Posted on 02/10/2006 6:59:57 PM PST by calcowgirl
Last year, FRs interview with political strategist-analyst Arnold Steinberg caused quite a stir. Since then, I have been getting periodic requests to interview Arnie again. Finally I approached him. Steinberg, an author years back of graduate textbooks in politics and media, also has been widely published as a columnist. He has been appointed to Federal commissions and boards by the Reagan and Bush administrations, and he served on the California Coastal Commission. He is an expert in virtually every phase of electoral politics, including candidate and initiative campaigns, and political advertising, including mail, print and especially broadcast. He has advised law firms on legal strategy and jury selection in major legal cases, and he has been an expert witness numerous times. He has conducted more than fifteen hundred quantitative (polls) and qualitative (focus group) studies, and he continues to consult selectively. Much of what Arnie says is controversial, but I guess that was the fun part for me, as an interviewer. Oh yes, remember, don't shoot me - I'm just the interviewer! :-) Here is the UNEDITED wide-ranging interview.
(snip)
FR: For a long time, youve correctly predicted the winners in statewide elections in California, and the winning margin, even when youre not involved
AS: Because Im not involved. Its easier to be objective.
FR: Early on, you called the then-developing special election a largely foreseeable disaster. You predicted all four measures would lose, and then said, that the governors people after the election would blame their total loss on lack of money. That indeed was their post-election line. But they were outspent.
AS: The gross rating points for the ads were overkill on both sides. The opponents could have run a better campaign and defeated all four measures with a sharper campaign that cost a lot less. But, remember, in fairness to the governor, the opponents could have cut a deal to stop the special election. But the vendors opposing the governor wanted to make money. And the governors opponents wanted to defeat the governor. In any case, no statistics support the dubious thesis that repetition at the margin would have impacted. Remember, polling showed the governors ads were having little effect. But they just kept coming. Why? Its like brokerage churning in the old days. I do acknowledge that allowing the other side to frame the issue before the election, however, was a consequence of the unions early money advantage. But the governor and his team know, or should have known, this. Moreover, the unions were successful in paid media because the governor was unsuccessful in earned media, for reasons Ive discussed in great detail before. My views remain the same: the governor erred big-time, strategically, by not moving decisively during his political honeymoon, when he had superb numbers and Democrats were afraid of him. Now, depending on what happens this November, he could go down in history as the one-term accidental governor.
FR: Accidental governor?
AS: When Cruz Bustamante entered the special election, that clinched the already likely recall of Gray Davis. The press even gave Schwarzenegger a pass, except for the stupid articles by the Times near the end that may have rebounded to Schwarzeneggers favor. His election provided Republicans with a unique opportunity to reshape and reform California government. Voters were in crisis-mode. So, a governor who had been elected by an accident then had an unprecedented opportunity to educate the electorate and, in the process, revitalize the Republican party in this state. He not only failed to seize the moment, but he did nearly everything incompetently, and people now think hes a screw-up.
FR: Are you saying hell now lose.
AS: Im definitely not prepared to say that. Ask me after the June primary. The Democrats remain a party beholden to special interests. They could yet prioritize that huge group of seniors who also are gay, Latino and Catholic who happened to vote for Reagan and now want to become Muslims. Seriously, the Democrats are capable of conspicuous irrelevance. Its just that the governor has become the Republican Gray Davis more spending, more government, more deficits, political opportunism, and their shared obsession with raising money, and unnecessary wheeling and dealing that doesnt pass the smell test. Just sloppy, mess stuff with campaign loans, muscle magazine deals, campaign money on the side to state employees and so forth. Its all gratuitous. Overall, this governor is a political masochist whose wounds are largely self-inflicted. He also is under the mistaken impression that people elected Maria. She is an intelligent and resourceful woman who is not strategically gifted, at least in politics. Its unseemly to have ones spouse involved in the intimate details of governance, and in daily conference calls. Apparently, there is no one she respects with the clout to explain to her that her intervention in personnel will come back to haunt her, and the governor.
(snip)
FR: Should the California Republican Party retract its pre-primary endorsement of the governor.
AS: Of course not. The party should unite behind the governor. Politics in this state is often governor-driven. Reagan upstaged the party, Deukmejian was aloof from it, and Wilson was conflicted. Oddly, the governor wants right-wing attacks, because he believes it makes him look more centrist. His conservative critics are implausible, because they are blamed (unfairly) for the outcome of special election, which was Schwarzeneggers idea. It occurred because he didnt hang tough in his first months in office, because he followed the advice of Maria and other Democrats to compromise. His political gullibility is further illustrated by his donating millions of his own money in the closing days of his campaign. He was taken to the cleaners by his own team. I guess its easier for him and, especially, Maria to believe he went, quote, too far to the right. His political analysis is schizophrenic: he runs in the recall as a reformist, populist Republican, but really preps to be an unoriginal, chamber of commerce Republican, but soon acts like a Gray Davis Democrat while driving his own Republican party into the ground. After making a fool of himself with on-again, off-again ballot measures, he acts like Milton Friedman on steroids and is all over the map on the implausible theme of paycheck protection, a weird Grover Norquist slogan I dont know what he was smoking, and the obsessively pro-choice Schwarzenegger is suddenly embracing parental notification (not unreasonable, at all, but far out for him) Anyway, he raises tens of millions for a boondoggle and, in the process, ends up very weak while making his opponents stronger, and really discrediting needed policy reforms. And now, his chief of staff and his wifes chief of staff are both from the Davis administration, and his spending and borrowing put Davis to shame. He still doesnt understand that no matter what he spends on education, the education lobby will say its too little. And he is a lightning rod for Democrats
(snip)
FR: You were not excited by his State of the State?
