| “I get to make the decisions about my children, not anyone else,” said Christie. “Every once in awhile, parents are going to make decisions we disagree with,” he admitted, “but the minute you start to take those rights away from parents, you don’t know that slippery slope, what rights are going to be taken away next.” Involving the state in family matters should not be taken lightly—an argument Christie articulated well, even as his opponents on stage went for simpler red-meat answers.
Ramaswamy, for whatever reason, became obsessed at one point with demanding that his colleagues name provinces in eastern Ukraine. This ended up distracting from his broader argument of foreign policy restraint. “Foreign policy experience is not the same as foreign policy wisdom,” he said, correctly, before veering into his weird geographic demands. At another moment, he suggested that January 6 was an inside job. His final answer about the climate agenda being a new progressive religion was interesting and possibly worth devoting more airtime to, but it was odd to include in place of a closing statement.
Florida flop: One name I haven’t mentioned is Ron DeSantis. That’s because the Florida governor continues to flop. DeSantis said nothing new or noteworthy, and he continues to offer absurd and impractical policy ideas, like taxing remittances to pay for a wall between the U.S. and Mexico (which would be very hard to pull off, and could just result in people using crypto instead of U.S. dollars). He also spread sex trafficking myths (more on that from Reason‘s Elizabeth Nolan Brown) while trying to talk tough, saying that when he’s president, well, the drug cartels better watch out, because there’ll be a “new sheriff in town.” OK, Ron.
“Nikki Haley said the other day there should be no limits on legal immigration and that corporate CEOs should set the policy on that,” DeSantis declared at one point, totally misrepresenting Haley’s stance. What she actually said was that business needs should be considered when developing U.S. immigration policy. “When it comes to legal immigration, it’s a broken system—it shouldn’t take someone 10 years to become a citizen,” she said in New Hampshire last month. “For too long, Republican and Democrat presidents dealt with immigration based on a quota. We’ll take X number this year; we’ll take X number next year. The debate is on the number. It’s the wrong way to look at it.” Instead, “we need to go to our industries and say, what do you need that you don’t have?”
To be sure, Haley still said plenty of insane things in this debate, like calling for the U.S. to “end all trade relations with China until they stop murdering Americans with fentanyl,” which seems like it would…destroy the entire economy overnight.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump remains on top, with these four presidential wannabes trailing far behind—a truth that was at least acknowledged on the stage last night. |