On Anita Perry's two-day swing through SC

Although her husband has served as Texas governor for the past 10 years, Anita Perry has largely stayed out of the political spotlight.

But that changed after Rick Perry announced his presidential bid back in August.

Indeed, her trip last week to South Carolina -- which took her to eight stops in two days -- showed the Texas first lady in several different lights. As a political spouse dealing with the slings and arrows of a national race. As an outspoken surrogate for her husband. And as a woman able to show the softer side of a candidate embroiled in a fierce nomination fight.

The trip was a chance for South Carolina voters to get face time with a member of the Perry family, given that her husband hasn’t been to the state in over a month. And -- probably not by mistake -- all of her public stops were in the Upstate region, home to a majority of the state’s large evangelical population.

Faith takes center stage
At her first stop, Anita Perry had breakfast with professors at North Greenville University, a Southern Baptist school tucked in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The university’s president, Jimmy Epting, encouraged her to address the small group, although Perry later said she had not planned on making remarks.

“I just want you to feel comfortable talking about the Lord here, as well as tell us all about your husband and tell us why we should be voting for him,” Epting said before offering the podium to Perry.

Her impromptu remarks had a heavy dose of religion –- an issue that received more attention in the campaign after a Perry supporter called Mormonism a cult.

“We are being brutalized by our opponents, and our own party. So much of that is, I think they look at him, because of his faith,” she continued.

She also was overcome with emotion when talking about her grandfather, the deacon in a church who, she said, made sure she went to Sunday school every week. Anita Perry had to pause for several seconds in the middle of her story.

“My grandfather still speaks to me today,” she said, smoothing her cardigan to signal her regained composure.

Talking about her emotional moment later in an interview with NBC News, Perry said, “I've not told that story out on the campaign trail before. But we were talking about faith, and Rick and I are very sincere about our faith and our belief in family.

“And I didn’t mean to say that this morning. It just came to me, and it’s a true story,” she continued.

Sticking to the script
Video of Anita Perry’s remarks at North Greenville quickly spread around the Internet -– something the Perry South Carolina team noted throughout the day with a combination of trepidation (over the reaction to her words) and satisfaction (that the trip was getting so much exposure).

She made few off-the-cuff remarks the rest of the trip, sticking largely to her prepared speech, which she carried in a large binder with her name embossed in silver lettering.

She also dialed back her statement that the campaign was being “brutalized.” In the NBC interview, Perry said that criticism from other candidates is “the nature of the beast.”

“I can certainly understand it, if I’d been in the race longer, it would be uncomfortable for someone to come in and take over that lead,” she said. (At the time of the interview, Perry had come in third in the national NBC/WSJ poll, behind Herman Cain and Mitt Romney).

Handlers were also never far from Mrs. Perry’s side, making sure she stayed on message.

During the interview, Perry discussed her husband’s position on illegal immigration, an issue over which he’s received conservative criticismtaken because he supports allowing the children of illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition to attend state colleges.

She began by expressing empathy for immigrants who are fleeing torture or abuse. “So many of them came for a better opportunity and that’s what America is about."

But the Perry campaign’s South Carolina chairman, Katon Dawson, was quick to interject. 

“In no means has Gov. Perry done anything but be one of the firmest, and most staunch supporters of securing our border and against illegal immigration,” he said, explaining that Mrs. Perry was referring to the tuition issue when she talked about giving illegal immigrants a better opportunity.

An outspoken surrogate
Anita Perry’s prepared remarks pulled no punches when it came to her husband’s opponents.

“He doesn't need a 9-9-9 plan. He doesn't need a 59-point plan!” she said, taking digs, at Herman Cain and Mitt Romney’s jobs proposals while speaking at Cribbs Kitchen in Spartanburg.

Perry also used some of the same one-liners favored by her husband. When asked, at a town hall meeting in Prosperity about his 2nd Amendment beliefs, she responded, “He believes in gun control. You should use both hands.”

At a stop Friday at Dyer’s diner in Pendleton, Perry came under more scrutiny when she blamed her son’s leaving his banking job on new Securities and Exchange Commission rules barring financial advisers from campaigning for candidates if the adviser’s firm has business interests with the candidate’s state.

But while she took flak for that remark, the man to whom she was speaking, David von Schmittou, said he appreciated her comments.

“I was like, whoa. It has touched a lot of people,” he said, referring to the high unemployment rate.

Nurse, dog lover, city girl
While her trip to South Carolina had overtly political stops, she was also there to introduce herself to voters. The holder of a masters’ degree in nursing, Anita Perry visited with nursing students at Clemson University, Bob Jones University, and Greenville Memorial Hospital.

