News from Iowa

An idea for the Iowa CFL

One of the first things your group could do is to invite Gary Johnson and or Gov. Sanford of South Carolina to Iowa, have them speak to your group and on college campuses. See if they would be willing to come.
 
Huckabee was interviewed today on statewide WHO-radio for about 30 minutes. The guy who hosts the drive-time show is a big Huckabee supporter and leading up to the caucuses last year he made his show a daily 3-hour Huckabee infomercial. He may be a big part of the reason Huckabee won here.

Anyway, he was calling in from the road to tout his new book and basically explain that if everyone else thought like him the GOP could win again. He agreed that if McCain had come out against the bailouts he may well have won.

The guy was just here a few days ago. Make no mistake...he's planning to run again.
 
The "abridged" version of the video from our 10/18 Iowa CFL kickoff meeting has been posted on the Iowa page here:

http://www.campaignforliberty.com/usa/IA/

We had over 100 people show up on a Saturday in Ames (site of last year's infamous straw poll). This is a lot more people than we had hoped for so we were packed in like sardines. We had a great time and had a lot of people step up to lead precincts and counties. It feels like we're off to a pretty good start here but there's a lot of work to do!
 
Layoffs

News today that local talk radio host J. Michael McKoy was laid off today.

Also, Des Moines-based Principal Financial Group laid off 550 employees today.

A few days ago the Des Moines Register laid off several dozen employees, including long-time front-page cartoonist Brian Duffy.
 
The Iowa GOP has a new Chairman. He is Matt Strawn from here in Polk County. He defeated 5 other candidates.

Strawn was some kind of state director for McCain, which is ironic since McCain was not popular here.

Strawn is part-owner of the ArenaFootball2 franchise here. I don't know much more about him. His closest competitor was Danny Carroll, a former legislator people describe as a religious conservative.

Strawn used YouTube and statewide pizza parties to push his candidacy, which is interesting since only the 17 members of the Central Committee have a vote. I thought it was nuts but apparently the 17 voters were impressed.

He wants to push Facebook and such to better mobilize the Iowa GOP.
 
With the unfortunate passing of Paul Harvey, the Des Moines FM station that carried Harvey's commentary has had to find something else to air in that time and it's...Mike Huckabee. Huckabee apparently has a syndicated daily commentary of 5-10 minutes that is now being broadcast to Iowans daily.
 
With the unfortunate passing of Paul Harvey, the Des Moines FM station that carried Harvey's commentary has had to find something else to air in that time and it's...Mike Huckabee. Huckabee apparently has a syndicated daily commentary of 5-10 minutes that is now being broadcast to Iowans daily.

Ouch --- any activism still left on your end Dave?
 
read the doug wead posts about ron paul running, he has it all planned out, especially iowa
 
People with political ambitions are starting to pour into Iowa:

George Pataki is visiting Iowa in April.

It sounds like visits are being planned by Newt Gingrich and MN governor Tim Pawlenty.

Former Senator Rick Santorum is visiting in October.
 
Here comes Huckabee again. Remember, pols like this only come to Iowa for one reason - and it ain't the sweet corn.


IowaPolitics.com: Huckabee to speak at Iowa business convention in June
4/14/2009

By Lynn Campbell
IowaPolitics.com

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee has been confirmed as the keynote speaker of the Iowa Association of Business and Industry's annual convention in June.

The convention is being held June 9 to 11 at the Arrowwood Resort and Conference Center at Lake Okoboji. Huckabee, a former Republican presidential candidate who won the 2008 Iowa caucuses, is scheduled to speak from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, June 10 in the resort's Wimbledon Event Space.

The theme of this year's convention is "Taking Care of Business" and Huckabee, who's also an author and talk show host, was seen as having experience and insight on that theme and on health care and wellness, said ABI lobbyist John Gilliland.

The event has not been publicized because organizers have not yet confirmed the topic that Huckabee will speak on. It's likely that Huckabee will speak about current events. Gilliland said Huckabee wasn't expensive to book as a speaker to the ABI convention, but he did not know the exact cost.

Huckabee has already visited Iowa once since the 2008 election, stopping in Cedar Rapids and in the Des Moines area in November to promote his book “Do The Right Thing: Inside the Movement That’s Bringing Common Sense Back to America.”
 
Everyone and their brother is going to try and get on the Republican ticket in 2012.
 
I just got a nice postcard from the American Future Fund telling me that former NY governor George Pataki will be speaking in Des Moines next week.

His speech: "Yes We Still Can - Why Washington Has Failed and How We Can Reclaim America's Future".

All these pols are excited because they think their message will sell better now - but we all know they're just more of the same...
 
I just got a nice postcard from the American Future Fund telling me that former NY governor George Pataki will be speaking in Des Moines next week.

His speech: "Yes We Still Can - Why Washington Has Failed and How We Can Reclaim America's Future".

All these pols are excited because they think their message will sell better now - but we all know they're just more of the same...

Pataki has been pushing a national electric-grid at some of the uber-neocon meetings I attend to find out what they're upto.
 
Unfortunately, Mike Huckabee is doing what it takes to win the Iowa caucuses again. We need to have our guy doing the same, which is why I wish Ron Paul would make a definitive statement one way or the other about running in 2012.
 
