Saturday, November 17, 2012

Requiem for Mitt Romney


There was a debate in the 2008 cycle where all the candidates ganged up on Mitt Romney.  John McCain, Rudy Guiliani, Mike Huckabee, etc., all took their shots at him, leaving Romney more than once during the debate to question why all the personal attacks.  When the debate was over, and the candidates shake hands and smile for the camera, none of them would shake Romney's hand.  Rachel Maddow said the other Republicans were acting like mean girls.

I remember that moment, and I remember the faith speech he gave prior to the Iowa caucus.  He didn't want to address his religion so early in the campaign, but with staunch anti-Mormonism from the religious right, stoked by Huckabee's whisper campaign ("Don't they believe Jesus and Satan are brothers?") Romney gave his speech.  He did it in a way that didn't put religious bigotry to rest, but it at least dampened it.  Romney had other problems in 2008, like running as the "social conservative" in the group, but his camp believed the "Mormon question" had hurt him.

Four years later, it didn't matter so much.  Romney had the money and experience to make him a stronger candidate.  Even though the Republicans didn't want him as the nominee, always picking someone else with him as second choice, all the other candidates wilted under the spotlight.  At different points, Michelle Bachmann, Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry and Rick Santorum led in the GOP polls.  For all the hand-wringing now, does anyone really believe one of the those five would have done better?

The 2012 cycle took longer, partly due to some dissatisfaction with John McCain wrapping it up so early in 2008, a clearly flawed candidate.  And so Mitt Romney had to play the games one plays in primary politics.  He flanked Perry to the right on immigration.  He had to defend RomneyCare against ObamaCare and explain why what was good for Massachusetts would be disastrous for the nation.  His campaign took turns with attack ads on whoever was the frontrunner, but each and every frontrunner took their best shot on him and couldn't topple him.  It took its toll though.  Perry supporters didn't instantly switch to Romney supporters.  Same with Santorum's or Gingrich's.  Ron Paul supporters never switched to Romney, even if Paul was the one guy on stage he made a point not to attack.

While Romney was finishing them off, the Obama campaign was already planting the seeds.  They followed the playbook of George W. Bush in 2004.  Ironic much?  The Bush team canvassed their states and identified their voters and got them out.  It was about turnout of the base.  They also had to weaken their opponent, so the Bush team went after John Kerry's Vietnam tour with the Swiftboat Veterans.  Kerry never recovered.

The positive campaign the Obama team ran in 2008 wasn't going to work a second time around.  They didn't have the luxury of the high ground.  Plus with Super-PACs in play, neither candidate could keep control of their message.  Who can forget the ad that implied Romney gave a woman cancer?

Romney's strength was his economic prowess, so that's what they went after.  Romney was now Gordon Gekko, an evil corporate raider who destroyed companies and made millions.  The image stuck for enough people.

So what could he have done differently?

1. Tell the truth.  Romney has a certain cavalier attitude toward truth in politics. It's as though he believes everyone's going to lie, and he's here to play the game. Like Survivor.  But it was too easy to look at how he ran for Senate in 1994, how he governed in 2002, how he campaigned in 2008, and how he campaigned in 2012 that made people wonder. "Who is the real Mitt Romney?"  There were answers he'd give in the primary debates where I felt like he was telling the far-right what they wanted to hear but wouldn't really govern that way if elected.

2. Change the Convention order.  It may have seemed like a coup to get Clint Eastwood to speak ("former Republican mayor"), but it shouldn't have been in primetime.  There was a series of speakers who came to the podium one by one and shared brief stories of acts of service or kindness they'd received from Romney.  It not only humanized him but underlined how compassionate a man he could be. It was a side of him the electorate needed to see, and a side he'd never boast of.  It was a side that few people saw, because it didn't happen in primetime.  Instead his own speech wasn't that memorable, and all people could talk about was The Chair.

3. Pick a different Vice-President.  Romney figured he needed a pick to excite the base, so he doubled-down on the economic question and picked Paul Ryan.  Trouble is, Ryan had a budget the Obama team could criticize.  It didn't matter that Obama hasn't had a budget in three years; Ryan's suggestions were full of those that would raise the tax burden on poor and middle-income families.  And if Ryan was a such a fiscal conservative, why did he support Medicare Part-D and TARP and the bailouts?  He was just another white male Republican.

