Posted on 07/15/2004 6:16:26 AM PDT by Pokey78
New Hampshire
There was an interesting headline in the International Herald Tribune the other day: Front-Runner Is Leading In Presidential Race.
It turned out to be an analysis of the Indonesian election, but I think the general principle applies over here as well. It seems safe to say the front-runner is leading in the US presidential race and that, if the front-runner can maintain that lead up to and including election day, hes likely to win
The only point of disagreement is over whos the front-runner. The media, said Evan Thomas, assistant managing editor of Newsweek, in a unusual moment of candour the other day, wants Kerry to win and so theyre going to portray Kerry and Edwards as being young and dynamic and optimistic ...thats going to be worth maybe 15 points. In Fleet Street, if memory serves, an assistant managing editor is the bloke who orders the office furniture, but on Newsweeks bulked-up masthead Mr Thomas is quite the bigshot and, just to prove his point, the magazines cover this week features a beaming John Kerry and a beaming John Edwards over the headline The Sunshine Boys.
The only thing Thomas got wrong was that 15-point bounce. There was no discernible Edwards bounce outside his hair. The reality of this race was summed up by the bumper sticker I saw on some smug Vermont granolamobile the other day: Someone Else For President. Thats what matters to Democrats that Bush ceases to be President and Someone Else takes over the job. And, as long as they think of John Kerry as Someone Else, Dems are buoyant and confident. Unfortunately, every so often, theyll linger by the TV a little too long, Senator Someone Else will start to talk, and his party will remember that he is, indeed, John Kerry, and its too late to get another Someone Else.
So the question is whether the bases strong anti-Bush motivation can survive its non-existent pro-Kerry motivation. Key demographics such as blacks and Hispanics are reported to be antipathetic to the candidate and difficult to corral. Even the fawning press has a tough job talking him up. This is how Jodi Wilgoren began a recent puff piece in the New York Times:
Like a caged hamster, Senator John Kerry is restless on the road. He pokes at the perimeter of the campaign bubble that envelops him, constantly trying to break out for a walk around the block, a restaurant dinner....
Why couldnt he have been a caged tiger? Isnt that what shes getting at? A noble beast, restless and prowling? A caged hamsters never struck me as being that interested in poking the perimeter. Hes happy on his little hamster wheel, going round and round and getting nowhere, occasionally pausing to chew his nuts. But hes not constantly trying to break out, unless he happens to be at a Hollywood fundraiser and a certain male movie star asks him back to his pad for a nightcap. Perhaps Ms Wilgoren thought the tiger was too haughty and aristocratic, and that the rodent imagery would humanise Kerry. Or perhaps, like Sinatra, the Senator has his very own Hamster Pack of buddies for when he breaks out of the bubble and gets to that restaurant.
Bush, meanwhile, is like some indestructible lab rat. They keep tossing some lethal new poison in there every week and he digests it all and keeps on going. The economys a bust! Iraqs a quagmire! There are no WMD! But Bush just ploughs through it all, and in the end the dynamic of the race seems barely affected.
Some readers think Im being a little fainthearted this campaign season, noting that I predicted a Bush victory months ago but seem to have gone a little quiet on the subject. Well, I still think Bush will win. As I said before and after the 2000 election, the Democrats biggest problem is their lack of appeal to white rural males. Thats why Al Gore isnt President. He lost hitherto Dem states like West Virginia, Bill Clintons Arkansas and his own Tennessee. Do you reckon a Botoxicated Brahmin from Massachusetts with some pretty-boy ambulance-chaser is going to reverse Gores fortunes? I dont. The Michael Moorification of the Democratic party boosts their numbers where they dont need any more support Boston, New York, plus Berkeley and a few other crazy college towns. But it doesnt do anything for them in states where they could use a bump.
So Id say West Virginia, Arkansas and Tennessee are staying in the Bush column. The 2000 census brought about, yet again, a further draining of electoral muscle from the Democrat north-east to the Republican south and west. This means that even if Bush won only the states he won last time round, instead of a squeaker, hed beat Kerry by 278 electoral college votes to 260. I think it will be a little bigger than that. With the exception of Florida, the Bush bloc of states is pretty much secure. The battlegrounds this year are all Gore states Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Washington, Wisconsin. At the minimum Id look to Bush to peel away a couple of those from Kerry most likely some twosome out of Iowa, New Mexico and Wisconsin and hold on to Florida. That would give Bush 290295 electoral college votes over Kerrys 243248. If the Massachusetts senator is on TV too often and his insufferable pomposity becomes impossible to hide, the President may pick up three or four more states plus, under the Pine Tree States goofy split-take rules, half of Maines electoral votes, too.