It was announced today that U.S. Senator John Ensign (R-NV) will make 3 stops in Iowa in a few weeks to deliver lectures for the American Future Fund.

Presidential ambitions, perhaps?
 
Iowa presidential campaigning returns

Iowa Presidential Campaigning Returns:

[url]http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D98HFPOO0&show_article=1[/URL]

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - It's been six months since voters handed Barack Obama the White House, and in the minds of a lot of Iowa activists that means only one thing: It's time to start the campaign again. 2012 already?



Yes, 2 1/2 years before Iowans gather for their first-in-the-nation precinct caucuses, early presidential campaigning has begun.



"We had a brief pause for two or three months when people went somewhere warm, and then it starts again," said Richard Schwarm, a Lake Mills lawyer and former state Republican Party chairman. "Most of the old war horses hear the bell and start responding again."

Potential Republican candidates who have visited the state include Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who won the GOP caucuses in 2008. More politicians have trips planned, starting with Nevada Sen. John Ensign on Monday, followed by Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour and another appearance by Huckabee.



Several other high-profile Republicans thought to be considering presidential runs, including Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, haven't visited Iowa since the election.



Of course, politicians typically say their stops in Iowa aren't related to any presidential ambitions.



Ensign, for example, will speak as part of a conservative lecture series designed to define the Republican Party heading into next year's congressional elections. Huckabee will be the draw at a fundraiser for Bob Vander Plaats, a likely candidate for governor.



Phil Roeder, chief spokesman for the Iowa Democratic Party during the 1988 election cycle, said there's a long tradition of politicians traveling to Iowa to help others.



"It's the smoke screen," Roeder said. "Every candidate has to keep the expectations in check and at the same time it's a great way to make friends in Iowa. If you're here to help others and not just help yourself, it gives you a good list to go back to when it's your turn."



Or as Eric Woolson, a GOP strategist who headed Huckabee's successful Iowa campaign, put it, "That's the nature of Iowa and the political schedule."
Campaigning for the caucuses begins earlier with each presidential election cycle, but interest among Republicans could be especially strong this time because of last year's example. That's when an underdog first-term senator from Illinois patiently built a huge network of supporters in Iowa, then was propelled by a surprising caucus victory toward the Democratic nomination and ultimately the White House.



"We only have to look at somebody named President Barack Obama to realize that if you do well in Iowa a lot of other pieces fall into place," said Republican strategist Bob Haus. "They take their role very seriously, so candidates take Iowa very seriously."



It doesn't always work that way.



In last year's caucuses, Huckabee emerged with a big triumph. But he never could shake his underdog status and finally quit when it became clear that Arizona Sen. John McCain would gain the Republican nomination.



The coming presidential campaign cycle almost certainly will be a Republican show because it's unlikely any Democrat will challenge Obama's run for a second term. Obama has visited Iowa once since becoming president and has maintained much of his campaign infrastructure in the state.



In his trip Monday, Ensign plans to focus on western Iowa, where Republicans dominate. Ensign, a veterinarian, will tour Trans Ova Genetics, an animal reproduction and cloning company in Sioux Center, and will make a perennial campaign stop, the Wells Blue Bunny Ice Cream Parlor in Le Mars. That evening, he'll give his speech in Sioux City.



"I think he's a rising star in the conservative movement and I can't wait to introduce him to Iowa," said Tim Albrecht, an organizer for the American Future Fund, an Iowa-based conservative advocacy group.



Albrecht, a former staffer for Romney during his presidential run, said Iowa is the perfect place for potential candidates to hone their message. Romney visited Iowa repeatedly before declaring his candidacy, then held events in the state almost weekly in the months leading to the caucuses.
"You can't find a more fertile soil in America to begin growing the new conservative movement," Albrecht said.



If it's obvious why candidates can't resist heading to the heartland, what about Iowans? Don't they ever tire of the attention?
Apparently not.



"I think people genuinely think it's fun, it's interesting, it's exciting,'" said Roeder, now a spokesman for Democratic Gov. Chet Culver. "People take it pretty darn seriously."



Lexi Wornson, a Des Moines business owner, agreed.
"A lot of Iowans feel they can not only play a role, but they expect to play a role," she said.



For some, Iowa's place in American politics means a livelihood for those who run and staff campaigns, as well as businesses that cater to campaign gatherings.
"It puts food on the table," said Democratic activist Brad Anderson. "The reality is, it's been half a year since the election, they've had six or seven months to recover and I think people on the Republican side are ready to start the game again."



Schwarm, the former state GOP chairman, said the state benefits by the never-ending campaigning.



"The activists are interested in going out to talk to them and it builds energy and it builds fundraising," he said. "It's good for the economy."
Even if they wanted to delay campaigning until, say, a year before the caucuses, Drake University political science professor Dennis Goldford said Iowans wouldn't have much luck.



"Whether or not Iowans get tired of it, the fact remains that Iowa is still first in the nation until one or both parties determine otherwise," said Goldford. "Politicians certainly have to fight on the terrain they confront. That terrain starts in Iowa."
 
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