Facebook Twitter eEdition Your News Business Directory List Business Classifieds Subscribe NEMisJobs NEMissPreps NEMSHomes NEMSDeals

UPDATE: Missississippi governor tests 2012 GOP waters in Iowa, NH
by Beth Fouhy/The Associated Pres
2 years ago | 1436 views | 10 10 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Haley Barbour
Haley Barbour
slideshow
JACKSON — If the Republican Party is in danger of being marginalized as a conservative, white male Southern enclave, is Haley Barbour — the longtime Washington power broker and current Mississippi governor — the best person to turn things around?

Many rank-and-file Republicans and party leaders say yes, as the 61-year-old Barbour prepares to ramp up his national profile this month with back-to-back trips to the early presidential voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire.

Barbour will headline fundraisers in both states, but says the visits are part of his duties as incoming chairman of the Republican Governors Association. Both states have governors' races next year.

"I've told everyone I know that every Republican ought to be focused on governors' races in 2009 and the 2010 elections," Barbour said in an interview with The Associated Press.

A former chairman of the Republican National Committee, Barbour has emerged as a leader of his party's efforts to retool for the future. His allies believe he could be a formidable presidential contender if he chooses to play.

"Haley's unique in that he's a brilliant strategist who led the party and has also run in and won a competitive governor's race," said Ed Gillespie, a former RNC chairman. "He commands a lot of respect from rank-and-file Republicans, as well as the leadership of the party and many Democrats. He's a happy warrior who stands up for conservative principles."

Barbour typically sidesteps questions about his presidential aspirations, saying he will wait until after next year's elections to decide.

With his good ol' boy charm and a drawl as thick as Mississippi mud, Barbour at first blush might not fit anyone's idea of the standard bearer for a party looking to diversify. He's a former lobbyist who made millions representing tobacco and other business interests, even as lobbyists increasingly have become stigmatized by Democrats and Republicans alike.

But Barbour's political skills have been tested and proven in Mississippi, where he defeated a Democratic incumbent to become just the second Republican elected governor since Reconstruction, and at the national level, where he helped rescue the GOP during another low period for the party.

Barbour became RNC chairman in 1993 after Bill Clinton was elected president and Democrats held strong majorities in Congress. Led by Barbour and Newt Gingrich, another potential 2012 contender, Republicans rallied in 1994, claiming majorities in the Senate and in the House for the first time in 40 years.

The Republican gains that year were helped by the collapse of the President Bill Clinton's health care reform plan; President Barack Obama is making a politically risky attempt to reform the nation's health care system this year, with potential reverberations in next year's midterm elections.

Barbour left the RNC in 1997 and built a lucrative lobbying practice before returning to Mississippi to run for governor. He defeated Democrat Ronnie Musgrove in 2003 and was easily re-elected in 2007; term limits will require him to step down after 2011.

Barbour has governed as a conservative, which is sure to endure him with Republicans across the country. But coming from a state in the heart of the old Confederacy that hasn't voted for a Democratic presidential candidate since 1976, his appeal to independents and Democrats is open to question.

Barbour cut Medicaid costs by imposing renewal rules that led to thousands of people being dropped from the rolls. But he also signed into law this year a major cigarette tax increase, raising the rate from 18 cents a pack to 68 cents.

From the beginning, Barbour pushed legislators to trim the state budget by closing some state parks and cutting other expenses. While he claims credit for having fixed the budget problems "without raising anybody's taxes," local officials complained that they were forced to increase taxes because some state expenses were forced down on them.

Barbour has been a sharp critic of federal stimulus spending this year along with other a few other GOP governors, including Mark Sanford of South Carolina, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and Sarah Palin of Alaska. All are considered possible 2012 presidential contenders.

Barbour has rejected some $56 million in federal stimulus money for unemployment compensation, saying he objected to the requirement that Mississippi extend unemployment benefits to people seeking part-time jobs.

Barbour's first term as governor was shaped by Hurricane Katrina, which left a wide swath of destruction across his state in August 2005. His response to the storm was widely praised even as Kathleen Blanco, Louisiana's Democratic governor at the time, was panned for botching recovery efforts there.

But many Democrats argued that Barbour's job was made easier by friends in high places.

Mississippi's senior senator, Republican Thad Cochran, was chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee when Katrina struck, and he helped steer billions of dollars to his home state. And officials in Louisiana said that as Republicans, Barbour and Cochran received unfair preferential treatment by the Bush administration in coping with the storm's aftermath.

Other critics, including the Mississippi chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, complained when Barbour won approval from the federal government in 2008 for his plan to divert $570 million from a $5.4 billion grant from a hurricane-recovery housing program and expand the state port.

Steve Holland, a Democratic legislator in Mississippi who has clashed repeatedly with Barbour, commended the governor's smooth handling of Katrina recovery, but said it was little more than a distraction from Barbour's overall record of opposition to social spending.

"You have to be a totally devoted far-right, conservative person to appreciate his zeal and zest for unbridling the government," Holland said. "He's always against every damn thing you bring up, especially quality of life issues, people issues, hard issues. He's one of the most cold-hearted human beings I've ever met."

Barbour's friends differ, calling him a personable, gifted politician who would make a strong candidate and good president. His biggest problem, they say, is the accident of timing — despite his skills, would the party nominate a white, Southern former lobbyist to challenge the first black president?

"Haley is born to the job from a policy, intellectual and political standpoint," said Ed Rogers, Barbour's former lobbying partner. "He can go deep on issues and sincerely loves people. It would be fun for him to go to the pancake breakfasts in every county in Iowa."

