Sunday, April 15, 2012

The Latest Ballad Of Ricky Dumbass, The Bull$hit Artist Formerly Known As Governor Goodhair!

This blogger was about to blow off Ross Ramsey's meditation on the third anniversary of Ricky Dumbass' discovery of the Tea Party. Dumbass has become the symbolic head of the Texas Tea Party. In closing, Ramsey quoted the genius Governor saying: "It's an organic movement.... Nobody's the head of the Tea Party." Right on, Dumbass!! The Texas Tea Party has no head and it's most famous adherent (Ricky Dumbass) has no brain!! Amazingly, Ben Sargent's editorial cartoon in today's Austin fishwrap shows Ricky Dumbass sporting new ink on his left bicep: "The Tea Party — Nutty Or Nothing." That slogan sums up Ricky Dumbass and his choice for POTUS 45 (Big Love): "Nutty Or Nothing." The head of the the Governor of Texas and the Dumbo candidate in 2012 are akin to the Scarecrow in the Wizard of Oz: lacking a brain or the courage of his convictions. If this is the (fair & balanced) assessment of our current Dumbo party leaders, so be it.


[x TX Trib]
Three Years After Tea Party Rallies, Perry Presses On
By Ross Ramsey

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It was only three years ago when the political lines converged. On Tax Day at Austin City Hall, Governor Rick Perry spoke to a crowd of noisy, rowdy Texans in the sort of assembly that quickly became common as the Tea Party wave swept Texas and the country.

That crested as Perry was crystallizing his own views on Texas and Washington and fiscal conservatism. It seeded the anti-Washington message of his 2010 race for re-election as governor, found fuller expression in his book, Fed Up! which was published days after that election, and served as the rationale behind his abortive race for president. And now the governor wants others to get in line, before the elections and before the legislative session that begins in January.

"I did three that day — Austin, Arlington and then one at a baseball park in Fort Worth, where the Cats play," Perry said on the phone this week, remembering the Tax Day rallies. "That was the day I realized how real the Tea Party was.

"I obviously had a message about Washington's overreach," he said. "Over the course of the months and years, that has refined down to a tight 10th Amendment message."

The rallies have subsided, and the ideas of the Taxed Enough Already folks have been subsumed into the mainstream Republican Party. Perry is still working it, though. On Monday, he will unveil a financial pledge and challenge candidates in Texas to sign on, agreeing to oppose new taxes and tax increases, to cut "duplicative" programs and agencies in state government, and to push budget ideas that he has been touting for years, like requiring lawmakers to spend state revenue collected for specific programs on those programs, instead of diverting the money to other uses.

It's like the pledges that made the anti-tax activist Grover Norquist famous, but with more promises and with the clout of a governor behind it. Norquist has state and federal lawmakers all over the country quaking with fear of what might happen if they pass a tax bill. Whatever you might think of that, it's an interesting exercise in stimulus and response.

Imagine how it might work for someone with the power of public office. Perry can support or oppose Republicans in elections — a strong card to play with just six weeks left before the primaries. After the general election, lawmakers will walk into a legislative session where the guy with the pledges has veto power over their bills.

"I think we're at a unique time that we can reset the budgeting game in Texas," Perry said. "We could have well over half the House with one term or less, and maybe five new senators who are considerably more conservative. I've looked at the landscape. I'm going to be the senior statesman, so to speak. This is the time."

Perry said many of the candidates running for office now, and those who were elected in the Republican landslide in 2010, were either influenced, inspired or recruited by the Tea Party. What if they pledged to toe the line as they begin their terms, and for years remain bound to the promises they make now?

"I wanted people to be talking about it between now and the 29th of May, in time for the candidates to get their arms around it," Perry said.

"I wanted to get it into the groundwater. It isn't just the primary. I want candidates and voters thinking about this going into the next legislative session."

Perry's term runs through 2014, and he has told private groups that he plans to run for re-election. Some read that as a real possibility. Lots of handicappers thought he wouldn't run for re-election in 2010, but he did — and won handily. It's easy to believe it now because it happened then. Some think he's laying out the possibility to counter suspicions that he's a lame duck. Nobody in power wants to be disregarded after leaving office, much less before the term ends.

Perry isn't openly building a legacy. He and the crowds he met three years ago, he said, fed off each other. This could outlast him without belonging to him.

"It's an organic movement," he said. "Nobody's the head of the Tea Party." Ω

[Ross Ramsey is executive editor of The Texas Tribune and continues as editor of Texas Weekly, the premier newsletter on government and politics in the Lone Star State, a role he's had since September 1998. Before joining Texas Weekly, Ramsey was associate deputy comptroller for policy with the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, also working as the agency's director of communications. Prior to that 28-month stint in government, Ramsey spent 17 years in journalism, reporting for the Houston Chronicle from its Austin bureau and for the Dallas Times Herald, first on the business desk in Dallas and later as the paper's Austin bureau chief. Prior to that, as a Dallas-based freelance business writer, he wrote for regional and national magazines and newspapers. Ramsey got his start in journalism in broadcasting, working for almost seven years covering news for radio stations in Denton and Dallas. Ramsey was born in Amarillo, reared (mostly) in El Paso, and educated at (but not graduated from) the University of Texas at El Paso and the University of North Texas in Denton.]

Copyright © 2012 The Texas Tribune

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Sapper's (Fair & Balanced) Rants & Raves by Neil Sapper is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at sapper.blogspot.com. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available here.



Copyright © 2012 Sapper's (Fair & Balanced) Rants & Raves

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