AS: It should have been dedicated to the cement companies and construction unions. And these folks will probably fund the infrastructure bonds. And, then there are the bond underwriters. You know, Schwarzeneggers politics oscillate like a pendulum. Hes not pragmatic, hes erratic. We truly need infrastructure, but he doesnt have a clue how to go about it. Its a reckless approach. Whatever is done eventually be highly modified, and the Democrats will get credit. Schwarzenegger looks silly saying Build it build it build it. He comes across like a kid in a candy shop. . Its not like he made infrastructure a campaign issue in the recall. Look, I know where hes coming from. When I was a young man, I encountered Gov. Nelson Rockefeller in his 1970 reelection campaign in New York. Gov. Schwarzenegger thinks hes the Norman Vincent Peale of infrastructure. And Rockefeller had thought the Albany mall would be his pyramid. Arnold Schwarzenegger is happy when he talks about doing things. Hes high energy. Its dangerous to have a guy like him in office, because the only way he can get his adrenalin going now is to spend taxpayer money. Free market people liked some of the English rulers during the Industrial Revolution precisely because they so were preoccupied with their sexual affairs, they didnt govern. So we had monumental economic progress that lifted people from poverty. Anyway, there is little passion in the California Republican party for this governor, but who or what else does the party have?
(snip)
FR: What kind of reaction did you get from last FR interview, where you ridiculed the special election campaign as a nonstarter, doomed to failure?
AS: I received email and telephone calls from prominent, very substantial Republican donors who privately agreed with me and said they had been taken for a ride. And I promised never to reveal their names. Ive had inquiries from individuals and corporations for possible future consulting to evaluate political requests for major contributions, or to sign off on whether supposedly optimistic surveys are valid, accurate, and meaningful.
FR: What should the Republican party in California be doing?
AS: I dont know, and Im so glad its not my problem. And there are many very solid Republican campaign professionals in this state who are doing first class work product for their clients. On the big picture, nothing is happening in the U.S. Senate race. The legislative districts remain drawn against Republicans; and last years redistricting ballot proposition was, in my judgment, for show, because it would not have been implemented until the 2008 elections and then ripe for challenge as based on old (2000) census data. I guess the party can try to develop candidates for nonpartisan office and let them graduate into legislative and congressional candidates down the line. But on the governorship, its tough going. If he wins, we basically have four years that likely are barely distinguishable from a Gray Davis tenure, and maybe they are worse. And if he loses, Republicans face statewide demographic trends that further marginalize them. He could have been the first in a line of several Republican governors, because he had a unique chance to educate voters. Instead, he could be the last Republican governor.
FR: Arent you being too hard?
AS: Perhaps, because I had high expectations, because he was elected as a populist-reformist, not a business-as-usual Republican. There was no reason for him to raise big bucks, especially from Republican donors, to fund a Gray Davis fiscal bailout scheme packaged as a California recovery. Who funds an operating deficit with bonds, especially if you do not make structural reforms? He could have gone over the heads of the recalcitrant legislators when they were in awe of him; but when he sold out so early, they realized that hes not really so macho. That said, its more than policy and missed opportunities like pension reform, which he now discredited. And my guess is that county and city governments throughout the state are threatened with bankruptcies within a decade, maybe less, unless they reform. So, reform will come, but not because of this governor, but in spite of him and how he set back the issue. But its not really this issue, or that issue, its whether voters feel that he was going to make significant change, without being power-hungry or autocratic. Ive said in other places in far more detail how he squandered his time raising money and appearing at staged events, rather than governing and communicating. He and Susan Kennedy and others around him obviously do not understand that he is viewed now, and deservedly, as just another politician. Schwarzeneggers campaign committee received $25,000 from PUC-regulated AT&T (for whose merger she, as PUC Commissioner, voted four days later) three weeks before she received the same amount from the governors committee. She is a political disaster. Look, its only a matter of time before she renounces taking money from his political committee. In other words, shell flip-flop. By that time, it will be too late. Apparently, she was a point person for fundraising for Gray Davis. What about her recent absurd suggestion she might have trouble making her mortgage payment without supplements from Schwarzeneggers campaign committee? Hardly. Did she even disclose to Schwarzenegger her consulting last year for water-tycoon Keith Brackpool, who with his companies had given Gray Davis $345,000 and was involved, under Davis, in water policy and now stands to benefit from the governors proposals? All of this will be, shall we say, slow water torture, in the states newspapers.
