Mar 09 2008
Archive for the 'Alan Keyes' Category
Mar 04 2008
Keyes uses rally to revive last campaign push
Alan Keyes — who served as Assistant Secretary of State for under Ronald Reagan and has been hiding out in Texas since February – ended his campaign with an election-eve “Rally for America’s Revival” March 3 at the University of North Texas.
Surely the “complete conservative” wowed the crowd with gems like this speech from his Lincoln-Reagan Dinner:
”If we want to win the victory [as a party], we’ve got to stop pretending to ourselves that we shall win it by scaring people to death with our Hillary masks, our Obama masks, and our bogeyman rhetoric. It has worked once or twice, but I can promise you, it will not work this time — any more than scaring them with Democrat control of Congress secured our victory in 2006. No, if we want their trust back, and their faith back, and their allegiance back, then we must trust the truths upon which this country was built….our allegiance to the authority of our God.”
First, I know I said a “crowd” of supporters would be at Keyes’ gala. But is five people considered a crowd if three of them are family members, one is a janitor and the other is a homeless guy lured in with the promise of whiskey and a half-eaten egg salad sandwich?
At any rate I’m sure it was swell. I hope he wore his “Obama mask” to the rally!
Feb 09 2008
Alan Keyes thinks he and Texas are kind of a big deal
Alan Keyes continues touring Texas before the March 4 primary and guess what? He thinks he can win! Ignore John McCain’s huge lead in the Republican race and the fact that Keyes is getting nearly zero media coverage.
When asked by The Beaumont Enterprise if he thinks he can pull off the biggest upset in U.S. government history, Keyes replied “of course”:
I am both the most experienced in every respect, and the best candidate. I proved that back in 2000, when I won every single Republican debate. I think it is just a matter of getting the word out, from the grassroots to the media, to overcome the effort of the elite to destroy the freedom of choice of the American people.
In that same interview Keyes called McCain “barely halfway” (did he just say McCain is in recovery from drugs?) to the Republican bid since he has betrayed so many grassroots conservatives. Keyes predicts McCain is bound to lose the general election if he is nominated. Uh…
Keyes also said “the Republican party is being hijacked” by a bunch of liberals in conservatives clothing. So what is he going to do to get his party back on track? Win big in Texas of course. The former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State believes Texas is the key to Keyes’ campaign. He told Beaumont he has “no plans beyond winning the Texas primary and moving on to the convention, where I believe that the conservatives will come together in order to nominate the kind of alternative that America needs.”
Looks like Bizzaro World Obama is on a mission to save the Republican Party and it all starts–and ends–with Texas. Anything I could say about this would sound trite. So, ellipses.
Feb 04 2008
Bizzaro World Obama still on ballot
If Ron Paul is a the long-shot Republican presidential candidate, then resident minority for the GOP race Alan Keyes is in another universe. Now that “World Mayor” Rudy Giuliani has dropped out of the running, leaving Paul impossible to ignore, there is room for Alan Keyes to move into the vacant invisible candidate slot.
Keyes is not even mentioned on CNN’s online list of remaining Republican candidates (he was there in the beginning of January), but the “other” black man running for president is starting to make some noise to let everyone know he’s still in the swing of things. Keyes is in the midst of a a six-week grassroots tour of Texas, and he plans to camp out in Texas until its primary on March 4. According to pundits, Texas may become key to the Republican primary if Super Tuesday fails to produce a “presumptive” Republican nominee.
Keyes will also continue his “nationwide radio blitz to counter the media’s virtual blackout of his campaign.” Recently, Republicans in New York have attempted to remove Keyes from state ballots on the grounds that he has not submitted a list of delegates. Otherwise, he appears on the ballot in most states.
The former assistant Secretary of State (and trained opera singer–who knew?) is no stranger to animosity and controversy. This will be Keyes’ third long-shot run for the presidency. The last time he ran for national office was in 2004 when the Illinois Republican Party drafted Keyes to run against Barack Obama for U.S. Senate. Keyes became infamous for slamming his competitor, and he’s up to the same antics in this race.
Keyes launched a blistering attack against Mitt Romney on the issue of gay marriage saying:
“Mitt Romney is single-handedly responsible for instituting same-sex marriage in Massachusetts….Mitt Romney pushed through same-sex marriage all by himself, in the absence of any authority or requirement to do so, having a complete misunderstanding of his role as governor and of the significance of the court’s opinion.”