Joni Ernst to brave State of the Union rebuttal

Joni Ernst, the Republican Party’s latest rising star in the Senate, will do just that Tuesday, tapped by the GOP to deliver the rebuttal to Obama’s State of the Union address.

She’ll likely sit or stand, alone, facing a camera, countering the President’s policy proposals and implicitly — or pretty openly — reminding Americans that partisanship is alive and well.

Throw in the fact that fewer Americans watch the State of the Union — and even fewer the opposition party’s response — and 10 minutes of uninterrupted national TV time doesn’t seem so glossy anymore, especially when so much has gone wrong in recent years.

“It’s almost like the kiss of death to get picked to do the Republican response,” said Elaine Kamarck, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. “It represents an amazing opportunity to catapult yourself into the national conversation, but the risk is huge and the success rate has been minimal at best in recent years.”

Sen. Rand Paul, who is eyeing a 2016 run, gave his own response to the President’s address last year through a nearly 10-minute video on YouTube.

And the Tea Party Express has tapped its own conservative firebrand to deliver a rebuttal for the last four years, starting with then-Rep. Michelle Bachmann, who stared into the wrong camera throughout the live broadcast carried on CNN.

That response has fueled the discussion over a fragmented Republican Party, and the group hasn’t announced whether they will field an alternative to Ernst — who was endorsed by tea party leaders during her Senate campaign.

CNN