The Washington Post, in a rare act of actual reporting, gives us the news that "I'm not a candidate yet but will be" George Allen is raising money through his PAC. He also has a spiffy new website where he describes himself as "scholar, athlete, governor, and senator." Sorry, that tag line made me chuckle. Even if your a genius, who bills themselves as a scholar? Who does that?
Look, I know it sounds like I'm drinking too much Haterade when it comes to Allen, but he's not what I am looking for right now. After working so hard in 2009 and watching the great constitutional conservatives winning primaries all over the country - I'm looking for someone who talks about liberty and limited government with equal parts passion and intellect, someone like Rand Paul or Mike Lee or Jim DeMint or . . . dare I say . . . Ken Cuccinelli or Corey Stewart or Bob Marshall. I don't want someone boiling down every complex problem to a football analogy.
i wouldnt classify him as a scholar, but ok.
Posted by: local gop | July 17, 2010 at 01:21 AM
I know, its such a strange tag isn't it?
Posted by: Chris | July 17, 2010 at 02:31 AM
Considering that local gop has revealed him/herself to be an illiterate who can't construct a proper sentence, how would said person be able to identify a scholar?
Posted by: Professor Plum | July 17, 2010 at 07:34 AM
pp,
aside from a handful of typos, a product of running through about 10 blogs in 5 minutes, my sentences are fine. the grammar police are really useless if the only come back is "you can't spell." if i truly cared about spelling i would run my comments through a spell checker, but i really dont have time for that on a simple comment.
Posted by: local gop | July 17, 2010 at 08:35 AM
I would love to see either Corey Stewart or Bob Marshall go up against Allen. It would almost be a joke. Neither could pull 30%, even in a convention. Don't get me wrong I was a big Marshall supporter over Gilmore and would do so again but he has no chance against Allen. None whatsoever. Yea, one-issue candidates don't play well state wide either.
The problem is Allen is not a typical establishment candidate. Yes, he is a former Congressman, Governor, and Senator but he does not fit the typical bill.
I do think he will have a difficult task of regaining his seat from any Democrat but I do think its possible. I also think we might have some much better prepared candidates like either Randy Forbes or Rob Wittman, who can appeal past the Tea Party crowd. No offense, but Virginia is not Kentucky, South Carolina, or Utah.
Posted by: mytwocents | July 17, 2010 at 08:43 AM
Actually . . . Virginia is very similar in some ways to Kentucky . . . though KY doesn't quite have an equivalent of Northern Virginia they do have large areas around Louisville and Cincinnatti. Democrats do very well locally and statewide.
I believe in the power of a message campaign . . . all those guys I just mentioned had huge leads and the upset candidates worked to change minds and make a case. I'm tired of candidates running on reputation and the past.
Posted by: Chris | July 17, 2010 at 09:56 AM
I really like George Allen and I worked hard to help his earlier campaigns. Back then, he was always about promoting our FREEDOM, and reigning-in intrusive government.
During the Bush years, Virginia needed that George Allen to stand-up against the Bush Neocon assault on our Constitution. Instead, we got the George Allen who, when asked about the violations of our civil liberties by Bush, was quoted by Tom Brokaw as saying, "I will stand with my President."
Jim Webb cites Allen's refusal to stand-up for our civil liberties as his initial motivation for mounting a campaign to unseat George Allen.
Unquestioning loyalty is not the proper place for a Senator, or ANY citizen.
I am looking forward to working hard to re-elect Senator Jim Webb.
Posted by: J. Tyler Ballance | July 17, 2010 at 12:20 PM
pi kappa alpha, largest national men's fraternity, were scholars and were gentlement....
Posted by: Tim Travis | July 17, 2010 at 01:03 PM
I am with you on this. Allen's time has past. The GOP in this state has moved on from him. Allen had his moment and blew it through his own stupidity. That alone means you don't deserve another chance.
Posted by: George Templeton | July 17, 2010 at 01:37 PM
How "J. Tyler Ballance" or any other absolute idiots who consider themselves conservative or libertarian could vote--much less work hard for--Jim Webb (who is as reliable a vote for Obama/Reid/Pelosi, et al, as Allen ever was for Bush) is beyond me.
Effing nimrod.
Posted by: I'm With Stupid | July 17, 2010 at 06:31 PM