4. Get out of the echo chamber.  Romney was a numbers guy, but the team around him was giving him bad numbers.  "Oh, don't worry about Nate Silver. He's biased.  Look at Rasmussen! Look at our own internal polling."    Romney believed with all his heart on Tuesday he was going to win.  His consultants were charlatans.

5. Campaign for everyone.  How many times did we hear "small business"?  What about the people who don't own a small business?  He needed better articulation on why his plans would help everyone, not just the rich and entrepreneurial.

6. Don't criticize the "other."  The Obama team did a good job of "otherizing" Mitt Romney. He's not one of us.  But Romney fell into the trap when speaking to some wealthy donors, telling them what they wanted to hear.  There's a reason the "47%" comment was leaked in September even though he'd said it in May.  He may or may not personally feel disdain for those who don't pay federal income tax, but hey Fox News portrays them as freeloaders, so let's follow that narrative.  I make a decent living, but once I take my earned income tax credit, child tax credits, charitable deductions, mortgage deduction, and medical expenses deduction, I paid very little federal income tax last year.  I imagine plenty of other families out there making $30, $40, $50, $60,000 a year find themselves in the same boat.  It showed a disconnect.

7. Give a vision for the future.  Obama kept talking about moving "forward." Romney's campaign was more about hearkening back to Reagan's America, a military superpower, a shining beacon on the hill of low taxes and low regulations.  Each president is right or wrong for their time, and Reagan was right for his time.  But fellas, that was thirty years ago.  Nostalgia has never won a campaign.  Maybe Grover Cleveland.

So now the dust has settled, and Romney, unfortunately, rather than fading into the sunset, made some more conference calls to donors and supporters, and had the "gifts" gaffe.  The 2012 election was one of the smallest and shallowest in history, not to mention the most negative.  Big Bird, Binders of Women, "You Didn't Build That", etc.  And the "gifts" comment is a postscript to it.


That one word has emboldened other Republican leaders to condemn him and push him aside, Gov. Bobby Jindal first and foremost.  The fight for 2016 starts now, and the GOP would like a new leader.

Victory has a thousand fathers but defeat is an orphan.  I don't see Romney settling into an elder statesman role for the party.  Looks like most of the establishment guys are eager to get rid of him.  A lot of "I told you so" columns being written.

Romney never had many friends in the Republican Party.  His selling point was his management style.  His electability.  Now that he lost his election, that his team wasn't as well-managed as the other guy, they might come back to him for money, but that's about it.  The Romney candidacy is going to be like the second term of George W. Bush: something the Republican Party would like to forget ever happened.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Republican, Heal Thyself



After every presidential election, there is soul-searching, and if the Republicans want to get anywhere, to stay vital, to have a voice, they need to look within, and it needs to be more than a cosmetic gaze.  National Review's Ramesh Ponnuru had one of the better essays on what the GOP needs to do.

Republicans don't like being labelled as racist, sexist, homophobic, etc., but they make it too easy sometimes.  Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock lost two "gimme" Senate seats because they didn't know how to not bungle a rape question.  Gains that George W. Bush made in attracting Latinos to the GOP were lost in the 2008 and 2012 elections when hard-liners made illegal immigration their #1 issue.  Most Latino-Americans want our borders secured too, but I saw more than one FB post from conservatives with the parable of Joe Legal and Jose Illegal.  When a candidate would say "We love legal immigrants" it rang hollow.

The vast majority of African-Americans voted with Obama in 2008, and even if most of them wouldn't switch for any reason, there needs to be a long game played.  Harping on the "New Black Panther Party" and bringing up the birth certificate issue over and over did nothing but hurt feelings now and deepen distrust for the future.

The media and pollsters are obsessed with demographic breakdown, and it's clear certain demographics just favor Democrats more.  The GOP needs to resist the urge of demographic pandering but more importantly, they need to stamp out the appearance of demographic dismissal.  Saying "Oh, single women voted 67% for Obama?  Eh, they just want big government as their sugar daddy" will do nothing to leave the door open to sway single women in the future.

