The key to understanding CPAC.. and by extension the Republican Presidential primary... and, I guess, by extension our entire corrupt and broken political system... is you have to first know is that almost none of it has anything to do with public advocacy.
Most of it is about making money.
The commerce of conservatism has never been more robust. And here at the right’s biggest trade show, the annual Conservative Political Action Conference, just about everyone is selling something.
Political figures’ seeing financial incentives in keeping their names
circulating as presidential hopefuls is nothing new. But the merging of
political and profit motives has gotten to the point where many
Republicans say they fear that their nominating process has begun to
look like a machine for generating and heightening brand awareness.
“There are a lot of reasons for running for president,” said Stephen K.
Bannon, the executive chairman of Breitbart News. “And getting to 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue often isn’t one of them.”
You might think it's fun to gawk at so much right wing crazy in one place but most of these people know exactly what they're doing. What kind of an idiot would actually want to be President, anyway? The smart.. or at least shrewd.. ones are just building a brand they can parlay into
something much easier and more lucrative.
Mike Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor, won the 2008 Iowa
Republican caucuses in January of that year. Two months after winning
the prominent early presidential derby test, he left the race. In
September 2008, Huckabee became the host of an eponymous TV political
commentary program on Fox News.
Huckabee is not the only Republican on the national stage who later
went under the TV lights – former Alaska governor and 2008 vice
presidential candidate Sarah Palin is a Fox News contributor. Any hopes
for Huckabee, who left his show earlier this year to consider another
run for the presidency, and for Palin that such regular national TV
exposure could reboot their White House ambitions, have so far proved
elusive at best.
The popular use of the town hall meeting political structure in New
Hampshire, familiarly employed by Christie in New Jersey, works to
Christie’s advantage, the source said. A strong showing in the “Live
Free or Die” state’s primary could seal the deal for the birth of a
lucrative post-politics media career for Christie, in the event that he
does not reverse a polling trend that shows a thorny path to the
presidency.
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