Republican presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty says the time has come for bold reform in government policy. For example, the former Minnesota governor promises to offer a plan to reform Social Security, an issue most elected officials have been unwilling to address, The Hill reports.
"I think any doofus can go to Washington, D.C., and maintain the status quo or incrementally change things," Pawlenty told ABC Sunday. "But for the country, the hour is late . . . and we have to take significant action soon. This is time for people who want to be leaders in a bold way to come forward and say, 'We really have to change things significantly.'"
Although Pawlenty didn’t criticize GOP Rep. Paul Ryan’s budget plan, he said his will differ. "For example, he didn't address Social Security. I will, and we already are.”
Gov. Pawlenty meets with leaders from Osaka,
Japan, and the Kansai Region. Pictured from left to right: Mayor Kunio
Hiramatsu, Mayor of Osaka, Japan; Governor Tim Pawlenty; and Chairman
Shigataka Sato, Chairman of the Osaka Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
(Photo courtesy of the Office of the Governor)
In Asia, Pawlenty ends final trade mission as governor
St. Paul, Minn. —
Governor Tim Pawlenty will be back
in Minnesota this weekend after a 10-day trade mission to China and
Japan.
Pawlenty has been leading a
delegation of more than 40 business and government officials. Speaking
this morning via telephone from Tokyo, Pawlenty said a good way for the
U.S. to dig out of its economic troubles would be to increase exports.
During a Friday conference call from Tokyo with Minnesota
reporters, Pawlenty provided an audio postcard of what is likely
his last overseas trip as governor.
In Pawlenty's words, fast-growing countries like China "don't
need our money, they want our technology. They want our
innovation."
He said while Minnesota's large
companies are used to doing business in places like Japan and China,
smaller companies need help getting into foreign markets.
"These trade missions are designed
to give them an efficient, organized user-friendly opportunity to learn
more about these countries, the barriers and opportunities for trade and
exports into these countries," Pawlenty said.
Pawlenty led a similar delegation of
business and government representatives to China in 2005.
(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
Pawlenty announced his PAC's cash haul in
its first six months of existence.
(CNN) - Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, thought to be
considering a 2012 White House bid, announced Saturday his political
action committee raised $1.84 million in the six months since it was
created.
According to a statement from Pawlenty's Freedom First PAC, more than
$550,000 of that money came in the first quarter of 2010.
Pawlenty is pledging to use the funds to help elect conservative
candidates in the 2010 midterm elections.
“We need to put freedom first again in America, and stop the
out-of-control spending in Washington," he said in the statement. "The
early support for our organization will help us elect candidates who can
rein in Washington and renew the promise of freedom.”
Pawlenty was scheduled to appear at the Southern Republican
Leadership Conference held in New Orleans this weekend but canceled the
trip to instead welcome home troops who have been serving in Iraq. He
is now addressing
the gathering of Republican activists by satellite.
The PACs of other potential presidential candidates - including those
Sarah Palin and Mitt Romney - have yet to release their first quarter
fundraising totals
Tim Pawlenty Starts His Engines for the 2012 Presidential Campaign
It’s two years away, but
speculation surroundin the 2012 presidential race is alive and kicking,
if only for the increasingly irrefutable fact that anyone who intends
to run without
immediate access to a cable news soapbox is starting the 2012
campaign at a severe disadvantage. It is the uphill battle facing
possible Republican presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty,
who, from the Minnesota Governor’s mansion must be watching potential
challengers like Sarah Palin, Mike Huckabee,
and Newt Gingrich milk their cable news contracts for
all they’re worth.
Mitt Romney managed to somewhat dubiously get himself into the news cycle
this week too, and even Dick Cheney, who despite
denying any interest in the presidency is topping
Republican presidential contender polls along with Palin et al, is
keeping his face in the public eye.
Pawlenty is taking an unorthodox approach compared to his would-be
opponents: making media appearances to debate substantive issues. He has
willingly stepped into the ring to debate health care with President
Obama, taking advantage of the President’s call for a bipartisan health
care summit on February 25th to publicly list off his ideas on the
topic. On Sunday, the Washington Postpublished an opinion piece by the governor entitled
“Five Ways to Reform Health Care,” and last night Pawlenty appeared on
Fox News to explain his ideas to Greta Van Susteren on
air. It’s a comprehensive conservative approach that highlights the
token set of problems Republicans have been pointing out with the
current reform – interstate insurance availability, tort reform, a more
meritocratic approach to awarding insurance companies. It goes beyond a
simple grocery list of possible changes in the way the American health
care industry works: it’s a sizable chunk of a campaign platform.
Pawlenty’s approach, if he decides to run for office, is as
thoughtful as it is risky. Anger and populist outrage sell in the age of
the Tea Party, and Pawlenty is marketing himself as a
near-technocratic, mild-mannered critic with ideas that don’t betray an
urgency to save the nation from the socialist threat of the Obama
administration. On the air, he is still working on mastering his calm,
capable “presidential” demeanor without coming off so anemic – it’s
clear why the other potential candidates get so much air time on Fox and
he doesn’t. On the other hand, by defying mainstream demand he may be
tapping into a niche market of voters that are searching for someone
less animated and more studious on the problems facing the country
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