This time around would be tough because of the primary process, regardless of who won.  It was also tough because of which candidates chose to run.  Perfectly qualified, interesting people like Jon Huntsman, Gary Johnson and Buddy Roemer were ignored in favor of sideshow candidates like Herman Cain and Michelle Bachmann.  Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich, et al., had ZERO chance in a general election, and everyone knew it, but they were still allowed on stage.  The debates, while entertaining and informative, also did long-term damage.  And it's not just the candidates' fault. Who can forget the audience booing the gay soldier, or booing the Golden Rule?

There's also conservative media to consider.  We live in an age where people can get news from an infinite numbers of sources, most of it unreliable, and more and more, people are consuming news that reaffirms their world-view.  If you only watch MSNBC and read Daily Kos, for instance, you'd think Mitt Romney was one of the most evil men to ever run for president.  And a conservative may nod and feel superior to that silly notion.  But it sure seems like there are plenty of conservatives out there who only listen to Rush Limbaugh, watch Fox News, and read sites like WND for their info.

Mitt Romney was a flawed candidate, but I think he would have been a good president.  I'll do a separate piece on him specifically, but the American people rejected the Republicans this year.  Sure, we can argue turnout, margins of victory, voter fraud allegations, etc., but the Democrats did soul-searching in 2004 when they lost by similar margins and they came out better for it.  Time for the Republicans to do the same.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Last Night's Winners & Losers



WINNER - Barack Obama.  He beat the odds historically.  He's the first President since James Monroe to win a second-term following two other two-term presidents.  He got 8 million fewer votes than he did in 2008 and still won.

LOSER - Paul Ryan.  No one expected Romney to win Massachusetts, but Ryan couldn't deliver Wisconsin, he lost his debate to Joe Biden, and he's a white guy.

WINNER - The Democratic Party.  They've increased their pull with women, minorities, and the youth vote, and the shifting demographic of the nation are all in their favor.

LOSER - White men. They went overwhelmingly for Romney, but it didn't matter.  And since white men are losers, no way the GOP nominates a white man in 2016.  They're tired of the "racist, sexist" cudgel from the Left and will do whatever they can to change it.  Marco Rubio, Nikki Haley, Ted Cruz, Bobby Jindal, Kelly Ayotte, Condi Rice have to all be on wish-lists for the GOP in 2016.  Sorry, Paul Ryan, Chris Christie, Jeb Bush, Jon Huntsman, etc.  You have no chance.

WINNER - Pollsters.  Namely the RealClearPolitics.com average and Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight.com.  They wound up being right on just about every state.  Again.

LOSER - Dick Morris and Karl Rove. I seriously don't understand why Fox News hasn't fired these guys yet. They have been so wrong for so long and don't bring anything to the table, other than advertising money from their PACs, I guess.  Dick Morris was claiming a landslide for Romney after polls were closing and none of those numbers were baring out.  Karl Rove's meltdown when he thought Fox called Ohio too early was priceless.  They are millstones.

WINNER - Bob Scheiffer.  The best presidential moderator of the year, maybe ever. He did it perfectly.

LOSER - Candi Crowley and Jim Lehrer. Lehrer was about as effective as Larry King ("what's the difference between you two?") and Crowley incorrectly interceded to help push a false narrative and ruined her aura of impartiality.

WINNER - Negative campaigning.  It did its job. It supressed voter turnout, and Obama, whose ads were 85% negative, won.  2016 is going to be terrrrrrible.

LOSER - Big Money.  Six billion dollars were spent on this campaign, and we essentially got the same government we had last week.  What was the freakout about Citizens United again? Anyway, rich people can expect their taxes to go up.

WINNER - Harry Reid. He keeps his power in the Senate and he's still the most powerful Mormon politician in America.

LOSER - The Primary process.  Someone please explain to me why Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina get to be the first three states every year?  They always wind up determining the nominee.  Meanwhile, since Obama had no challenger, the Republicans went through one of the nastiest, most prolonged fights for the nomination in some time.  You had freaks and geeks like Michelle Bachmann and Rick Santorum and Herman Cain strutting their stuff when they had no business on stage and no one in the world believed they could actually be president, and yet they got to spout their stuff and have walking jokes like Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry take turns hammering Romney.  By the time he'd secured the nomination, the damage was done.

WINNER - Joe Biden.  HBO is going to make him a HERO when they make Game Change II.

LOSER - Game Change II: The Book. Can't see how it'll be as good as the first one.  And the HBO movie will actually probably make the main character Todd Akin.

