Posted on 11/06/2015 9:05:23 AM PST by lifeofgrace
Mike Huckabee tweeted âWe are months away from actual votes being cast and neither the pundits nor the press will decide this election, the people will.â This after he was unceremoniously dumped from the main 9pm stage in the Fox Business News debate to be held Nov. 10 in Milwaukee.
I like Huckabee. Iâve met him a couple of times, and found him to be genuine, humble, and compassionate. These are great qualities for a former pastor-turned-politician. But the former governor is mistaken about a great many things, his tweet being one of them.
If he was alive, Steve Jobs would also disagree with Huckabeeâs take on politics, like he did with practically everything Apple ever made: âA lot of times, people don't know what they want until you show it to them.â And the movie âSteve Jobs,â so glorified by critics, was thrown into the Dumpster by the public.
This campaign is down to 4 candidates, and will end up between Sen. Ted Cruz and Sen. Marco Rubio, just like the pundits say.
Selecting a candidate is like holding an iPhone for the first time, or deciding to see a movie from the trailers. Itâs a feel-thing. Either you âget itâ or you donât. I remember reading one Mel Brooks movie review in the Boston Globe years ago that went something like âI hate Mel Brooks and everything heâs ever made. F.â This is how CBS, NBC and ABC (along with Maureen Dowd and the rest of the New York Times editorial writers) see every Republican candidate.
Counting on the mainstream media to choose a Republican candidate will yield the worst dog possibleâor Mitt Romney. Pundits are better than the media at predicting, but thereâs pundits and thereâs puppets. Anyone in the vast orbit of Karl Rove is going to push for the Windows Phone of candidates in an iPhone race like Jeb Bush or Chris Christie. And forget about Ann Coulter, whoâif she were ever marriedâwould leave her husband to become Donald Trumpâs concubine.
But thereâs a class of pundit, and a few honest press brokers who see the world like ânormal peopleâ and they get it. The race for the nomination is truly narrowing, with a gaggle of ghost candidates waiting for Cole Sear to release them from this world, and a few others on life-support until the moneyâs gone.
This election is essentially down to four candidates, and if you donât know that, youâre probably whistling past the graveyard or wearing rubber bullets in your ears. That doesnât mean Carly Fiorina, or Bobby Jindal, or Jefferson Sherman arenât good people. It just means they wonât be the nominee this year. Theyâre past the event horizon of the black hole of politics. Theyâre demised, passed on, no more, expired and gone: theyâre ex-candidates.
In the view of the majority of useful pundits who get it, the final four are: Donald Trump, Ben Carson, Rubio, and Cruz. We canât ignore the fact that Carson and Trump are in a virtual tie for frontrunner, with Trump beginning a long slide, and the left focusing its big guns on exposing every piece of dirt they can find on Carson. Cruz has held steady at around 9 percent for a while, with a war chest of $13.5 million at the last FEC reporting milestone. More importantly, Cruz has a well-oiled campaign machine with serious horsepower.
âPeople are swayed by his intellect,â said Mica Mosbacher, a Houston fundraiser helping organize events for Cruz across the country. âHe always says, âAsk me all the hard questions.â And he is very polite and humble. I think the firebrand you see [in public] is his passion getting ahead of him. Those who are supporting him admire that he will stand up for whatâs right.âCruz has the gravitas and intellect of a Jeb Bush, without the wishy-washy, kowtowing to money problems Bush carries. And of course, he doesnât have the Bush name bolted to him like like a boat anchor. Cruz is also popular with evangelicals, being the real thing, and with hold-the-line conservatives, being the real thing.  Evangelical author and radio host Dr. Michael Brown recently endorsed Cruz, writing,A Republican strategist well connected to the donor world added: âWhen heâs with major donors, they expect the guy they see with all the red meat, but they instead see an intelligent, buttoned-down lawyer with real bona fides. He will say things like, basically, âThis is politics â youâve got go out there and sell and perform.âââ
But in looking for the leader who most strongly fits my criteria â being unshakably pro-life, pro-marriage, and pro-Israel; having a good handle on economic issues, immigration, and national security; and not being part of the political establishment â Senator Cruz comes out on top, and I genuinely believe he has a real possibility of making it all the way.Rubio is moving up fast in the polls recently, bolstered by a stellar debate performance sealing Bushâs has-been status. However, he lacks the organization and fundraising capacity of the other three candidates. Carson raised more than three times Rubioâs haul in the third quarter this year, which will hurt him when actual voting starts in a few months. Rubio communicates effectively with the electorate, and his financial prospects could improve should he have another great debate performance.
Both Cruz and Rubio are running marathons, while Carson and Trump are sprinting. Like Herman Cain in 2012, who in 2014 said âI believed that I could win, and damn near did!â someone like Carson, appearing to be an unstoppable force, may not make it past Iowa. People like and âvoteâ in phone polls for Carson because they believe him, and all it takes is one true piece of dirt to erode that trustâjust like Cain.
Trumpâs skeletons, on the other hand, are all out for public display. Thereâs nothing anyone could say about Trumpâs past that likely hasnât been said or played on cable 500 times. Itâs Trumpâs ability to sell himself on policy that mayâthe pundits say inevitably willâdo him in. Itâs possible that CNBCâs John Harwood did more damage to Trump than it seems when he began the last debate asking if Trumpâs policies make him a cartoon character.
