Posted on 12/16/2014 3:02:22 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Eliana Johnson reports that Ted Cruz and his strategists see a path to the presidency that relies on turning out the conservative base and largely ignoring independents:
"Its almost conventional wisdom now that presidential candidates woo the party faithful in primary contests and tack to the middle in the general election to attract more-moderate voters. Not Cruz. As one of his advisers puts it, winning independents has meant not winning. The adviser says the moderate fiscal- and social-policy positions that candidates need to adopt to win independent voters have dampened base turnout."
As evidence, the adviser points out that George Bush won independents in 2000 but lost the popular vote, while both John Kerry in 2004 and Mitt Romney in 2012 won them and yet lost. Meanwhile, Bush won in 2004 when turnout by conservative voters peaked.
Cruz will not rely entirely on the conservative base. According to Eliana, he is courting Jewish voters. He also hopes to do well with Hispanics, from whom he received around 40 percent of the vote when he was elected to the Senate. Throw in some Millennials plus blue-collar voters and women and, voila. What could go wrong?
Heres one thing that could. Cruz could get crushed by independents. Yes, Bush was reelected, rather narrowly, in 2004 without winning the independent vote. But he lost it by only 50-47.
Cruzs adviser acknowledges that he cant get[] killed with independents. But a strategy that tries to turn out the conservatives voters who allegedly went missing in 2008 and 2012 because McCain and Romney werent conservative enough would likely cause independents to kill Cruz.
Bush may not have lavished attention on independents in 2004, but he was a compassionate conservative who could point to centrist legislation and policy positions. Cruz will have nothing remotely centrist to point to, nor, if his strategy is to turn out conservatives for whom McCain and Romney were too centrist, will he want to do.
Heres another hitch. A Cruz candidacy would likely energize the Democratic base, thus enabling a candidate with less base-appeal than Barack Obama to obtain turnout similar to what Obama received.
As for the Hispanic vote, Cruz shouldnt count on the level of support he received in Texas in 2012. Back then, Cruz hadnt become the symbol of strident conservatism that he is today. Back then, he hadnt voted against amnesty and led the charge against Obamas executive order on the subject.
As for the Jewish vote, dont make me laugh. Its great that Cruz has attended Commentary Magazines annual dinner, participated in Israel Day events, and raised money at a kosher deli in Manhattan. Perhaps he will win support from a few big Jewish political donors.
But Cruz is dreaming if he believes that Jewish voters, for whom (as Norman Podhoretz has written) liberalism has virtually obtained religious status, will support a stridently conservative candidate over a liberal who, unlike President Obama, can plausibly pretend to be a reliable defender of Israel. The Republican candidate, if any, who will make inroads with Jewish voters in a race against, say, Hillary Clinton is the one who lavishes attention on independents, not the one on a quest to turn out missing evangelical voters.
As Eliana says at the conclusion of her article, Cruz will have to persuade donors that his message and strategy will produce a Reagan-like victory rather than a Goldwateresque defeat. Donors will be aware that Cruz lacks Reagans sunny disposition and congenial demeanor, and that the Democrats wont be running Jimmy Carter.
“Heres one thing that could. Cruz could get crushed by independents. Yes, Bush was reelected, rather narrowly, in 2004 without winning the independent vote. But he lost it by only 50-47.”
Independents are sick of rats.
You are either on the right side or the wrong one.
You don’t have to be part of a party, but you sure as hell cant be neutral to a set of principals.
I’m an “independent” and I support Cruz.
This is a media creation that’s meant to encompass all Indie’s as though all Indie’s are one in the same, which negates the very definition of Independent.
It’s nonsense and meant to slam Indie’s.
If you stand for something, then people can decide if they approve of you or not- a novel approach.
I don't think Cruz or his team said anything about not wanting votes from independents. However, Cruz is not going to pander to independents by promoting liberalism.
The GOPe candidates however are liberals who think that conservatives should vote for them because they have no other choice / lesser of two evils e.t.c. Come election day GOPe liberals will still be trying to sell themselves as being conservative to a skeptical base.
I’m all in.
“Independents” are followers. They put their fingers in the air and decide which way the wind is blowing and go there. They’ll follow the conservative base just fine when the time comes.
The only ones we should be crushing are the rats and then the rinos, Cruz 2016 you got my vote!
Utter deceptive nonsense from Paul Mirengoff.
How about illegal immigrant voters, who will outnumber conservative voters, for always, until and unless illegal immigration is, finally, ended, throughout the entire U.S.? How are all, future U.S. elections supposed to, also, become conservative victories, when the illegal immigration problem continues to get, even, worse, each and every year and counting?
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