"Jim Bowie
was willing to give up everything for freedom," Perry told a crowd of
about 300 Republicans at the Lincoln Reagan Dinner of West Kentucky on
Saturday. "I hope there are a new generation of young men and women that
are willing to give up everything, if you will, to change this state. To put
Kentucky on a track that will make it competitive again."
One thing Perry
does not want to change: Kentucky's senior U.S. senator. Perry endorsed Sen.
Mitch McConnell, telling the crowd that the Senate minority leader would win
re-election.
"I love
the number six," Perry said. "Sam Houston was 6 foot 6 inches tall.
And Mitch McConnell is going to be in his sixth term as United States
senator."
McConnell finds
himself in a GOP primary fight with wealthy businessman Matt Bevin, who
attended the event but wasn't allowed to speak.
Organizers said
the dinner was supposed to unite the Kentucky GOP behind one mission: taking
control of the Kentucky House of Representatives in November. But speakers
talked just as much about taking control of the U.S. Senate so McConnell could
become majority leader.
"The
future of America is inextricably intertwined with Kentucky and how these
elections come out this time," Perry told the crowd.
But first,
McConnell must fend off a challenge from Bevin, who has attracted the backing
of tea party groups. The primary is May 20.
Organizers said
the dinner was not intended to endorse McConnell, but every table had
"Mitch '14" bumper stickers on them.
Before the
dinner, Bevin and some volunteers shook hands outside.
"I'm
running for U.S. Senate against Mitch McConnell. I'm the guy you're not
supposed to know about," Bevin told a McConnell supporter.
McConnell spoke
after Perry, calling his Democratic opponent Alison Lundergan Grimes the
"face of the status quo." He also said Sen. Rand Paul was "an
incredible and electable candidate for president of the United States."
Both Paul and Perry are considered prospective 2016 presidential candidates.
McConnell made
no mention of Bevin. Bevin told reporters he was not surprised, adding that it
was no coincidence the Kentucky Republican Party — headquartered in the Mitch
McConnell Building in Frankfort — goes to great lengths to "have people
think there is not a race."
"This is
like the old Who song. You know? We won't be fooled again," Bevin said.
"We have been fooled time and time again by a man who tells us one thing
in Kentucky and he goes to Washington and he does something else. And the
people of Kentucky are weary of it."
Calloway County
Republican Party chairman Greg DeLancey said the program was limited to elected
officials so no one will be distracted from the theme of defeating state House
democrats in November.
"We're
just trying - especially in western Kentucky - to bring that theme home of getting
Republicans together and seeing how much we all have in common," he said.
Bevin has been
invited to speak at other county Lincoln Day dinners, including one in Barren
County last month where he was the keynote speaker.
Phill McCallon,
a transportation worker from Kirksey, said he has voted for McConnell several
times. But this year, his vote is in doubt.
"I came to
see what they have to offer. I like what Bevin has to say, but Mitch has the
power right now," he said. "I still don't know which way I'm going to
lean."
Source:http://www.kentucky.com/2014/03/16/3143366/texas-gov-perry-throws-support.html
Read more here:
http://www.kentucky.com/2014/03/16/3143366/texas-gov-perry-throws-support.html#storylink=cpy
Comments:
The same shenanigans are going on in Georgia,
but they are more subtle. Our version of
Bevins is Dave Pennington from Dalton. He hasn’t yet been publically insulted by being
banned from a GOP event, but he will be ignored by the press and voted for by
the people.
However, the Georgia GOP “establishment”
doesn’t want to hear from their conservative delegates. They will make the same plea ‘We're just trying to bring that theme home of getting
Republicans together and seeing how much we all have in common,’
The battle is raging within the party making it clear
that there are two camps of Republicans in Georgia and elsewhere. The “establishment”
can raise money from government vendors, but regular Republican voters don’t
participate.
You will see a lot of grass roots voter group led campaigning
in the primary by us Constitutional conservative reformers, but not so much after
that if our candidates don’t win their primaries.
It’s the same mistake Mitt Romney made when he chose to spend
all his powder attacking Newt Gingrich in the primary and didn’t attack Obama
in the general election. None of those
weasels admitted Obama was a Communist hired to implement Agenda 21. Our elected
Georgia Republicans continue to support Regionalism and refuse to repeal Agenda
21 enabling State laws HB 277 and HB 1216.
“Establishment” Republicans are pretending that we will
believe that if we just keep voting for their favorite RINOs, things will get
better, but they haven’t mentioned if that will occur in our century.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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