As election 2012 fades from the political conversation, all the losing presidential players are tossed in the wind to old jobs or new lives. None have risen to the Palin-esque stature of party tastemaker, just as none have been offered their own Huckabee. Indeed, the 2012 GOP crop–only a short while ago broadly displayed on what seemed like endless debate stages–have moved into obscurity somewhat quicker and more willingly than their 2008 predecessors.
Rick Perry is still the governor of Texas. Rick Santorum seems to have a healthy, if modest, public speaking career. Herman Cain is busy with his radio show and its new feature, “Ask the Hermanator.” Newt University offers ongoing video lectures, its latest on the potential on self-driving cars. Ron Paul has retired from Congress and writes weekly columns on his website. And Rep. Michele Bachman is under investigation by the Office of Congressional Ethics for alleged federal campaign finance violations.
Except for one interview with Fox News and an appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference, Mitt Romney has kept a low profile since losing to President Obama on Nov. 6th. That’s to be expected; losing the presidency can’t be fun. What’s more noteworthy is that Romney’s running mate, Rep. Paul Ryan, has largely done the same thing.
“He seems to have fallen entirely off the radar of early state Republicans,” Politico’s Jonathan Martin wrote Monday. “Democrats bring up his name with more zeal than do people in his own party. And his footprint at the Conservative Political Action Conference was so faint that his being an afterthought was itself an afterthought. What the heck has happened to Paul Ryan?”
Those close to Ryan say the he’s concentrating heavily on his work. Being the GOP numbers guy means Ryan has a haul ahead of him with upcoming fiscal fights. His new budget was panned by both Democrats and Republicans, and serves as an example for the kind of austerity politics from which some GOPers have begun to distance themselves.
“We must not become the party of austerity,” said Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal at CPAC. “We must become the party of growth.”









