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Congressman Paul Ryan a brave pick by Mitt Romney for Vice President - Charismatic Irish American will force a major economic debate in fall campaign

Posted on Saturday, August 11, 2012 at 08:29 AM

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Paul Ryan


Irish American Congressman Paul Ryan is a brave pick by Mitt Romney. It makes the election a contest about ideas, the “get government off my back crowd” against the “government is needed to keep our social and economic fabric together” group.

Romney could have run on just attacking Obama’s evident economic failures but he saw that policy was not working. He was seven points down in a CNN poll as late as Thursday of this week.

Instead he has picked a man who was once accused -- by a Republican columnist Charles Krauthammer --- of “writing the longest suicide note in history” when he unveiled a controversial budget plan that slashed social security, medicare and medicaid. Ryan has also been attacked by the Conference of Catholic Bishops for proposed cuts to the poorest in society. The Wall Street Journal will love this choice, just a few days ago they were trumpeting Ryan and daring Romney to pick him.

Romney showed a surprising gamblers instinct by doing so. It will be a fascinating clash of ideas in the Fall, not least when Ryan and fellow Irish American Joe Biden square off.

I met Congressman Paul Ryan at an Irish Embassy event in Washington a few years back. He was new to Congress at the time but nonetheless, impressed with his quick mind and clear focus on the future.

He looks the part, strikingly tall and handsome. He is a young man in a hurry at age 42, irrespective of how Romney does, he is now the likely leading figure for the GOP for a younger generation.

He fears his family history, deaths by heart attacks before 60 have become a tragic constant in his family’s medical background. He himself found his own father, then in his mid fifties, dead in his bed and it inspired him to enter politics and try and make a difference.

His Irish roots go back to his great-grandfather’s arrival in Janesville, Wisconsin a riverside town. It is a  town of about 65,000 people dominated by three families, the Ryans, Fitzgeralds and Cullens, known as the Irish mafia. When Ryan had his first run for office at age 28, 14 years ago, a political advertisement showed him walking through the graveyard where his immigrant ancestors lay.

The Ryans were literally the road builders and Ryan Inc, started by his immigrant great grandfather, is now a national construction company. Ryan’s side of the family went into law, however, and no longer have anything to do with the building business.

Paul Ryan grew up in an extended Irish family with eight other Ryan households within shouting distance of his very impressive home which has six bedroons and eight bathrooms and is on the National Register of Historic Places -- doubly so now.

He is popular and accesible to the media almost to a fault.

“The key to understanding me is really simple,” he said.

“I am not trying to be anybody other than who I actually am,” he told the New Yorker in a recent profile and journalists who cover him do find that to be the case.

He has summed up his own political philosophy thus: “Only by taking responsibility for oneself, to the greatest extent possible, can one ever be free,” he wrote, “and only a free person can make responsible choices—between right and wrong, saving and spending, giving or taking.”

It was clear for some weeks as his campaign foundered that Mitt Romney needed a game changer VP pick - and party leaders and the Wall Street journal think the has found the man.

U.S. Representative Paul Ryan could, they had argued, make a persuasive vice presidential pick thanks to what he himself calls the "checklist."

"I check a series of boxes," the Wisconsin Republican reminded the media in 2008. "Young guy. Economics guy. From a swing state. Catholic."

It could be the magic political formula that Romney is seeking to bolster the public's perception of him as a rather uninspiring and dull candidate. Thanks to the controversial budgets that Ryan persuaded House Republicans to pass in 2011 and 2012, he's become a national figure and something of a star of the hard right.

Romney understood that magic allure when he asked Ryan to campaign with him for five days in Wisconsin this spring.

Some of the math isn't promising. Only two sitting House members were selected for the vice presidential spot since 1948 by either party. Both tickets lost and neither VP pick ever held elected office again.

Ryan’s age is another factor. At 42 he is the third-youngest vice presidential selection since World War II, after Richard Nixon, 39, in 1952 and Dan Quayle, 41, in 1988.

According to the Boston Herald, political science researchers and academics debate whether running mates have any effect at all on presidential elections. In a 2001 paper called 'Requiem for a Lightweight,' author David Romero of the University of Texas argued they have none.

Even GOP strategist Karl Rove agrees: "Running mates haven’t decided an election in more than a half-century," he wrote in The Wall Street Journal last week.

But Ryan may not have gotten the memo. Since the start of 2012 Ryan’s appearances on Sunday news shows rank him second only to Ron Paul, who ran for president. Ryan has repeatedly appeared on ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, Fox, MSNBC, CNBC and other channels.

Ryan may be a practicing Catholic but that was not enough to stop the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops ruling his budget would hurt the poor and vulnerable.  Bishops urged lawmakers to 'resist for moral and human reasons' the cuts to hunger and nutrition programs in the Ryan budget.

Recently more than 80 professors and administrators at Georgetown University signed a letter to Ryan before his appearance at the famous Catholic school accusing him of wrongly citing Catholic teaching to argue for his budget.

Ryan's budget calls for biting cuts in Medicaid and a total overhaul of Medicare for people currently under the age of 55, making both Ryan and his policies a political lightning rod.

Romney will benefit from choosing a charismatic running mate popular with economic conservatives, but he could also be opening himself up to the divisive shortcomings of that choice too. Time will tell.