At Bob Jones University, Perry’s eyes lit up as she told students that getting her degree in nursing was “one of the best decisions I ever made in my life -- other than marrying my husband.”

Perry also seemed to share her husband’s love of dogs. As she stopped at a well-known Republican family’s home between events, she became excited when she saw two dogs in the backyard, and played with them before going inside.

And while visiting Greenville Hospital, she stopped to ask a receptionist the name of her dog, whose picture was on her desk.

“What’s your puppy’s name?” she asked, to which the receptionist responded, “Dixie Belle.”

“Dixie Belle!” Anita exclaimed. “We’ve got a Belle,” she added, referring to her son Griffin’s dog Belle, who is the mother of Gov. Perry’s black Labrador, Rory, according to ABC News.

Throughout the trip, Perry wielded what is the strongest card for a political wife: the ability to shed a personal light on her husband, the candidate.

“He grew up in a part of a community, not a town. It had a Baptist church on one end, and a Methodist church on the other end,” she said at Dyer’s diner. “I grew up like 10 miles up the road; he said I was a city girl. I had 42-hundred in my town,” she said as patrons chuckled.

“What we learned growing up in rural Texas, we learned about family, we learned about faith, we learned about what we thought was important in life. That you took care of each other,” she added.

And she vouched for her husband.

“I take a deep breath and really hope that people will give him a fair listening; an opportunity to listen to what he has to say,” she said. “I’m married to the man. I’ve known him since I was eight years old. He’s a good man, he’s principled, he makes tough decisions, he’s a leader, so I just want everybody to give a fair look at him.” 

Discuss this post

Who is darling Anita going to assign the blame on today? lol

I can't decide which ones the bigger JOKE - her or her husband!

  • 7 votes
Reply#1 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 5:35 PM EDT

It is a tag-team; they are working in tandem so they are BOTH the bigger joke...

  • 3 votes
#1.1 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 8:05 PM EDT

LMMAO

Thank you Feisty Redhead I can always count on you to beat back the crazy nut jobs trying to take over our planet. Thank you so much and keep up the great work. I look forward to read your posts more in the coming campaign season and throughout the elections.

  • 1 vote
#1.2 - Tue Oct 18, 2011 10:37 AM EDT

Thank YOU Solutions539 for the kind words!

I do the best I can trying to keep the nut jobs on the run & the truth front & center! ;o)

  • 2 votes
#1.3 - Tue Oct 18, 2011 10:39 AM EDT

I think Feisty Redhead could say "The World is Flat...",and Solutions539 would agree,and praise you for it,...I think he likes F.R.,and is flirting.,...Not that there is anything wrong with that.,...I'm just sayin'.

    #1.4 - Fri Oct 28, 2011 9:35 PM EDT
    Reply

    It's too bad these poor religious folk don't realize their religion is being used against them to make them vote against their best interests.

    Today's GOP should have as their official motto, "Caveat Emptor."

    • 2 votes
    Reply#2 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 5:43 PM EDT

    Dam I could not have said it better. But throughout history it has shows religion has been used as a hammer to defend wrongful thinking.

    • 1 vote
    #2.1 - Tue Oct 18, 2011 10:46 AM EDT
    Reply

    What? No mention that the Obama Administration 'cost' her son his job? I thought that was the best quote of the week!

    • 4 votes
    Reply#3 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 5:45 PM EDT

    Anita lifted her crinoline pettifore just enough to show her husband hiding beneath her skirts.

      Reply#4 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 5:53 PM EDT

      This is getting like the Jim and Tammy show from the PTL days.

      • 2 votes
      Reply#5 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 6:12 PM EDT

      [Anita Perry's two-day swing through SC]

      To quote Spanky: Holly hell!

      Who's running for president, Rick or Anita?

      • 1 vote
      Reply#6 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 6:52 PM EDT

      Because, of course, Michelle Obama never goes out campaigning.. .

      • 4 votes
      #6.1 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 8:03 PM EDT
      Reply

      And like the Wahabi's, these are the people who neither read their own holy book, nor believe in liberty. Does the majority of American's really want to replace a failed democracy with a fundamentalist theocracy?

      Nice.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#7 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 7:14 PM EDT

      What are you babbling about?

      Must be a full moon; once a month, the moonbats howl their delusions about the "Koch Brothers" , or some supposed secret Christian sect that Perry and Bachman belong to.

      • 1 vote
      #7.1 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 8:54 PM EDT

      Ignore this guy,Bob1887910,..He's probably a paid troll.,There is nothing deluded about news reports on the Koch Brothers shady dealings,facts are facts.,And I've heard,or read nothing about "Secret Christian Sects" concerning Perry,and Bachman,..They wear their religion on their sleeves.,the comparison with their brand of religion with Wahabi's fundamentalist views is accurate.,An honest look at the facts would prove that to the most casual observer.

