Señor Obama tiene Problemo Grande!
El Jefe' - The Chief
Read this Great Article on Why Obama is a to be our next "ONE TERM" President! 
August 29, 2011
The Ticket Obama & Liberals Fears Most
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| Senator Marco Rubio | 
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| "Marco, see you in the White House." | 
The talking heads on Fox News Special Report  this Friday, August 26, concurred that Marco Rubio will be on the Republican ticket  next year as the vice presidential nominee. I agree. There is  virtually no downside to Rubio and the advantages to the ticket are  prohibitive. He is youthful, attractive, and articulate.  Rubio won a  tough three-way race in Florida last year. His life story is compelling  as the child of Cuban parents who worked up the hard and legal way. His conservatism on social and economic issues is unwavering.  Rubio is  slightly too young and inexperienced to run as president, but eight  years as vice president would make him ideal presidential timber.
If  Senator Rubio becomes the running mate of Governor Perry, which I  believe is increasingly likely, President Obama could face his worst  electoral nightmare. At the outset, both men are excellent campaigners  -- articulate, likable, attractive, and accustomed to winning elections  in the diverse and large populations of Texas and Florida.  Unlike  Republican nominees since Reagan, Rick Perry knows how to work crowds.  Perry, like Rubio, has never lost a political race.  Although it is a relatively small section of his resume, his time successfully selling Bible reference books door-to-door may be as important as background in running for president. 
Both  Perry and Rubio have life stories which demonstrate that the American  Dream really works. Perry grew up on a cotton tenant farm in the middle  of nowhere and worked hard up every step in his path to success.   Rubio's parents worked in menial jobs so that their son could have a  better life.  Imagine Rubio campaigning in Las Vegas, where his parents  worked like so many Hispanics today, cleaning rooms and tending bars.   The greatest impact of these life stories is that the Republican ticket  could say just how poor people need not stay poor if government gets out  of the way.
Perry  and Rubio are both social and economic conservatives. The left tries  to downplay the appeal of social conservatism, but to take just a single  social conservative issue, abortion, the latest Rasmussen Poll  shows that 55% of Americans believe that abortion is morally wrong  while only 30% believe that abortion is morally acceptable and 41% of  Americans believe that it is too easy to get an abortion in America  while only 14% believe that it is too hard to get an abortion. The  vanilla question about whether Americans are "pro-choice" or "pro-life"  is meaningless, if Republican candidates have the gumption to ask Obama  in a debate whether he believes abortion is moral or immoral -- leaving  the question of federal policy on abortion aside. 
This particular ticket would also have profound appeal to Hispanic voters, whose support for Obama has dropped a dramatic 36 points  since he took office.  The impact of Rubio on the ticket, of course, is  obvious: he would be the first Hispanic on a major party ticket in  American history.  Big chunks of Hispanic voters in 2008 voted for Obama  because he was a "person of color." Reelecting a black man president  has much less psychological value to Hispanic voters than electing a  Hispanic who could easily be president in eight years.
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| Governor Rick Perry | 
A  politically savvy Perry with the first Hispanic on a national ticket as  his running mate could disarm the traditional skittishness that some  Hispanics have had about voting Republican.  Combine that with the very  real success that Perry has had in creating jobs in Texas -- compared  with Obama nationally or California Democrats -- and he could make a  strong argument that Perry-Rubio is precisely what most Hispanics really  want in Washington. 
This  could be complemented by the rise of Hispanic Republicans in 2010.   Susana Martinez, the conservative Republican governor of New Mexico,  next door to Texas, is a prime example.  The first female Hispanic  governor in American history could travel throughout the Rocky Mountain  region touting a Perry-Rubio ticket. It is not just Hispanic "people of  color" that could connect with Hispanics.  Bobby Jindal and Nikki  Haley, both articulate and strongly Republican governors could both show  the legal immigrants from lands as distant as India are welcomed by  conservatives.
Black  voters will go overwhelmingly for Obama, but black voters vote  overwhelmingly for Democrats no matter what Republicans have tried. If  Hispanic voters, already accustomed to conservative Republicans senators  and governors, vote in substantial numbers for conservative Republicans  at the national level, then not only is Obama in trouble, but so is his  party. That is why Perry-Rubio could be the ticket Democrats fear  most.
~  REMEMBER...   VOTE 2012!  ~   | 
 



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