Thats my reading of the electoral college. But the other reason Id bet on Bush is more basic: he tends not to lose. In 2002 Michael Moore gloated that the midterms would be the shot heard round the world a massive repudiation of the moron warmonger and instead the President had a great night of significant incremental gains in the Senate and House. If hes a moron, hes the luckiest moron who ever lived. A few months ago the Democrats were jeering about the Bush recession. Then the recession ended. So they started jeering about the jobless recovery. Then the jobs kicked in. So now theyre moaning that the jobs dont pay enough. Get the feeling this whole economy thing just isnt going anywhere for them?
Its the same with Iraq. If youd wanted to, you could have landed some serious blows on the administration. There are aspects of post-war reconstruction that were not handled well, and some military decisions that were questionable. But by insisting that Iraq was on the brink of civil war, and the Shiites were on the verge of a mass uprising, and Bush lied over the uranium-from-Niger story, and one lousy jailhouse was entitled to 99 per cent of the Iraq coverage for weeks on end, the Democratic party and their chums in the mainstream media ruled themselves out of making any credible contribution to the debate.
There was an almost touchingly bewildered piece in the Boston Globe this week: Media coverage of President Bush has been largely unflattering this campaign season, but theres little indication the bad press has affected the countrys view of him, according to a survey being released today.... Despite months of tough coverage, the Pew poll found that the strongest associations people have with President Bush are positive. The Bush characteristics most frequently cited by the public are that he is tough and wont back down (53 per cent) and that he is strong and decisive (48 per cent), although 44 per cent did describe him as stubborn. Conversely, only 18 per cent selected Kerry as the candidate who most epitomises strength and decisiveness, and only 15 per cent saw him as the one who is tougher and more tenacious....
The only theme that more of the public saw as best describing Kerry rather than Bush was that he was a flip-flopper.
Why did months of tough coverage have such little impact on Bush? Because of blowhards like bigshot Democrat John D. Rockefeller IV. Last week, in his additional remarks to the Senate intelligence committee report, Senator Rockefeller accused the administration of being fundamentally misleading in basing its case against Iraq on the argument that we knew with certainty that Iraq possessed large quantities of chemical and biological weapons, was aggressively pursuing nuclear weapons, and that an established relationship between Baghdad and al-Qaeda would allow for the transfer of these weapons for use against the United States.
That was all fundamentally misleading, says Rockefeller, today. Heres what Senator Rockefeller said in October 2002:
There is unmistakable evidence that Saddam Hussein is working aggressively to develop nuclear weapons and will likely have nuclear weapons within the next five years.... Saddams existing biological and chemical weapons capabilities pose a very real threat to America, now.... And he could make those weapons available to many terrorist groups which have contact with his government, and those groups could bring those weapons into the US and unleash a devastating attack against our citizens....
What a sad hack. Virtually every Democratic heavyweight from Al Gore down has the same kind of amnesia, accusing Bush of lies and deception for saying exactly the same things they were saying. My view of Iraq and the war on terror hasnt changed since 2002. Nor has Bushs, or Cheneys or Condis. But Democrats have stood their own arguments on their heads so often that they now stand for nothing.
Thats Kerrys and Edwardss problem. Ask them about Iraq and they drone on about getting the UN back in there and bringing France and Germany on board by giving them fair access to the multibillion-dollar reconstruction contracts plus a leadership role in exchange for some troops. But all the UNs done for Iraq is rip off its people in a $10 billion Oil-for-Food scam thats bigger than Enron, Worldcom and every other corporate scandal combined. And bribing France and Germany with US tax dollars and Middle East meddling rights in exchange for vague promises of military resources they dont have isnt so smart, either. If the object is to cosy up to foreigners disenchanted with Bush, Patricia Hewitt is closer to the mark: Kerry-Edwards trade protectionism will offend far more allies than Bush ever did on Iraq.
The truth is that blathering about the UN and France is the equivalent of having no policy, no ideas. Its the default position for sonorous phonies. And, as that survey suggests, thats all anyone knows about Kerry. For example, the Senator recently flipped his position on abortion. He now says that he personally believes life begins at conception. But he votes non-stop for abortion every chance he gets because he doesnt believe in inflicting his deeply held personal beliefs on the country.
Huh? This is a first: a candidate who boasts that his conscience is at odds with his voting record. If you believe that abortion is the taking of a life, you vote against it. If you lose the vote, then you say, well, I personally believe life begins at conception, but I respect the will of the legislature, blah blah. But to say that you believe in voting against what you believe because you dont believe in believing in your beliefs is as close as you can get to admitting that the flip-flop perception is true: you stand for nothing; theres no there there.
