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Dem Timing Plays & GOP Silver Bullets
RealClearPolitics ^ | October 05, 2006 | Jed Babbin

Posted on 10/08/2006 12:53:49 PM PDT by paratrooper82

In football, the timing play is a thing of beauty. The quarterback takes the snap and drops back in the pocket counting seconds in his head, looking anywhere except the direction he plans to throw.

At about the count of three he aims at a spot downfield and throws. If it works, the receiver gets there exactly when the ball does. In politics, the timing play is less beautiful but just as important, as the media proved in 2000 and 2004.

(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: communism; democrats; extremist; facist; hate; liberalism; wehateamerica; wehatebush
Just a few days before the 2000 presidential election, the media gifted us with the Bush drunk driving story, dredged up from 1976. That didn't damage Mr. Bush sufficiently, so in the 2004 campaign the 527 Media first tried and failed with the forged Texas Air National Guard documents and then, in the last week, jumped on the phony U.N. story about hundreds of tons of missing explosives in Iraq.

That one might have sunk President Bush but for the fact that the Pentagon got lucky, both finding the people who knew the truth and getting them in front of a tv camera before Election Day.

This year, polls show Democrats aren't doing as well as they'd thought on key issues such as winning in Iraq, homeland vulnerability to terrorist attack and the need to keep the economic boom going. To counter their structural weaknesses, as I predicted in this space since August, the 527 Media - the NYT, WaPo, CBS, NBC, ABC — are producing "October surprises" at a tremendous pace.

So far we've seen them make a major story of the Senate Democrats' attempt to revive the discredited "revolt of the generals" followed quickly by the leaked National Intelligence Estimate and then the new Bob Woodward book, "State of Denial."

Before this year, the media would take the trouble to deny that they timed their stories to do damage to a Republican candidate. Even that pretense has been abandoned this year. The timing of the Revolting Generals, Part III was obvious: it was a foundation for Woodward's book release. But Woodward's book itself? The proof that the book's purpose, and the timing of the release, is to influence the 2006 election comes from Woodward's own words.

As reported in the October 2 Editor and Publisher, NBC's Matt Lauer asked Woodward why he held such an important story — i.e., his alleged proofs that the Bush administration was lying to the American people about the Iraq war — instead of taking the WaPo front page with it?

E&P reports: "Woodward replied that he had not waited "to make a splash, but to assemble the whole story," and then go to the White House and Pentagon and CIA and ask, "What did you do?"

He added: "Simon & Schuster and my bosses at The Washington Post said the only real obligation here is to tell it before the election." (emphasis added). At least Woodward is honest about his motivation. If only his editors, and those of the other 527 Media were as forthright.

Now we have the carefully-timed "breaking news" of Rep. Mark Foley's salacious e-mails and "instant messages" with a House page. The St. Petersburg Times and The Miami Herald received the e-mails between Foley and the page, in the case of the Times as early as last November. Neither published the story until ABC did. How long did ABC have them, as well as the actually incriminating "instant messages"? The media are not conspiring to hold the stories. Never forget: it's a media culture, not a conspiracy.

The Republicans should realize two things. First, as ABC's political director Mark Halperin wrote a few days ago, Republican strengths are real. If Republicans start filtering the media-generated noise out of the election conversation, they will beat Democrats on issues. Second, the Democrats are spinning the issues not answering them.

The Foley matter is serious, but should only have been a small story. It's made big only by media inflation and continued revelations about Speaker Dennis Hastert's actions and inactions. According to several reports they have warned Hastert to resolve the problem this week or resign. Now everyone is wondering what comes next? What else does the 527 Media have up its sleeve to hammer Republicans before the election? The Republicans are in a state of near panic, worried that they're being out-maneuvered by the Clintons' war room machinery. They sound like the Civil War staff officer who famously got Ulysses S. Grant to blow his top.

After a fight near the Rapidan River during the Wilderness campaign, a staff general approached Grant proclaiming a crisis, bewailing the Union's inability to guess what Robert E. Lee would do next.

Grant scolded him: "Oh, I am heartily tired of hearing about what Lee is going to do. Some of you always seem to think he is suddenly going to turn a double somersault, and land in our rear and on both of our flanks at the same time. Go back to your command, and try to think what are we going to do ourselves, instead of what Lee is going to do."

That's what Ronald Reagan would do this week. Close your eyes and think: in your mind's ear you can probably hear him laughing off the idea of panicking. So should the Republican leadership. Karl Rove may not be the Lone Ranger, but he has six silver bullets in his campaign pistol.

First, the whole liberal culture of the media is a glass house waiting for the Republicans to toss a funny bone or two to shatter. As I prescribed last August, the Republicans could generate a huge response from their base — and corresponding turnout in November — by taking on the media. Not just those involved in the Foley matter (who, as my pal Hugh Hewitt wrote, Hastert should take on directly) but all the politically-activist media.

Second, why are all the Washington liberals cheering and raising money for so-called Democrat moderates? Because they know these "moderates" will, like they always do, vote liberal in the Senate and House.

Republicans like Sens. Rick Santorum and Mike DeWine always want to see their race as a competition of resumes and their consultants reinforce that by telling them what they want to hear. They'd do better by ignoring the consultants and battling their opponents ideologically.

The Republicans should deploy the ultimate weapon — the "L" word — forthwith. You want to see Jon Tester's numbers to drop in Montana or Claire McCaskill's in Missouri? Tie them to Sen. Schumer's refusal to describe what the Dems will do if they get control of the Senate.