        #7.2 - Fri Oct 28, 2011 9:53 PM EDT
        Reply

        From what I have been reading lately, she won't stand up to scrutiny either! Special interests, vested interests, conflicts of interest....she is a great partner to her husband. I sure don't want them representing my country! Can you picture them trying to convert the "heathen" foreign heads of state to their version of Christianity? It staggers the imagination!

        "We have met the enemy and he is us!" Pogo by Walt Kelly

        • 2 votes
        Reply#8 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 8:00 PM EDT

        As opposed to, say, the Obama's brand of Christianity?

        Hate filled screeds passing as sermons?

        Anti-Semitism? Racism?

        And, look how well it's worked! Economically and foreign policy wise!

        • 3 votes
        #8.1 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 8:06 PM EDT

        Obama's Christianity? When did he get ordained, and when was his sermon? And if you're talking about the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, isn't the message from the Christian right that America is damned because of homosexuality? Isn't this what Fallwell and Robertson preach? So what's the difference in Wrights interpretation and Fallwell's?

        • 1 vote
        #8.2 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 11:04 PM EDT
        Reply

        Thank you for your unbiased testimony Anita. What we really want to know is whether or not you walked in on Cowboy Ricky and Goeff Conner In flagrante delicto.

        Many folks believe that one can be both gay and Christian, so why doesn't Cowboy Ricky and or Anita address this pervasive rumor? If the story is true, there are only three eyewitnesses.

        Be wary of politicians who take aggressive homophobic positions. In my experience they are the one's appearing on late night t.v. thanking the Lord that they have seen the wickedness of their secret homosexual lifestyles and beg the forgiveness of their supporters.

        Me thinks thou protest too much.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#9 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 9:01 PM EDT

        Yup!,...enquirering minds want to know!

          #9.1 - Fri Oct 28, 2011 10:04 PM EDT
          Reply

          Damn the dude seemed like a decent conservative guy till I started hearing all this religious crap.We need a "Survival of the fittest Party"which advocates FREEDOM not FREEBIES.Support yourself or die already!!Science/Evolution not god/religion.Liberty, libertarianism, drug decriminalization anything that gets the gov't out of our lives & our paychecks which includes abortion,euthanasia(abort yourself) gay marriage(marry your cousin,dog,car,have 5 wives)Stem cell research & cloning because there's no morality in science just progress.Also NO MORE OCCUPATIONS if we need there resources just kill em all & take it because we're stronger, better & more powerful..."Survival of the Fittest",baby.

            Reply#10 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 10:07 PM EDT

            Hell Yes!,..We should march right on up those "Ivory towers",and kill them all,and take what is rightfully ours.,We don't need to have "occupations",...grab those Fat Cats and hang 'em !

              #10.1 - Fri Oct 28, 2011 10:16 PM EDT
              Reply

              I'm jealous of these people. I can't get away with crying that I'm being victimized, then turn around and blame someone else for my troubles. She first cries that her husband is being beat-up, then blames Obama for her son having to resign his position on Wall Street to help his dad campaign.

              • 1 vote
              Reply#11 - Mon Oct 17, 2011 11:01 PM EDT

              Heads up Anita, Herman Cain says, look in the mirror and blame yourself.

                Reply#12 - Tue Oct 18, 2011 9:20 AM EDT

                seams like she wants to have her cake and eat it too.

                • 1 vote
                Reply#13 - Tue Oct 18, 2011 10:47 AM EDT

                “We are being brutalized by our opponents, and our own party. So much of that is, I think they look at him, because of his faith,” she continued.

                Really? Ifind that hard to beleive after Mr Jeffieries introxdoced rick Perry saying we "be need a manwho is born again Christian inthe white House" and that "Mormonism is a cul;t" and Perry getting up right after Jeffires sad of Jefferies remarkes "He hi tit out of the park"

                I think it's the other way.Mr Jerreies and Rick Perry or " brutalizing" Mitt Romney, and then preteing that THEY are thevictim. Perry talks bout constituttionism onone hand and then viotatesit the verynext second.

                Article 3 ,Section 9 :Thereshall be no religious test for public office in the United State or among the several states."

                So what didMr Jeffies "hit out of the park"? Implict inthe remrks was a religous test forpublic office.

                If anyone was brutalized it was the Consituttion-that apparently Mr Perry choses deliberately-not to follow.If he followed it- he would have disavoved the remarks.

                Some day Mr Perry ought to sit down and read the consitution-assuming of course he can read.

                  Reply#14 - Tue Oct 18, 2011 12:45 PM EDT
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