90 comments

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Briano, you ask people on the left to "stop with the class warfare"? Are you kidding? Class warfare is a slogan that has taken hold on the right as a knee-jerk reply to substantive charges of unfairness in federal treatment of individual income. Class warfare is a delusion. What's not delusion is the fact that your presidential candidate pays 100% to 12% less in federal taxes than the average American, who does not have Swiss bank accounts, outsourced employment profits, windfall oil depletion allowances and other loopholes, $700,000 deductions for competition horses for medically advised "exercise," low capital gains taxes, Individual Retirement accounts that grow tax-free to $1,000,000, etc., etc. It's unlikely that thinking voters will elect such a person to high national office, and it's likely they will insist on a fair reform of the tax code very soon after the coming election. Again I point out that millionaires use far more government services-- and more expensive federal government services-- than the unemployed and the poor among us, yet they expect the working poor to pick up the costs of their very expensive government services. Class warfare? No, but it is division of self-interest along socioeconomic lines with foisting off of financial responsibility to the less advantaged. We need and we will have a restoration of interests in common and fair payments for the work of government.
1 percenters, warren Buffet, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Barbara Striesand, Bruce Springstein, I have no political agreement with any of these people, but I have no want to steal their money nor do I begrudge them the ability to donate to causes I personally dis agree with, they earned it, it is their money to do with as they will.
One percent, stop with the class warfare. Without that 1 percent paying the majority of taxes all the rest would be destitute. Start a business before you talk to me about regulation. you say private enterprise is unable or unwilling to provide jobs, I infer from that you mean government will provide these things. Where does government get the funds to do these things? From private enterprise. No starting business is assured of success, they invest their time,talent and funds to do so. The government bureaucrat risks nothing, their incentive is to grow their budget and to make sure they spend the allocated funds.
BrianO, we tried deregulating the finance industry, which has been the primary contributor to GDP since the 90s. Deregulation brought the nation to the brink of economic collapse, rescued only by the bail outs. Job creation is a two-way street: without a healthy middle class to purchase goods and services, jobs are unsustainable. And "private enterprise" has shown quite clearly that it is uninterested in creating new jobs (investing in a workforce) even though it has the billions in profits needed to hire, to repair the infrastructure, to begin the conversion to sustainable energy sources-- in other words, for progress! We're in a hostage situation, with the one percent refusing to invest until it gets what it wants. It wants enough freedom to bring the nation to brink of economic collapse again, all in the name of their "freedom" and their "profit."
Eiriamach, you live in a zero sum world not reality, you grow the base and shrink those relying on the government through new jobs created by this growth. if you wish to grow government strangle free enterprise and imprison the free spirit of free men then continue down the path of class warfare and hatred of your fellow citizen.
So, Niall, The US Conference of Catholic Bishops would rather have a pro-abortion VP than Ryan? I think not.
Ryan is about as "charismatic" as a Nazi blitzkrieg.
Gearoid04 thinks the Ryan Plan would close the budget deficit. What a laugh! Ryan's budget shows how little the GOP cares about the deficit as long as the wealthy run the gov't. As the NY Times editors point out (8/12), "Mr. Ryan’s budget would not reach a surplus for 30 years, according to the C.B.O., because he would cut taxes, largely for the rich and for corporations, by $4 trillion. That’s even more than Mr. Romney’s extravagant tax giveaways, because Mr. Ryan would erase all capital gains taxes." ADD that figure to the $6 trillion that the Ryan budget cuts from essential programs, and we're looking at perpetual Great Depression as America's economic future: "Medicaid, food stamps, and other vital programs would be offloaded to the states, but the states would not be given the resources to run them. The federal government simply would not be there to help the unemployed who need job training, or struggling students who seek college educations. Washington would be unable to respond when a city cannot properly treat its sewage, or when the poor and uninsured overload emergency rooms as clinics close. More than three-fifths of the cuts proposed by Mr. Ryan come from programs for low-income Americans." The deficit is a bogeyman that the GOP uses to try the frighten middle class voters into putting millionaires in charge and sending American workers into financial oblivion.
Nice fluff piece there Niall. Sorry about that invite to the White House St. Patrick's Day party, Barack.
Is feidir linn.
Per Wikipedia and with apologies to readers of German ancestry:.................................................................................... "[Paul Davis]Ryan was born and raised in Janesville, Wisconsin, the youngest child of Elizabeth A. "Betty" (née Hutter) and Paul Murray Ryan, a lawyer.[6][7][8] He is of Irish and German ancestry,[9]."
God help the USA if Obama is re-elected. I am puzzled at so many people believe his lies and are falling a second time for the worst scam ever.
Last year President Obama and Representative Boener had a budget deal worked out that would of saved America from getting it's credit rating downgraded. However guess who it was that stopped that deal from going through. None other than Rep. Ryan who along with his Tea Party Republicans became the obstructionist of this budget plan just as they were the obstructionist of any other government programs that would of helped America in any way to more quickly get out of the Recession we are currently getting out of. Ryan has a dictatorial style of governing that has no place in a democracy that requires compromise in getting things done. Romney and Ryan are no good for America because the Ryan budget plan is no good for America as well as their voodoonomics economic plan.
Wow, this article really surprised me considering this is Irish Central. It was objective, concise, clear, while illuminating the pro and cons of the Ryan candidacy. A refreshing piece of writing in contrast to the Cahir and Patrick Roberts "School of Journalism." Good job, Niall...on this one. To see the typical partisan rant, read over most of the previous 73 comments.
Yeah, he is a "make believe" Catholic alright, with a 100% record in supporting pro-life legislation by word and deed. This debate about fiscal responsibility vis-a-vis social welfare programs, is an issue which Catholic social doctrine leaves open to debate, in how to practically handle it. Paul Ryan believes with good reason, that the present welfare program debt has ballooned to almost insurmountable proportions, and serious pruning is needed. He also credibly believes that those caught in the poverty trap, are not helped into employment, by dependence on programs driven by state-run bureaucracy which crush local initiatives.
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