and Northeast that would support Rudy over Romney (as the anti-Palin) and Palin.

    One of the main criticisms of Sarah Palin is her lack of executive experience and Rudy certainly has that experience – as New York City Mayor and U.S. Attorney.

    But, could Rudy win the GOP nomination?

    Probably not unless Sarah Palin imploded. But a Rudy candidacy would certainly freeze out Mitt Romney. Two moderates Vs. Palin = a Palin nomination.

    There is little doubt that Giuliani COULD beat Barack Obama with a center-right coalition that would challenge the President in more battleground states – like Colorado, Washington, Nevada and Virginia.

    But, Rudy will not be running unless it is as a stalking horse and foil for Palin.

    Rudy would make a terrific Vice Presidential nominee with Sarah or as U.S. Attorney General under ANY GOP Administration.

    Alaska Governor Sarah Palin (L) joins former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (R) and his wife Judith Nathan as they attend the New York Yankees MLB American League baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium in New York, June 7, 2009

  • Rudy Giuliani,  Sarah Palin

    Video: Rudy Giuliani Defends Sarah Palin Over Blame for Tucson Shooting – Nothing to do with a Map

    Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani on Face the Nation

    Link for the video is here.

    The Mayor picks up around 3:00 of the video and discusses mental illness as the cause of the Jared Loughner Tucson shootings and at 8:30 defends Sarah Palin.

    Giuliani said during a “Face the Nation” interview on CBS that her use of that term was off the mark — but the former New York City mayor also defended Palin.

    He called her response to the blame “one of someone accused” unjustifiably, adding “facts and circumstances” uncovered thus far show alleged shooter Jared Loughner was not motivated by an politician or ideology. Rather, his apparent unstable mental condition is to blame, Giuliani said.

    “This had nothing to do with left or right,” Giuliani said. “Or a map.”

    The transcript of the Giuliani interview is here (PDF file).

    I think the Mayor makes the correct analysis, defends his colleagues and develops a sensible plan for the future. A problem solver, Giuliani remains one of America’s best.

  • Rudy Giuliani,  Sarah Palin

    Sarah Palin Video: I Believe I Can Beat Barack Obama

    Is there now any doubt that Sarah Palin will roll the dice and run for President in 2012?

    Sarah Palin says she is seriously considering a run for the White House, and she believes she could beat President Obama in 2012, the former Alaska governor told ABC News’ Barbara Walters.

    “I’m looking at the lay of the land now, and … trying to figure that out, if it’s a good thing for the country, for the discourse, for my family, if it’s a good thing,” Palin said in an interview scheduled to air in full Dec. 9 on ABC as part of Walters’ “10 Most Fascinating People” of 2010.

    Asked Walters: “If you ran for president, could you beat Barack Obama?”

    “I believe so,” Palin said.

    Also, today there is this somewhat favorable profile of Team Sarah in the New York Times, no less

    As I said before, Sarah will keep her powder dry, prepare to run and run if President Obama’s poll numbers continue in the tank in key battleground Midwest states.

    I doubt she will have little trouble defeating Mitt Romney in Iowa, South Carolina and Florida in any contested GOP primary elections. Mitt Romney would likely win New Hampshire but with Rudy Giuliani at her side should be able to sweep the Northeast GOP primaries and California – if the GOP contest continues that late.

    What does Sarah Palin have to lose, really?

    Barack Obama or any incumbent President will be difficult at best to beat. Expectations to beat Obama will be low.

    If Palin runs and loses the GOP nomination, she can write more books and make a comeback ala Nixon and Reagan in later years. If she loses to Obama, she will be the front runner for the 2016 Presidential race where there will be no incumbent.

    I say Sarah Palin runs.

  • Rudy Giuliani,  Sarah Palin

    Election 2012: Why Stop Sarah Palin?


    Sounds like Mitt Romney’s political operatives to me.

    Top Republicans in Washington and in the national GOP establishment say the 2010 campaign highlighted an urgent task that they will begin in earnest as soon as the elections are over: Stop Sarah Palin.

    Interviews with advisers to the main 2012 presidential contenders and with other veteran Republican operatives make clear they see themselves on a common, if uncoordinated, mission of halting the momentum and credibility Palin gained with conservative activists by plunging so aggressively into this year’s midterm campaigns.

    Former New York Mayor and GOP Presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani has the best advice for the GOP.

    Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, meanwhile, made the point that Palin’s anti-establishment credibility is only helped when Republican operatives air their concerns anonymously to the consummate insider publication.

    “I worked for Ronald Reagan, you know the 11th Commandment was don’t criticize another Republican,” he said during an appearance on “Fox and Friends” on Monday. “Let’s not start this presidential race before this election is over and let’s not go through the negativity we went through in the last one where Republicans attacked the heck out of each other. We have got a bigger mission here. Sarah Palin has every right to make her case to the Republican Party. How about we let the Republicans decide — not the so-called leaders — whether she is qualified or not?”

    “I think they are missing the whole point of what is going on in our electorate right now because that is the worst possible way to take that kind of a lesson out of this election,” Giuliani added. “I think this time we have to have a Republican National Committee that disciplines Republicans who attack other Republicans. I see it starting already and it really disturbs me.”

    And, I agree. Let the Republican primary elections take care of themselves.

    Republican political operatives should obey Reagan’s 11th commandment and come out of the shadows, if they have the intestinal fortitude.