Posted on 02/03/2012 7:50:37 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Sure, Mitt Romney just had a huge win in Floridabut his favorability ratings have been sinking miserably since the New Year. Andrew Romano on why the GOPs long primary race in 2012 wont mirror the Dems in 2008. Plus read more Daily Beast contributors on what Romneys Florida victory means.
On stage last night in Ballroom C of the Tampa Convention Center, Mitt Romney, the winner of the 2012 Florida Republican primary, tried his darndest to simulate the emotional state that Homo sapiens refer to as happiness.
Our opponents in the other party ... like to comfort themselves with the thought that a competitive campaign will leave us divided and weak, he said. But Ive got some news for them ... when we gather here in Tampa seven months from now for our convention, ours will be a united party with a winning ticket for America!
Rousing stuff. Still, one can imagine that by the time Romney returned to his room and began to scarf down his requisite bowl of Brown Sugar Chex Bites, he was already asking himself a slightly less sunshiney question:
When will it end?
For weeks, pundits and prognosticators have speculated about what kind of shape the GOPs most likely nominee will be in once this years rollercoaster nominating contest finally reaches its inevitable conclusion. Some have argued that the attacks on Romneys career at Bain Capital will leave the nominee mortally woundedeasy prey for Obama & Co. Others have disagreed, claiming that the Super PAC onslaught will simply toughen him up for the even bloodier battle ahead.
But no one really had any evidence to support their suppositions. Now we do. And while its hardly conclusive, a growing body of polling data suggests that the longer Romney is forced to fight Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum, and Ron Paul for the Republican nomination, the weaker a candidate he will be heading into the fall.
Just take a look at whats been happening to Romneys favorability ratings over the last few months. On Nov. 15, Pew released a poll that showed the Mittsters negative score (45 percent) outstripping his positive score (38 percent) by 7 percentage points. By Jan. 17 the gap had doubled to 14 points.
A few days later, on Jan. 20, Nate Silver of The New York Times posted a round-up of recent surveys. His conclusion? That while Romneys favorability rating was unchanged, on average, over the seven polls, some of which showed it increasing and others decreasing since the start of the year, his unfavorable rating was up ... in 6 of the 7 polls, and by an average of 3 percentage points.
Now fast forward to Jan. 24, when The Washington Post and ABC News released their latest poll. Silvers trendlet had gained momentum: since New Years Day, Romneys favorables had fallen 8 percentage points among all voters; his unfavorables, meanwhile, had risen by 15. The news was even worse among Independents, the voting bloc that will eventually decide the election: an 18-point drop in positive sentiment coupled with a 17-point rise in negative sentiment.
Finally, there was the latest NBC News-Wall Street Journal survey, which came out yesterday. Much like the Post-ABC sounding, it revealed that Romneys negatives with independents [have] jumped 13 points in the past month ... and 20 points since November. In the fall, Romneys approval rating was solid: 21 percent favorable to 22 percent unfavorable. By last week, however, his unfavorables had shot up 20 points to 42 percent. His favorables were still stuck in the low 20s.
In other words, at least 10 recent polls have shown that the gap between general-election voters who like Romney and general-election voters who dislike Romney is wideningoften to more than 20 or 30 percentage pointsall as the Republican nominating contest drags on.
Why are votersespecially Independent voterssuddenly souring on Romney? The surveys dont say. But given the spike in political coverage that has accompanied the primaries, it seems likely that low-information indiesthe sort of people who, until recently, didnt have much of an opinion about Romney because they didnt know much about himhave over the past few weeks absorbed at least some of the Mitt-related headlines plastered across their local papers and parroted on their local news: that he profited off of dying companies at Bain Capital; that he pays an effective tax rate of only 14 percent; that hes buried his assets in the Cayman Islands; that he likes to fire people; that hes willing to spend tens of millions of dollars tearing down his fellow Republicans; and so on.
As a result, the voting blocs most likely to be offended by the image of a plutocratic corporate candidate have been turning away from Romney en masse. These include Rust Belt typesa new Public Policy Polling survey shows that the percentage of Ohioans who disapprove of Mitt (56 percent) is now twice as high as the percentage who approve (28 percent)and whites with incomes under $50,000, among whom the candidates negatives have jumped 20 percentage points since Iowa.
This is pretty strong proof that this years wacky GOP primaries are going to wind up hurting Romney in the fall. Supporters of the former Massachusetts governor will, of course, disagree, arguing that (A) Democrats were going to level these attacks anyway, so the sooner the better, and (B) Obama weathered an even longer, harder-fought primary in 2008 and still went on to win Independents (and the election).