Well, the Dems have a problem on this issue. The base is fanatically pro-abortion while the broader electorate isnt. And, in fairness to Kerry, asked if he too believed that life begins at conception, John Edwards just froze and ducked the question, twice. The trouble is that the Senator is applying his meaningless abortion conscience to the war. One pictures too easily a President Kerry in 2001 saying that while he personally believes in removing the Taleban, he doesnt believe he has the right to inflict his deeply held personal beliefs on Jacques Chirac, or Gerhard Schröder, or whoever the Belgian guy is.
This has been a strange election season, even before any al-Qaeda October surprise. Its like watching Sheffield Wednesday take on Middlesex. If the crowd decide this is really a cricket match, Wednesday look like a bunch of dummies. If they figure its footie, Middlesex are in trouble. Likewise, if the voters think this election is about the small print on your credit-card statement or ten-year-old girls without winter coats or any of John Edwardss other bizarre obsessions, theyll ditch Bush and Cheney. But if they think its about American resolve in dangerous times, Kerry and Edwards look way out of their league.
absolutely wonderful Steyn. This one's getting bookmarked.
Timing is everything. You must present your message when people are listening. They aren't listening in the summer. They will listen in October, before the election.
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This is so important! The Bush team have objectives, plans, timelines, etc. The Dems get blindsided over and over again, by refusing to recognize this.
I was with staunch Bush supporters today, who had no idea who Joe Wilson was. They know they prefer W, and they do not need to have every assault on his character or performance rebutted in the nightly news. I think they represent a lot of voters this fall.
What are these people substituting for oxygen?
from Senator Santorum's remarks on the Senate floor yesterday:
"I plead with my colleagues. I know they have given speeches. I know there are lots of pressures out there. Certainly, the popular culture is not supporting those of us who have stood and supported this amendment. But just think about what America will look like, as we have seen in other countries around the world that have changed the definition of marriage , what America will look like with growing numbers of people simply not getting married; growing numbers of children growing up in nonmarried households. "
" I suggest you look at the neighbors of America where marriage is no longer a social convention,
where marriage is no longer something that is expected, particularly of males, and see what the result is in those subcultures, see what the result is, see the role that government and community organizations have to play to save the lives of children, to give them some shred of hope because mom and dad aren't there.
"That is the world we are looking at. That is the world that is simply around the corner if we choose to do nothing."
Senator Santorum is the mirror opposite to Senator Edwards. Now who really is voicing care and concern for the children who are lacking a stable home.
Absolutely!
I was unaware of his TV show, what was the format? As a radio guest, he is usually on for one segment (my understanding, he isn't on locally, IIRC, it is on in LA) and that is fundamentally different than hosting. But even if he is indeed capable of both, and given how gifted he is I wouldn't be all that surprised, it is still something fundamentally different than writing. Thomas Sowell is another writer who does a fair bit on the radio. He does pretty well for a non-professional, but he is out of his element. I think the biggest difference is precision...writers tend to get into subtle points and details, where as broadcasters tend to gloss right over them.
Sorry to re-post the entire quote, but I think this just about sums up the leftist mindset...No one but Steyn. |
Does he live over there? Most of his articles seem to be for British publications.
I would have Steyn protecting my back in a fight anytime. This is great stuff.
He lives in New Hampshire.
Thanks.
And if it does survive it, will the expression of anti-bushism be at the polls, or the box office?
Looks like Kerry has a problem.
LOL! I wonder how long Mark worked on this classic sentence? Dead on.
And Pokey, -[snip]- thanks for posting the entire article :)
Don't take Larry Sabato seriously. He is a popular but not serious pundit. An academic houseplant by training and nature, he blooms at midnight to confirm that it is dark outside.
He says the election will be at best a tie because simply, the election polls for the last few months suggest that it will be a tie. Big deal.
Sabato has the David Gergen disease: he will tell you today's weather, as it happens. And ask a pretty price for the information.
Don't forget that Steyn offered to buy a new winter coat for every 10 year old girl they could find who didn't have one.
They have yet to find one.
I hope you're right. But as long as he has Karl Rove whispering in his ear, I take nothing for granted.
LOL! I wonder how long Mark worked on this classic sentence? Dead on.
And Pokey, -[snip]- thanks for posting the entire article :)
That reminds me of Rumsfeld's classic obsevation on the difference between knowing what you don't know and not knowing what you don't know.
No, that didn't come out right.
Thank YOU for posting this.
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