***

Fouhy reported from New York.
Comments
(10)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
sandlot1959
|
June 14, 2009
sheesh...you democrats that are posting are making Mississippi look just like the hillbilly backwater state that most northerners seem to think it is...Haley was instrumental in landing Toyota in this state and if not for the antics of Chris Cox and Barnie Frank, the plant would be almost operational by now and ready to go...want to thank SOMEONE for this mess the country is in? Blame the Democrat party...the burst housing bubble and the inflated oil prices are nothing but the handy work of the liberals...talk about the party of NO...The Democrats are the party of YES when it comes to new spending and the party of "duh huh" when it comes to questions of paying for all the new programs...As our great state speaker recently said, and I paraphrase...speaking of spending, DON'T WORRY ABOUT TOMORROW BECAUSE IT WILL TAKE CARE OF ITSELF"...now thats a solution for success...We'll see how well you guys are enjoying your new age president when unemployment is 14 percent and oil prices are over 200 bucks a barrel and we're experiencing hyper inflation...do you guys even know the differece between a trillion and a billion?
R.J.
|
June 14, 2009
Mississippi Attorneys,Judges,and state officials before stealing the millions from Katrina or through the courts with bribery. The politicians started a leave em for dead campaign worth millions from state citizens. Namely my family Even documented proof fails any action against these proven crimes. www.mftms13.wordpress.com

Here's one thing Haley or Hood won't aid with. these crime are conducted on their watch and that is all they will ever do. It's come to the point whom ever can steal enough { lobbyist } and get away with it now makes a great candidate. To anyone wondering how this test venture is being pay for should ride down to gulf coast. A quicker understanding of life in Ms. could be summed up at the mftms13c site.
LGWMS
|
June 14, 2009
Who is footing the bill for Haley to test the waters? I hope it is not the good people of MS, I like many others will be so proud when Haley starts walking out of the state for good, since he and Marsha are so fond of it.
mryhenry125
|
June 14, 2009
Haley nees to go on a one way trip and take his millionaire friends with him, any time you have a governor of a state with half million people out of work no unemployment, no insurance, nothing and he turns down the only hope they have until things get better, beleive me he could care less if we starve todeath and no jobs have been created, he is creating more poverty, but do you thuink he cares? He could care less and the other bad part is the senate and house is letting him they passed it at first and then he vetoed it and I guess they gave up they are just drawing a check plus expenses.
mryhenry125
|
June 14, 2009
i am sorry, i can not wait to see Haley gone, how could anybody turn down stimulus on unemployment when we have a half million people with no jobs, no unemployment, no insurance, nothing and the reason he is using don!t make half sense, part time workers, part time workers have always drawn unemployment if they don!t make as much as unemployment pays, I have harped on this but it has done no good, because i am in that number and they have no new jobs, if unemployment rate has dropped it is because half million people have ran out and they have nothing and what is really bad is that the house and senate have given up, they tried to fight it at first but when he vetoed it i guess they gave up, so we have a governor who does not care anything about his people who are starving, then he needs to get back on the plane and go to Europe or where it is that he needs to go for sure it is out of ms.
amego
|
June 14, 2009
Haley is doing a great job considering what he has to work with, clown's like Holland and Hob bryan and all the tax and spend demo in Jackson and Washington, It's hard to believe that for avery dollar the US government spents they have to borrow .50 cents that your BHO change. Give me 3.5T. dollar I'll put a smile on anybody face.
builderproschoice
|
June 14, 2009
If Haley was running for President Of The Southeastern United States....he would be elected with a vast majority of vote.......unfortunately for the former national Republican party that has become a regional Republican party such a place does NOT exist. The political & social climate of modern day does not have but a small piece of the political pie for Republican existence. The 2008 elections and overall public opinion supports the claim.

Steve Holland's description of Gov. Barbour("he's always against every damn thing you bring up, especially quality of life issues, people issues, hard issues. He's one of the most cold-hearted human beings I've ever met") ironically depicts a vast majority of public sentiment towards the current Republican party. They have become the "Just Say No" to ANYTHING crowd. Why/how have Republicans allowed this to happen?

The only way Republicans will have a shot of occupying the White House in 2016 (2012 is out of the question) is to shift the party towards the center, become less bitter, and stop allowing Dick Cheney, Rush Limbaugh & Newt Gringrich to stereotype and ring loud as the sole voices of the party. Why/how have Republicans allowed this to happen?

(The past eight years of Bush/Cheney blind/polar vision did not help)

Great Republicans do indeed exist! They must now come to the forefront of a UNIFIED Republican party, get back to grassroots and give ear to constituents.

By the way.....good or bad, Rep. Steve Holland remains consistent with his opinions & political positions. He's doing something right....he's spent a lifetime in the state legislature and is regarded as one of Mississippi's finest.

GO Steve....
t-townpt
|
June 14, 2009
I find it amusing that someone like Rep. Holland would say Gov. Barbour is "cold-hearted". Just because he is fiscally conservative and doesn't allow EVERYONE to be on some sort of social program doesn't make him a bad person. Our state is in the shape it is in because of too many years of people like Rep. Holland and Speaker McCoy running the show in Jackson.
Mr.T
|
June 14, 2009
Turn the country around? Haley can't even turn this corner of the state around.If by 2012 the job situation has improved,and the American people have health insurance that they can afford,and our troops are out of Iraq,it will be a long time before you will see another republican in the White House.

Can you imagine Haley and Obama in a debate? Haley would come out of it looking like he had come through a sausage grinder.I'm sure that the democratic leadership is certainly HOPING that Haley will be their next presidential opponent.
Jeff_Jolly
|
June 14, 2009
I've know Haley for nearly 35 years. He would make a great President.

Also, as a friend of Rep. Steve Holland, I would say that Steve is for anything that Haley is against.

I'm supporting Haley if he runs and I'm already talking to friends in other states about their support for him.

GO Haley....