In a speech that could prove pivotal to his political future, Gov. Tim Pawlenty painted an image for national Republicans gathered in San Diego of a new Republican message that would reach out to conservative Democrats and independents -- and invoked his blue collar bona fides as the possible guy to lead the charge.
To rouse the crowd, Pawlenty took some serious shots at the party's nemesis: President Barack Obama.
"In the eyes of many, President Obama is cool, cool, cool. But the American people are figuring out that he is wrong, wrong, wrong," Pawlenty said.
The keynote speech to the Republican National Committee was designed to energize a party hammered in recent elections and to introduce Pawlenty's middle America, outside-the-Beltway persona to those who could help generate buzz about his prospects and open up campaign checkbooks.
To that end, Pawlenty also made the rounds of national media, offering interviews to CNN, FOX and the congressional insiders' newspaper, The Hill.
In his speech, Pawlenty painted Obama as a big spender who is sending the nation hurtling toward larger deficits and ever-broader Washington control over people's lives. Obama's policies, Pawlenty said, would make good attack fodder in the 2010 elections and beyond.
Pawlenty, who announced earlier this year that he would not seek a third term in Minnesota, said Republicans "need to get over their political post traumatic stress syndrome" from the blistering losses.
Republicans, he said, need to offer "hopeful, meaningful solutions. And we need to state it boldly."