And just like that, it seems, talk about a Rick Perry reboot in 2016 has taken over the conversation in Austin.
The reinvention of Perry as presidential candidate goes beyond the decision to sport new eyeglasses, says The Texas Tribune's Ross Ramsey. In a Monday column, Ramsey posited the new Perry strategy as finding a middle path between the flavors of the month in the GOP field — Tea Party favorite Ted Cruz and newly re-elected New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.
"In a surprising twist, [Perry] looks like a conservative establishment candidate as the jockeying begins for the 2016 presidential race," Ramsey wrote. "He is still anti-Washington, still steeped in states’ rights and Tea Party rhetoric, still quite conservative, but not quite so eager to burn down the castle. He is turning into Cruz’s big brother: It’s the same family, but Perry wants to be the one you trust with the car keys."
Ramsey noted that Perry is no stranger to reinvention, reminding everyone that he worked with the Al Gore presidential campaign in 1988 before remaking himself as a Republican to run for statewide office two years later.
The Austin American-Statesman's Jonathan Tilove picked up on this strain of the conversation in writing up Perry's appearance before a friendly audience at the Texas Public Policy Foundation designed to talk up Texas at the expense of California. Perry showed up late for the event, a victim of Austin traffic.
"Perry’s late arrival," Tilove wrote, "was the only glitch in an otherwise flawless occasion that demonstrated why a Perry presidential campaign, in just the right light, still seems plausible, and the reasons why Perry — merging conservative bona fides, executive experience and his casual charm — seemed such a formidable candidate for president in 2012 before he wasn’t."
This level of pre-positioning, if it's accurate to describe it as such, stands in marked contrast to Perry's late entry into the 2012 contest. Mark Halperin and John Heilemann, in town on Monday night to discuss their new book on the 2012 presidential election, Double Down, reminded the audience that Perry's entry into the race frightened eventual GOP nominee Mitt Romney.
In the end, the two authors said, what did Perry in was his late entry into the race and his decision to have back surgery. Insomnia related to his recovery from the surgery led to the unsteady moments that doomed his campaign, most notably his "oops" moment in the Nov. 9, 2011, Republican presidential debate.
It also means that the political press will be watching extra closely the second time out for anything that could be plausibly described as another "oops" moment. Take, for instance, the kicker at the end of a story by The Dallas Morning News' Christy Hoppe earlier this month on Perry's return to Iowa:
Yeah. Insomnia. Let's go with THAT.
Starts out as a democrat, "reinvents" himself as a Republican to win an election in Texas, then "reinvents" himself again as a responsible Tea Party candidate in an attempt to get elected to national office. Seriously, dude....your 15 minutes of fame are up.
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