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The 2012 Republican Cabinet

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While Republicans celebrate their newfound majority in the House of Representatives, Americans await the true political turning point: the 2012 elections. Will President Obama perform enough political payoffs to purchase a pass to the presidency yet again? Or will he be stopped by a populace unwilling to tread down the same dark path as Greece, Spain and Ireland?

If Obama is to be stopped, Republicans will need to run a powerhouse candidate in 2012. The Republican Party is still fragmented between libertarians and social conservatives, though that fracture has been papered over with the veneer of fiscal conservatism; meanwhile, Obama remains a formidable candidate.

Who can unify the Republican Party? Republicans are counting on Obama to do the job. But they cannot simply run an empty suit and hope to win; Democrats tried that in 2004 with John Kerry and lost. Republicans will have to come up with someone who can bridge ideological ties within the party while jazzing up the conservative base. Or they can come up with a slate.

Each Republican candidate for the 2012 nomination should sign a pledge to create a conservative dream team: a cabinet comprised of at least half of the following appointees. These potential cabinet selections represent the best the conservative movement has to offer, and together they can unify a country looking for a team of experienced professionals with a longstanding record of service and principle. Many are potential 2012 candidates themselves.

— Secretary of State: John Bolton. The former ambassador to the United Nations is a tough, brilliant and straightforward master of international politics. His bluntness will be an asset in a branch of American government far too comfortable with prevarication and pontification. A muscular spokesperson for a muscular American foreign policy.

— Secretary of Defense: Newt Gingrich. Gingrich is a heavyweight thinker and a man deeply familiar with the intricacies of defense policy. As former speaker of the House, he knows how to work with Congress, and he is one of the few political figures who proposed a workable solution with regard to Iran (he suggests a naval blockade). His brilliance and flexibility will be an asset to an office too often headed by career bureaucrats.

Secretary of the Treasury: Paul Ryan. The congressman from Wisconsin has become the nation's leading expert on budgetary matters. His grasp of classical economics is unparalleled, and his fluency in governmental jargon allows him to navigate the dangerous waters of governmental wrangling.

(For Federal Reserve chairman, an unconventional but worthwhile pick would be Ron Paul, who would audit the damned institution forthwith.)

Attorney General: Rudy Giuliani. He cleaned up New York City as mayor. As a district attorney, he went after the mob with alacrity. Who better than the tough guy New Yorker to ferret out corruption?

Secretary of Labor: Chris Christie. The governor of New Jersey has made himself a national figure by facing the dastardly teachers unions head on and forcing them to defend their selfish policies. The single greatest force militating against a resurgent economy is the hand-in-globe relationship between unions and liberal-controlled government. Christie would put an end to it.

Secretary of Energy: Bobby Jindal. Jindal, an incredibly bright governor and rising star, took charge during the British Petroleum oil spill, attempting over and over again to authorize actions that could mitigate the environmental effects of the spill. At the same time, Jindal is an advocate of drilling and nuclear power, removing the offshore oil drilling moratorium and criminalizing OPEC.

Secretary of Health and Human Services: Bill Frist. As a Harvard Medical School-educated cardiothoracic surgeon, nobody knows better than Frist the shortcomings of the current medical system — and how much worse things will get if Obamacare takes full effect. The former Senate majority leader is well equipped to parlay with Congress.

Secretary of Education: Mike Huckabee. Huckabee revolutionized education in the state of Arkansas, increasing charter schools and home schooling, broadening college scholarship availability and raising student scores.

Secretary of Commerce: Mitt Romney. The CEO extraordinaire would stand strong for American business while promoting international trade. He's not a career politician, but he's a career job-creator.

Secretary of Homeland Security: Jan Brewer. We already have one former Arizona governor who had no idea how to deal with the border situation. It's time to replace Janet Napolitano with Jan Brewer, who has repeatedly shown that she takes federal immigration law seriously.

These are just some of the possible picks. While there's no superstar waiting to grab the 2012 nomination yet, there is a bevy of heavy hitters waiting to contribute. The 2012 candidate who will look the best is the one who can put together the best team.

Ben Shapiro, 26, is a graduate of UCLA and Harvard Law School. He is the author of the new book "Project President: Bad Hair and Botox on the Road to the White House," as well as the national bestseller "Brainwashed: How Universities Indoctrinate America's Youth." To find out more about Ben Shapiro and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM.


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
The republican party is split between social conservatives, Fiscal conservative, Moderates, Libertarians. There`s something for every group in the cabinet you named off.. Except for the libertarians. If the GOP fails to put Rand Paul, Ron Paul, Or Demint in the cabinet, I don`t see them getting the libertarian vote. They might still win the general.. But who wants to risk it? The libertarians are holding the GOP hostage.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Jeremy
Sat Mar 3, 2012 12:31 PM
The republican party is split between social conservatives, Fiscal conservative, Moderates, Libertarians. There`s something for every group in the cabinet you named off.. Except for the libertarians. If the GOP fails to put Rand Paul, Ron Paul, Or Demint in the cabinet, I don`t see them getting the libertarian vote. They might still win the general.. But who wants to risk it? The libertarians are holding the GOP hostage.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Jeremy
Sat Mar 3, 2012 12:31 PM
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