That's the message from state leaders who are considering a White
House run as Washington slips deeper into political paralysis.
Ambitious governors long have cast their accomplishments in contrast
to the capital's gridlock. But three years from the 2016 election,
several governors are trying to grab more of the national spotlight,
while Congress earns all-time low approval ratings.
In events Saturday evening in two important early voting states,
Gov. Martin O'Malley, D-Md., was trying to highlight that contrast
and U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., was trying to fight that image of
the nation's capital.
In the emerging 2016 field, governors with little national
recognition are competing with better-known Capitol Hill figures
burdened by the baggage of working in Washington.
"We've got to show America we're not just the opposition party,
we're the proposition party," Ryan said, suggesting an approach for
his party in Congress to an audience at Republican Gov. Terry
Branstad's annual birthday fundraiser outside of Des Moines.
Courting voters at a party dinner in New Hampshire at almost the
same time, home of the leadoff primary, O'Malley promoted himself as
a can-do governor and former Baltimore mayor.
"We took action. We started making things work," he told a room
packed with roughly 1,000 Democrats gathered in Manchester, New
Hampshire's largest city.
"Enough finger-pointing. Enough obstruction. Enough wasted time,"
O'Malley continued, criticizing a political environment with "a lot
more excuses and ideology than cooperation or action."
At about the same time Saturday, Ryan, the 2012 Republican nominee
for vice president, was in Iowa headlining a fundraiser for
Branstad.
"We need a governor as president of the United States," Branstad
recently told the AP.
But Branstad has praised Ryan, chairman of the House Budget
Committee who was the Republicans' vice presidential nominee, as
savvy and hard-working.
"It's obvious we have a common-sense statesman from a neighboring
state that's really trying to do the right thing," Branstad told
roughly 800 Republican stalwarts.
But Branstad points to only his fellow Republican governors as
examples the nation should follow. Branstad, if re-elected, would
have a closer look at the GOP field than anyone, as his party's host
of the Iowa presidential caucuses.
Last month, days after the partial government shutdown ended in
Washington, Branstad introduced U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, as "a
bright up-and-coming senator" before launching into an harsh
criticism of the federal government and promotion of the
accomplishments of governors in Texas, Wisconsin, Ohio and Michigan.
In each of those states, Republicans also control the legislature.
Ryan was making his first appearance in Iowa since Romney failed to
carry the state in the presidential election last year. It was also
his first trip to the early-voting state as someone considering a
candidacy for president in 2016, and he hinted he'd be back. "Maybe
we should come back and do this more often," he said.
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While the audience in the packed ballroom dined on barbecued pork
and fried chicken, Ryan repeatedly praised Branstad for enacting tax
cuts this year with a politically divided legislature.
"And that is an example people in Washington could learn from," Ryan
said.
Gov. Chris Christie, R-N.J., scored a resounding re-election victory
this month by promoting his success as a can-do governor.
"Under this government, our first job is to get the job done. And as
long as I am governor, that job will always, always be finished,"
Christie said during his victory speech.
Gov. Scott Walker, R-Wis., offered a similar message in a speech to
state leaders in Washington. "Real reform happens in the states,"
Walker said, according to prepared remarks from the closed-door
speech.
Ryan has his own challenges as an eight-term congressman.
Gallup found this past week that just 9 percent of Americans approve
of Congress' job performance, a record-low. The Pew Research Center
found in October that just 1 in 5 surveyed said they trust the
government in Washington to do what is right most of the time, while
8 in 10 said they only sometimes or never trust it, reflecting near
record levels of distrust.
Back in New Hampshire, the state's Democratic Party chairman noted
that presidential primary voters on both sides "have an inclination
to support governors" over members of Congress.
"Being a governor of a mid-sized state is not a bad place to start
when it comes to New Hampshire," Ray Buckley said of O'Malley.
Aides to O'Malley suggest that he would not seek the Democratic
nomination if Hillary Rodham Clinton were to enter the race. But his
status as a Washington outsider offers O'Malley a unique argument in
a Democratic field whose strongest prospective contenders are
capital insiders — Clinton and Vice President Joe Biden.
On the Republican side, Gov. Bobby Jindal, R-La., hasn't ruled out
running. Gov. Rick Snyder, R-Mich., has tried to raise his national
profile as leader in a state where unemployment has dropped more
than 6 percentage points since he took office in 2011.
Four of the last six presidents have been governors.
[Associated
Press; THOMAS BEAUMONT & STEVE PEOPLES]
AP Director of Polling
Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report. Peoples reported from
Manchester, N.H.
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