Asked about being a cartoon, Trump becomes a cartoon character. #CNBCGOPDebate GOP debate â Eric Culp (@rewritersblock) October 29, 2015
The question was troll bait, but it had more than a tinge of truth to it. Does Trump really believe that he can solve the border crisis, the trade imbalance, the national debt crisis, our foreign policy malaise, and bloated federal government by just sinking his posterior into the Oval Officeâs overstuffed chair? Will the âgreat peopleâ he hires be able to get his plans through Congress? Do we really believe it? When voters start asking themselves those questions, as much as we may believe that Trump believes he can do all this, nobody should get a pass to be so light on details and heavy on their own ego.
Trump the man on stageâthe personaâis such a familiar role to him, who by all accounts is a nice guy in person, that it will likely be his undoing. In order to assuage concerns that he really is the narcissistic jerk he portrays, Trump has toned things down a bit, assuming what I think may be closer to his own personality versus his public persona. But itâs the persona that got all the media attention, and befuddled the pundits while rocketing him to the top of the polls.
Now that Trump is sharing top-billing, and even a bit behind Carson, he canât claim victory merely because heâs the victor in polls.
Just how well Trumpâs triumphant shtick will work when delivered from anything other than the pole position is unclear. There is a good reason that both he and his supporters have elected to rest their case upon a tautology â âHeâs winning because heâs winning!â â and that is that, in a culture that celebrates champions, standing in first place is quite the aphrodisiac. Unsure about the Donaldâs positions on matters of state? Worry not: Heâll make America great again because he is great; heâll choose the best people because he is the best people; and have you noticed how rich he is?In the end, the pundits are right. Itâs going to be down to Cruz and Rubio.
Thereâs a reason why dark-horse first-time politicians lose. Thereâs a reason why red-hot social media campaigns fizzle. I have seen it personally. Iâve worked a local race where the dark horse (on his second try, after barely missing the first time) won the social media âlikes,â raised the most money, offered the most detailed policy proposals, and had some of the best name recognition. And he lostâbadly. The political consultant we hired to advise us told us how to win, and the candidate thought he knew better.
The pundits know some things, and in the 2016 GOP race, we better listen if we want to take the White House.
Trump/Carson/Cruz.
Rafael Cruz has spent a surprising amount of time here in Michigan as well.
Agreed. Rubio is IMO the dumbest one out of the whole bunch. The only reason he’s still in is because Bush’s backers desperately want somewhere to go. Christie is tanking, Walker and Perry are already out, Romney said no thanks, and they don’t like Cruz.
I had to look up this “Jefferson Sherman” guy the article mentions, I didn’t even know he was running.
Now I’m tempted to start some pro-Sherman threads just for fun :)
Are you kidding? Cruz will slay Hillary.
Trump will be the next POTUS. Bank (no pun intended) on it.
Not if Cruz/Trump can settle on whose whose VP /s
Still, I get NO idea why our FRiends care whom has the seat; it’s not as if the Prez should have ANY authority anyway. Hell, it’s not like any living Prez has sat down to hammer out a treaty themselves...they only SIGN the end product (and take the spotlight). Bully pulpit, they would BOTH be good. Else, just a figurehead.
Yeah, yeah, when we were a Republic.....
If they want a balanced debate pltform, put Christie and the Huckster on one side and the rest on the other side.
It’s not any kind of a compliment to Cruz to say, “Cruz has the gravitas and intellect of a Jeb Bush, without ...........”
“Are you kidding? Cruz will slay Hillary.”
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
I like Cruz and would love to see him more than anyone else as President.
Cruz may score some intellectual points against Hillary. But her backers won’t care, the media won’t care, and Cruz doesn’t have the charisma to sway enough people from the middle.
The court of public opinion is an entirely different animal than a court of law. And voters vote based on opinion, not on facts.
IMHO, Cruz could never beat Hillary. He would wage an honest, spirited, hard fought campaign, and lose by similar margins as McCain and Romney.
Is there a Jeb Bush about whom I am unaware? No one would ever accuse Jeb of being smart.
Carson has imploded today, Cruz is un-electable outside of Texas so you are left with only one guy that can win.
Donald Trump.
He might be, as W might say, “book smart and sidewalk stupid.” He comes across to me as being sidewalk stupid, although I don’t have any real reason to see him as book smart.
Believe it or not George Will was the first to predict this, followed by Krauthammer then Steve Hayes.
I’ve believed ever since the last debate that this was the most likely scenario.
I think this is the most likely scenario. Cruz, I support whole-heartedly. Rubio, I have questions about.
TPA, TPP, and H1B will sink Cruz, especially since the release of the whole TPP deal the Cruz voted FOR. Doesn’t matter how or why, he owns it now, seeing as how he is a member of the thoroughly corrupted congress that allowed this atrocity that was rammed this through.
Let’s hope this topples Carson’s support, he’s blocking Cruz from taking the top spot.
I don’t particularly like Rubio, but I can see him as Cruz’s VP. It would be like Bush Sr. being Reagan’s VP. He can go to funerals and preside over the Senate. Other than that, there is nothing for him to do.
“Cruz has the gravitas and intellect of a Jeb Bush...”
Don’t insult Ted with that comparison!
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