Look at Make Us Great Again. Started by Mike Toomey, an Austin lobbyist, and G. Brint Ryan, a Dallas tax consultant and donor to Mr. Perry, it has a $55 million target budget, a stated goal of promoting Mr. Perry’s candidacy and an interesting initial message for donors: don’t give to the other Perry PACs, because we’re the genuine item.
What’s a donor to think? Mr. Toomey and Mr. Perry have been running in parallel since they were both State House members back in 1985. Mr. Toomey took a couple of years off from his lobby business to be Mr. Perry’s chief of staff. He did the legal work on a land sale for the governor. He owns an island in New Hampshire with David Carney, the governor’s top political adviser.
He says emphatically that he’s not talking to the campaign or anyone in it, and there’s no evidence to the contrary. But who needs to talk? Mr. Toomey knows the governor personally and politically, knows his policies, knows what will help and what will hurt. He’s got no reason to phone home.
And he’s got a great reason not to phone home, aside from the legal one: Mr. Perry and Mr. Carney and everyone else in the bunker can disavow whatever Make Us Great Again does. Every campaign has a moment when it goes too far, or walks something right up to the edge of propriety. Take two weeks ago, when Robert Jeffress, senior pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas, followed his introduction of the governor at the Values Voter Summit in Washington by telling reporters that he considered the Mormon Church to be a cult and didn’t think Mitt Romney was a Christian.
They make me sick. They should make all Americans sick. They are the new form of "money changers" mentioned in the bible that Jesus hated, so all good Christians should hate them too.
:puke: