SECOND OF TWO PARTS
For pundits, analyzing Republican presidential politics in 2007 provided a lesson in humility. Just when the professional political soothsayers had decided that John McCain, or Rudy Giuliani, or Fred Thompson, or Mitt Romney was likely to emerge as the party's standard-bearer, along would come a different name at or near the top of a credible poll. In December in Iowa, along came Mike Huckabee. The emergence of the former governor of Arkansas as the front-runner in the Des Moines Register's Iowa Poll gave the Star Tribune Editorial Board reason to add one more chair at the table we'd set for prominent Minnesota backers of the leading Republican candidates. On Dec. 18, five Minnesota surrogates gathered to share their reasons for backing their candidate of choice. The lineup: former Senate Minority Leader Duane Benson, for Mike Huckabee; former Minneapolis City Council member and retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Denny Schulstad, for John McCain; former gubernatorial candidate and businessman Wheelock Whitney, for Rudy Giuliani; businessman and former state GOP executive director Tony Sutton, for Mitt Romney, and House Minority Leader Marty Seifert, for Fred Thompson. Here are excerpts of their exchange: KEY STRENGTH
Schulstad: One of John McCain's strengths is that he has his very strong beliefs and he sticks to them. He doesn't hold his finger up to the wind to find out how the voters in Minneapolis feel or how the voters feel in Des Moines. He does what he thinks is right.
He's down in Iowa right now telling them that he doesn't support subsidies for ethanol. That's not what you do down in Iowa. His political spinsters would be going nuts right now. But that's what I like about him.
Whitney: Rudy Giuliani is a moderate Repubican [as I am]. I haven't had an opportunity in my life to vote for many, or work for many. He appeals to me on that basis.
I very much like the fact that he is running a national campaign, quite different from other candidates, who are focusing all their efforts on Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina. He's a leader, with a proven record, and he's led in the national polls ever since the first poll was taken in 2007.
Sutton: Mitt Romney is the kind of guy who can get things done. He demonstrated the experience in Massachusetts of working across the aisle, in a very Democratic state as a Republican governor. Minnesotans can relate to that and respect that kind of leadership.
I've been looking for a positive leader, like Reagan. Firm on the issues, but positive. I see Romney being that kind of leader. ... Republicans do best when fiscal conservatives and social conservatives pull in the same direction. Romney is the complete package. He can bring us all together as Republicans.
Seifert: Fred Thompson is genuine; he tells it like it is; and he's detail-oriented, which I think Minnesotans respect.
If you go back in time in Minnesota, we've had an independent streak and always respected people who tell it like it is. Teddy Roosevelt -- we were one of the few states he carried as a Bull Mooser [in 1912]. We elected Farmer-Laborite governors; [we elected] Perpich, Wellstone, Ventura -- they were all genuine, all had some details that people agreed with, and they told it like it is.