

Nikki Haley and the new samurai: Lonely are the brave in South Carolina
Like Paul Potts singing “Nessun dorma” on “Britain’s Got Talent,” transcendent moments come like a bolt of lightning in the middle of the night. Another came last week when Rep. Joseph Cao (R-La.) said to BP America President Lamar McKay during a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing: “Well, in the Asian culture we do things differently. During the samurai days, we’d just give you the knife and ask you to commit hara-kiri.”
From the start, Nikki Haley, who is running for governor in South Carolina, has
brought the same sense of clarity to her campaign. She is a Methodist, but like
Cao’s samurai, she hails from an Asian warrior tradition. She is on the
forefront of a rising edge of conservatism that might best have been described
by Ross Douthat in a recent column for The New York Times: “Liberals had hoped that Obama’s election marked
the beginning of a long progressive era — a new New Deal, a greater Great
Society. Instead, from the West Coast to Western Europe, the welfare state is
in crisis everywhere they look. The future suddenly seems to belong to
austerity and retrenchment — and even, perhaps, to conservatism.”
Haley is expected to win her primary today, but it has been a tough campaign,
plagued by bottom-feeding pols from the old school and the kind of shenanigans
that we from New York, Philadelphia and Chicago are well acquainted with. But
South Carolina and most of the South are in the process of transitioning to
positive leadership and economy, so it was most important that outside help
appear for Haley in the time of trouble. It was the time to be brave. But only
two were brave: Mitt Romney and Sarah Palin. Both saw the potential in Haley
and both saw the forces rising to stop her. And both put boots on the ground to
help.
It should be remembered in 2012: Who was brave when it was time to be brave?
Another who was brave was Jenny Sanford, wife of Gov. Mark Sanford, who stood
up for Haley from the first and without whose help Haley may not have had the
chance to shine. Mrs. Sanford should be rewarded by way of a position in
Haley’s government — the one that takes over the governorship if by any chance
Haley is selected as vice president in a couple of years on a Romney or Palin
ticket.
Visit Mr. Quigley's website at http://quigleyblog.blogspot.com.








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