Straws in the Wind in New Hampshire
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
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New Hampshire,
which guards its first-in-the-nation presidential primaries against
other, similar elections like a civic-minded junkyard dog, has somehow
let the Iowa caucuses steal much of its thunder. And not just the
caucuses, either. Have you noticed the Ames Straw Poll in the last
few election cycles? Ames is big, man. It is news, and big news,
for whoever wins there. It is even news when a candidate decides,
months in advance, to skip the Ames Straw Poll, as Sen. John McCain
has done. It is even momentarily news when a candidate admits to
an interviewer on national television, as McCain did, that he was
unaware that no one who skipped the Ames Straw Poll has ever won
the Iowa caucuses. I mean, when you can parlay the first voting
in the caucuses with the most prestigious straw poll, held some
15 months before the actual election, you have combined marketeering
with electioneering in a way that suggests New Hampshire should
look to its laurels.
And what of
the Hopkinton Straw Poll in New Hampshire? What’s that? You never
heard of the Hopkinton Straw Poll? You never heard of Hopkinton?
(Yeah, sure, rub it in.) Well, I am a resident of Manchester, New
Hampshire, where we have sidewalks, electricity, indoor plumbing
and, yes, big-city dwellers, we even have a rather busy little airport
where roughly 4 million individual trips, going and coming, take
place every year.
But nobody
cares about our straw poll in Hopkinton, just a half-hour drive
from the Manchester-Boston Regional Airport. While Ames gets national
coverage, George Stephanopoulos of ABC News doesn’t ask John McCain
or any of the other candidates why they are skipping Hopkinton.
And locally, the Amherst Fourth of July parade gets more news coverage
in New Hampshire than the Hopkinton Straw Poll does.
So unless you
were there, you probably missed it. On Saturday, July 7, 294 people
cast ballots in the Straw Poll that was held by the Coalition of
New Hampshire Taxpayers as part of the organization’s annual picnic.
Ron Paul received 182 of those votes. Rudolph the sawed-off RINO
(Republican In Name Only) Giuliani was runner-up with 24 votes.
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee cared enough to come, gave a
rather good speech, shook a lot of hands, gave a lot of interviews
and received half a dozen votes for his efforts. Mitt Romney, recently
the governor of the neighboring state of Massachusetts and the occupant
of a $10 million summer home in Wolfeboro, NH, picked up a few votes,
though fewer than the ex-mayor of New York. The others were not
there and it probably would not have mattered if they were.
Dr. Ron Paul
was not there, either, but neither did that matter. He had made
a previous commitment to address the Freedom Fest in Las Vegas,
but that was okay. His hard-core followers were determined to vote
for him if he had been anywhere other than China, Cuba, or Cambridge,
Massachusetts. The candidate’s son, Dr. Rand Paul of Kentucky, made
the trip, however, and made an impressive speech for his father.
The Manchester
TV station, WMUR-TV, which owes much of its prosperity and its marvelous
new facilities to revenues gained from the advertising paid for
by candidates in the New Hampshire primaries, covered the event
and interviewed Gov. Huckabee, Rand Paul and others. But there was
no print media at all. The closest thing to print media coverage
was a solitary blogger from Seacoast Online, which is owned by the
Portsmouth Herald, a bland and predictably liberal daily on the
New Hampshire seacoast. The statewide daily, The New Hampshire
Union Leader/Sunday News missed the event altogether. Likewise
the Concord "Monica" (one of Bill’s favorite newspapers),
though Hopkinton abuts Concord and is well within the Monitor’s
coverage area. Likewise all the other dailies and the Associated
Press.
We are not
surprised. New Hampshire has already hosted two pre-primary debates,
one for the Republicans and one for the Democrats. Each "debate"
lasted two hours without commercial interruption. Each was broadcast
live from the campus of Saint Anselm College on our local ABC affiliate,
WMUR-TV, and on the Cable News Network. Both were moderated by CNN’s
Wolf Blitzer. It was interesting that in four hours of questioning
of 18 candidates (eight Democrats and 10 Republicans), very few
questions were asked about issues that either libertarians or old-school
conservatives would consider priority matters. No one asked Ron
Paul, for example, how he would dismantle most of the federal government
or how he would bring about the transformation of America’s foreign
and military policies to reflect that "more humble" role
for our nation that Texas Gov. George W. Bush talked about when
campaigning for president in the year 2000.
Instead, we
got questions about how the next president might utilize the talents
of former President Bill Clinton or the current incumbent. Former
Alaska Gov. Mike Gravel suggested he would send the Arkansas traveler
traveling internationally. "He can take his wife with him,"
he suggested, much to the amusement of Sen. Hillary Clinton, who
laughed heartily. "She’ll still be in the Senate." And
Tom Tancredo, recalling that the president’s brain, Karl Rove, had
instructed Tancredo never again to darken the door of the White
House, said he would instruct George W. Bush to do the same.
The Republican
candidates also were quizzed on Darwinism and whether they believed
the evolutionists’ explanations of how we got here and why. As to
the age of the earth and the days of creation, Gov. Huckabee, pastor
of a church in Arkansas, confessed: "I don’t know. I wasn’t
there." In other words, ask Bob Dole.
So they have
conspired to exclude Ron Paul from the campaign in Ames, but Paul
is no doubt making inroads there, anyway. There is a lot of old-style
conservatism, as well as general anti-war sentiment in Iowa and
Ron Paul is the only peace candidate on the Republican ballot. Other
candidates say they are for peace, of course, even when proposing
to nuke Iran for the temerity of wanting to have a nuke of its own.
Ron Paul, appalled at the notion, wants peace the way President
Eisenhower did.
"I think,"
Eisenhower said, "that the people want peace so much that one
of these days, governments had better get out of the way and let
them have it."
Well, there
you have it – Dwight Eisenhower and Ron Paul as "peaceniks."
All they’ve been saying is, "Give peace a chance." Who
knows?
It might work.
July
12, 2007
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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