Bottom line is still that he recommends the Republican Party continues its support of Arnold.
LOL! ;)
The RonDog account had the audacity tonight to spam the California Topic seeking technical help from conservatives in support of an effort by a exBush staffer to challenge a solid conservative, Poochigian, for state wide office.
The FairOpinon account and the RonDog account could tag team conservatives. One driving a wedge between conservatives and conservative candidates, the other injecting more Bush brush into California politics and both supporting liberal lites/moderates on a conservative forum.
LOL! ;)
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his chief of staff and his wifes chief of staff are both from the Davis administration, and his spending and borrowing put Davis to shame.
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LOL! ;)
Just win Baby! Don't sweat the details!
I saw that thread. What a shame that those touting "unity" never seem to use their energy to promote conservative candidates, instead enabling more and more liberalism to prevail. While Prosper doesn't seem like a bad guy, you'd think his background with the UN and State Department would help him find a better home.
Yes he does but obviously many conservatives aren't buying it.
I'm looking forward to the vote count in June, comparing the Austrian's total vote count to the conservative's. Bet the conservative wins by a handsome margin, a first in California history.
And whom do you think Angelides will pick for his staff?
Did you make a choice between Angelides and Arnold yet, or are you solidly in the Angelides camp and can't wait for his tax raises?
The Republican party? How do you define the party? Perhaps Sundheim and those on the executive committee should take a look behind them once in a while. They might just realize that not many are following.
At this point, Arnold has made a mess of the governorship and Sundheim and Parsky (apparently with the help of the White House) have made a total mess of the CA GOP. There's a whole lot of cleaning up to do. With the upcoming election, they've forged a path for failure--with or without Arnold, the path is generally the same: more spending, more borrowing, more liberalism.
I hope you're happy with what you have promoted these past 3 years. Many are not.
I will defer to your greater wisdom in these matters when I start seeing RESULTS.As a relative newbie in California's goofy electoral system, I will admit to not knowing all the players here as well as you do...
...but I am getting REAL tired of all the sanctimonious posturing on this forum by the folks who have brought us all LOSERS -- (in the only true definition of that word, in that they all LOST when it really counted, on Election Day) -- like:If we can finally WIN (for a change) with the slate that you support, praise God!Bill Simon
Tom McClintock
Jim Gilchrist
But if Pachoogian and Mountjoy are such wonderful candidates, what is the harm in their PROVING IT the "old fashioned" way, by winning in the primary?
Things would look very different and the Dems would be on the run, if the conservatives wouldn't have cut off their noses to spite their face by voting against the reform propositions promoted by Arnold.
So take a look in the mirror, if you want to see whom to blame for "the mess".
So, a governor who had been elected by an accident then had an unprecedented opportunity to educate the electorate and, in the process, revitalize the Republican party in this state. He not only failed to seize the moment, but he did nearly everything incompetently, and people now think hes a screw-up.
LOL.. he'll probably keep all the Kennedys is my suspicion, including Maria and Susan is my best guess.
It's worked out so well so far for the current demRat in office.
The CRP would be happy to hitch their wagon to a rising star, Parsky and Rove would be overjoyed not to have to worry about the possibility of a conservative Senator nipping at Bush's heels and Republican Party loyalist could have their 15 minutes of fame on FreeRepublic, bragging about a job well done and heaping praise upon conservatives for their support and wisdom.
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Things would look very different and the Dems would be on the run, if the faux conservatives wouldn't have cut off their noses to spite their face by voting against the reform propositions promoted by for Arnold in the Recall instead of Tom.
Yes, then we would have Bustamante.
More than once, I called the special elections and the governorship a 'poison pill.' The reason is still the same. Until the people wake up and throw the radical left out of control of the legislature, there is no hope for California. That could have happened with a few more years of dem governance of Calif. But now, the dems keep screwing things up and the R's share the blame.
Arnold hasn't been the sharpest tool in the shed. But this would have happened to any Republican governor. California is not yet ready the throw the left and the unions out of control of the State. Until they are, we need to let the state self-destruct.
Do you support their Pro-choice, anti-gun, pro-LGBT agenda, all to puff up the Big tent?
How does that work stuffing it into a conservative pipe , much less, how the heck do you keep it lit without gagging?
Do you also subscrbe to "Just win Baby!" and forget the costs.
You really feel comfortable with that? Just curious.
I find it ironic you would now pour hot coals and scorn on the "losers", as you describe them. tsk tsk
I hope that both McClintock and Poochigian go on to win in November. They both have an uphill battle.
The jury is out for me on the Wilsonegger gang because victory, rather than advancing the cause of conservatism, has thus far advanced the cause of liberalism. As Steinberg opines: we basically have four years that likely are barely distinguishable from a Gray Davis tenure, and maybe they are worse.
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