WINNER - Claire McCaskill.  Missouri was ready to throw her out, but then Todd Akin revealed himself to be quite the idiot when it comes to how the female body works.

LOSER - Social conservatives.  Some states have made gay marriage and marijuana legal, and Akin & Mourdock helped frighten enough women that abortion rights might be curbed that women wound up citing "abortion" as their #1 issue in exit polls.

WINNER - Some Democrats in Utah actually won some races. Jim Matheson held on to his Congressional seat once again, and Ben McAdams is the new Salt Lake County mayor.

LOSER - Mia Love was poised to be a star in the GOP, but somehow she lost her race.

WINNER - The uninsured.  ObamaCare is here to stay.

LOSER - The economy. Did you see the Dow today? Did you notice the debt ceiling will need to be raised again pretty soon? Unemployment is still at 7.9%.  Gas prices are still high.  So... yeah. Precarious.

WINNER - The American People.  Decisive win means no lawsuits and no repeat of the 2000 mess. A peaceful transfer or maintenance of power.  The election's over so no more political ads popping up everywhere.  It's always right after an election when people are most willing to work together and get things done. The speeches by Obama and Romney last night were examples of encouraging in victory and gracious in defeat. And I'll end on that note.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Obama wins

Heading to bed. Analysis tomorrow.

Sticking with CNN

CNN's Jessica Yellin reports that Obama camp predicts they'll win Pennsylvania.

Candi Crowley is the CNN reporter in the Romney camp. Seems like an inside joke.

Uh-oh. It's 6:00pm. Wolf Blitzer is giddy.  Here we go.  Obama gets Connecticut, D.C., Delaware, Illinois, Massachusetts, Maryland, Rhode Island.  Maine will send at least 3 of their 4 Electoral Votes to Obama.

Romney gets Oklahoma.

Romney up 19-3 in Electoral College vote

It's going to be a long night.

I've flipped through the three cable channels.  Bret Baier and Megyn Kelly anchoring on Fox News, actual news anchors.  But their guest list includes Sarah Palin, Laura Ingraham, Karl Rove, Liz Cheney... heh.

MSNBC has the same six they had in 2010.  Maddow, Matthews, O'Donnell, Sharpton, Schultz, and the hero of HBO's Game Change - Steve Schmidt.  Not even pretending to be a news network anymore.

CNN has an Ohio countdown clock.  Wolf Blitzer, Anderson Cooper, Erin Burnett on location in Ohio. Peter Henry (?) says a source within the Romney camp said their internal polling showed them down 5 in Ohio but it was tighter in Pennsylvania.  Innnnteresting.

Diane Sawyer acting drunk on ABC.  One of the SNL ladies needs to pay attention.

Election Day Tidbits


7 Things I've Read Recently

1. MSNBC really is more left-wing partisan than Fox News is right-wing partisan.  I mean, it was obvious from the 2010 Election coverage on that this was the case, but independent studies confirm.  I liked what I heard one talking head say over the weekend.  He said we should quit referring to them as cable news but as 24-hour cable op-eds.

2. The press seems to be helping Obama run out the clock on Benghazi.  Yesterday, CBS released more footage from their 60 Minutes interview they'd conducted on September 12 and aired September 23.  It would have been very illuminating if they'd had it be part of the original broadcast, or released it the day after the second debate where Obama insisted he did call the attack on Benghazi an act of terror in the Rose Garden.  But no, they quietly dump it right before the election.

3. Barack Obama ran the most negative campaign in modern history.  They say negative campaigning works because Bush was so much more negative than Kerry in 2004.  Didn't work for McCain; we'll see if it works for Obama.

4. By overpraising Pres. Obama and refusing to make an appearance with Mitt Romney in Pennsylvania, if Romney loses, Chris Christie will not be the front-runner for the GOP nomination in 2016.

5. Nate Silver has Obama winning the Electoral College 313-225 and the popular vote by 2.5%.

6. The RealClearPolitics average has it at 303-235 and 0.7% for Obama.

7.  Gallup and Rasmussen are the only major polls that have Mitt Romney winning, both by 49-48 margins. But here's a link to where all the pundits are predicting.  Let's hold them accountable.

8.  In 2013, America will still be here.  I didn't read that; I just thought I should say it because so many people on the wings are convinced that if their guy loses, we're doomed.  Dooooomed.