Will Tester or McCaskill vote to make Pat Leahy chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and thus prevent confirmation of any conservative judge to the Supreme Court? How many of these so-called moderates will break their campaign promises as soon as they get to Washington? These are the questions the media should be asking. Because they won't, Republicans have to.

Third, flag burning, gay marriage, the Patriot Act, the NSA terrorist surveillance program, ballistic missile defense and a host of other issues can be used to nationalize the election and turn the tide against the Dems. The nation is for them, the Dems are opposed.

Fourth, there are all those Blue State would-be Reagan Democrats waiting for an appeal to their best nature. All Republicans need to do is direct campaign energy to them on issues that count: the economy, personal freedom, national security. The Reagan legacy is still there, if Republicans are smart enough to recognize it.

Fifth, the only important media event of this campaign to date was Bill Clinton's narcissistic outburst on FOX News. Clinton jumped the shark and reminded America that the Democrats' politics are only a means to achieve and maintain power. The important truth, coming in the words of former CIA bin Laden desk chief Michael Scheuer last Sunday, was that Bill Clinton's most important legacy was leaving Usama bin Laden alive to commit 9/11. Reminding America of this now and for the next two years is enormously important.

Sixth, and not least, is the economy. The Democrats can't afford to talk about it, but even the most profligate Republican earmarker can. The Republicans can connect the dots: security abroad and at home and economic success. Wouldn't it be ironic if the Bush Boom and why Republican control of Congress is essential to continuing it were the issue of the last week of this campaign?

1 posted on 10/08/2006 12:53:51 PM PDT by paratrooper82
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To: paratrooper82
It's hard for me to fathom how the majority of voters could go into the voting booth and think about the likes of Pelosi, Rangel, Barney Frank, Boxer and the rest of the Democratic appeasers running the Congress while we are fighting the Islamofacists, and still vote for a Democrat.
2 posted on 10/08/2006 1:01:27 PM PDT by Signalman
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: Bobkk47

It's because they think they're voting for Tester and Casey and so-forth. There's no presidential candidate on the ballot to put it into sharp focus and so the DNC trots out "new" candidates who promise to be moderate.

How many times have liberal gubenatorial candidates campaigned on moderation or some such things and pushed to raise taxes the first day they got into office -- so that the voters would forget 3 years later?

Fast Eddie Rendell is about to get re-elected despite doing just that and on campaigning on property tax reform. How'd that work out for ya, Pennsylvania?

And apparently only Republicans got angry about the pay increase that Fast Eddie signed, because it didn't seem to hurt him any.

And they can talk about an uninspiring Swann campaign all they want, they're getting exactly what they deserve.


4 posted on 10/08/2006 1:11:11 PM PDT by AmishDude
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To: paratrooper82

Well at least Babbin kept it topical to the football season so that freepers who can't think can continue to
trudge along.

Next to Olbermann he's a genius.


5 posted on 10/08/2006 1:12:39 PM PDT by CBart95
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To: Bobkk47
as ABC's political director Mark Halperin wrote a few days ago

A broadcast network employs a "political director"??? This in itself is incriminating of bias

6 posted on 10/08/2006 1:21:16 PM PDT by Mr_Moonlight
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To: Bobkk47

A newly elected Democratic majority would go about apologizing to the world for the Bush administration, apologizing for alienating our allies and acting unilaterally, for the "quagmire" of Iraq, for alienating Muslims, for not caring enough or sharing enough of our wealth with "to each according to his need", for the "racism" of Katrina, for our "greed" for oil, etc etc yada yada. All this would be seen as weakness and appeasement by the Islamofascists. There would be a CAIR office in a Democratic White House...along with International ANSWER.


7 posted on 10/08/2006 1:31:06 PM PDT by Sender (Error 404: tagline not found)
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To: thecrow2006

Yes and now there is a new one about Allen, supposedly didn't tell the Senate about some stock options.


8 posted on 10/08/2006 1:36:57 PM PDT by DaiHuy (I have never seen a situation so dismal that a policeman couldn't make it worse)
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To: AmishDude
"..pushed to raise taxes the first day they got into office"

This is a good example of what Warner did in Virginia...and of course he campaigned on a promise of 'no tax increase !

The Virginia GOP was singularly inept!
In both the successful Warner campaign & Kaine campaigns, the GOP campaigns & candidates were lackluster. They allowed two liberals to portray themselves as moderates and when Kaine (the Lt Gov of Warner!)ran the GOP was totally ineffectively in pointing out the previous Warner administration broken campaign promise of 'no taxes'.
9 posted on 10/08/2006 1:41:54 PM PDT by Reily
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To: Sender

You got that right. Even if gridlock remains and a new Demo controlled Congress does not accomplish much, the perception they create will be a disastrous one. The day after the Dems take a majority, America will look weaker and much more divided. The terrorists will be sitting back and laughing at how gullible the American people are. And this will make us look that much more vulnerable to attack. How frightening.


10 posted on 10/08/2006 2:14:55 PM PDT by TNCMAXQ
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To: paratrooper82

Let's see if we have this right...the Republicans can do nothing right...The Dems have no programs that will work better, no people who are better at running the government, and are only good for sarcasm and coming up with feel good slogans...so let's vote for the Dems right ?...wrong !....Problem is the Republicans have done good but have not gotten the message out properly...they should realize the average American has an attention span of about 30 seconds so it is jab,jab,jab, rather than the grandstand knockout punch speeches..


11 posted on 10/08/2006 4:59:14 PM PDT by billmor (Let each become all he or she is capable of being... SUNY motto)
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