Tempestuous wind blows through primary

Perry’s new era is nothing compared to the new era facing the Republican party

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AUSTIN, Tex. — It’s a new, unsettling era for Republicans on many fronts. For instance, take Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Please.

Many Texans still love Perry and felt badly about his wipe out on the national political stage. The Dallas Morning News had this big headline: “Perry’s dream dashed...With S.C. out of reach, he bows out, backs Gingrich.” A story underneath that: “After failed bid, what’s his future?” Columnist Jacquielynn Floyd’s headline: “Take Comfort, Rick Perry: you have Texas to call home.”

Some analysts now predict Perry faces a new era: he returns with reduced clout and is viewed by foes as weaker. Texas House Democratic Leader Jessica Farrar is already demanding Perry reimburse the state money the Governor spent on out-of-state-security costs during his failed White House bid. And the liberal group Progress Texas has collected over 3,000 signatures online to try and force Perry pay the state back.

But Perry’s new era is nothing compared to the new era facing the Republican Party.

It’s now in a new era where the conventional wisdom has been upended, its former presumptive front-runner is on the run and the party’s traditional establishment seems about to be evicted. Is former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney about to lose yet ANOTHER well-funded presidential bid? Is former House Speaker Newt Gingrich on track to become the party’s nominee despite having enough baggage to occupy six TSA inspectors?

The Republicans’ new political era was best summarized by The National Journal’s Ron Fournier: “Gingrich’s stunning South Carolina victory, coupled with his surge in Florida polling, has created near-panic among Republican consultants, lobbyists, elected officials and staffers, particularly in Washington, who believe Gingrich is too volatile and scandal-plagued to defeat Obama.”

Romney once enjoyed a 22-point lead going into the Florida primary, but then he caught front-runner-itus and did his best Thomas E. Dewey imitation, while Gingrich roared in the South Carolina debate, becoming the kind of polarizing Rush Limbaugh-esque candidate that many 21st century conservatives crave. Romney’s tepid debate performances and politically negligent handling of the tax issue then sparked a huge shift: a Rasmussen poll gives Gingrich a 41-32 point lead. Public Policy Polling puts Gingrich ahead of Romney 38 percent to 33 percent: a Gingrich gain of 12 points during a week when Romney dropped 8 points. Still, poll numbers are fluid.

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