But theyre forgetting a few things. First, its easy for swing voters to dismiss Democratic barbs as pro forma partisan sniping; its harder when the attacks are coming from Romneys fellow Republicans. Second, the 2008 Democratic primary pulled Obama toward the center, not away from it, like Romney, leaving the future president far better positioned to appeal to moderates than Mitt will be if hes forced to fend off Gingrich and Santorum for a few more months.
Finally, the reason the battle royale between Hillary and Barack went on forever is because primary voters really liked both of them. At this point in 2008, both Obama and Clintons favorable ratings were significantly higher than their unfavorable ratings; their numbers had actually improved since the previous November. In contrast, the reason this years Republican race is still going on is because very few primary voters really like any of the candidates, Romney chief among them. If Republicans cant even bring themselves to support this guy, swing voters must be thinking, then why should we?
None of which is to say that Romney will lose in November. Obama remains the most vulnerable incumbent in modern memory, and Mitt is certainly improving as a campaigner.
But for now, at least, the damage seems realand neither Gingrich, Santorum, or Paul shows any signs of dropping out. So pour yourself another bowl of Brown Sugar Chex Bites, Mitt. Youre gonna need it.
What IS there to like?
The guy has to be one of the least inspiring, least likable candidates for president I’ve ever seen!
He comes across as someone I would go out of my way to avoid around the office. You see him coming, and all the sudden you start doing ‘something’ with your smartphone and don’t make eye contact.
This is going to be an interesting Spring, especially if Romney continues his slide.
The DAILY BEAST? I didn’t even think that garbage was permitted to be linked her.
Well.... With this article, they are correct.
Romney is about as likable and trustworthy as a used car salesman.
And this is all before Obama and the dems have even really started campaigning and focusing on him. They really haven’t lifted a figure yet or even begun to fight to quote John Paul Jones. To use a Super Bowl analogy they’re still in the locker room getting taped up and putting the pads on and haven’t even come out on the field for warmups yet.
I like how the article said some of the attacks have contributed to his image as a plutocratic out-of-touch rich guy. Really. If back in 2009 you had said “which Republican in the country most embodies the out of touch wall st fatcat/1%, has the least ability to connect or relate to main st/the average joe, and would be the best example of the stuffed-shirt CEO the dems would love to run against” Romney would have won going away. I don’t think any other Republican would even have gotten a vote.
At some point in addition ot all the factors mentioned in the article, someone is going to ask “why in this election where the economy and jobs are the main issue did the GOP elites think our best guy was someone whose state ranked 47 of 50 in total jobs created and 48 of 50 in private sector jobs created during his term as governor?”
Imagine if there was a GOP President and the dems nominated a Governor who was 47th of 50 in job creation. How much would we be laughing at them.
>The DAILY BEAST? I didnt even think that garbage was permitted to be linked her.<
Far worse than WAPO, Guardian UK, vancouver Sun, LA Slimes etc? Someone on FR should make a law for our resident chronic thread makers to quit linking to those lefty sites because I hate giving them a click point..
Uh, you do know who runs the Beast don’t you?
It would be the far leftist Tina Brown...
You know, the one showing up on Morning Joe to talk about how wonderful socialism is.
It is a bit sad. 310 million people in the country. 40% of the country is conservative. All these GOP office holders nationwide. And the best we can come up with is Romney? Really?
But looking at history most presidentail nominees are pretty lame and uninspiring. Look at the list. Romney, McCain, Kerry, Gore, Dole, Bush41, Dukakis, Mondale, Carter, McGovern, etc...
Doesn’t say much. both parties have a history of picking bad candidates. It’s very rare that a true leader or inspiring emerges. On the GOP side only Reagan has in the past 50+ years
Unfortunately, so many of the so-called conservative outlets have been carrying Romney’s water that one has to check the lefties to find something critical about Willard.
What do you expect when a good chunk of Americans are only concerned about what a candidate tells them he will do for them? You know; how many chickens he will put in THEIR pot for free?
What do you expect when a good chunk of Americans are only concerned about what a candidate tells them he will do for them? You know; how many chickens he will put in THEIR pot for free?
That's what has had be so blown away during this whole thing. Out of ALL the conservative republicans that are out there, the primaries are a dog show. Out of the entire Republican party, there's ROMNEY? WTF?!?!?!
I could see him being a Senator, or perhaps a Secretary of Treasury, if no one else wanted to do it, but NOT a presidential candidate!
Pass the word!
Since they’re not excerpt and link, how are you giving them hits?
The more you get to know Mittens, he's just “swarmy” and a soulless, arrogant, political opportunist.
You mean AP and Bloomberg are full-on not excerpted? And there’s no link in any of your threads? Gimme a break here.
We all know how it works: post thread, rile up the troops so they post, then you feel all goody because you posted the thread. Sounds fair?
Romney has a famous endorser beside Donald Trump.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=wAkKl3Y8xmQ
Bishop Willard Romney is a nasty man with a void inside.
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