Posted on 09/10/2008 5:30:13 PM PDT by goldstategop
Polls showing John McCain tied or even ahead of Barack Obama are stirring angst and second-guessing among some of the Democratic Partys most experienced operatives, who worry that Obama squandered opportunities over the summer and may still be underestimating his challenges this fall.
Its more than an increased anxiety, said Doug Schoen, who worked as one of Bill Clintons lead pollsters during his 1996 re-election and has worked for both Democrats and independents in recent years. Its a palpable frustration. Deep-seated unease in the sense that the message has gotten away from them.
Joe Trippi, a consultant behind Howard Deans flash-in-the-pan presidential campaign in 2004 and John Edwardss race in 2008, said the Obama campaign was slow to recognize how the selection of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as McCains running mate would change the dynamic of the race.
They were set up to run experience versus change, what they had run [against Hillary] Clinton, Trippi said. And I think Palin clearly moved that to be change or reform, versus change. They are adjusting to that and that threw them off balance a little bit.
A major Democratic fund-raiser described it a good bit more starkly after digesting the polls of recent days: Im so depressed. Its happening again. Its a nightmare.Adding to Democratic restlessness, McCain has largely neutralized some issue advantages that have long favored Democrats.
This weeks USA Today/Gallup poll reported a split on which candidate can better handle the economy; 48 percent chose Obama while 45 percent said McCain. In late August, Obama had a 16-point edge on the issue.
Also this week, an ABC News/Washington Post poll reported that when voters are asked who can bring about needed change to Washington, McCain still trails Obama by 12 points. But in June, McCain trailed by 32 points.
That shift in the publics perception of the issues, in Democratic pollster Celinda Lakes words, tremendously concerns me.
Lake joined other Democratic veterans, some speaking not for attribution, in emphasizing a classic liberal woe: that the Democrat let the Republican define him.
Obama needed to define himself, Lake said. I do think that during the Democratic convention we should have done a better job of defining McCain.
Steve Rosenthal, a veteran field organizer for Democrats and organized labor, said that some entrenched Democratic vulnerabilities never receded this year. And in his view, Palin has reawakened those liberal weaknesses.
For some white working class voters who dont want to vote for Barack Obama but werent sure about McCain, Palin gave them a good reason to take another look and consider supporting McCain, Rosenthal continued.
On the one hand, it could be a temporary reshuffling of the deck, he added. And on the other hand, it underscores the deep seated problems we have in this race with race, class and culture.
In some ways, you play the cards youre dealt, Rosenthal continued. There is a good amount of time left for Obama to make the connect.
Asked if partisans in his state are worried, New Jersey Democratic chairman Joseph Cryan responded: Absolutely, absolutely. Its a sit up straight and listen kind of thing.
While Obamas campaign is a little bit off balance, Cryan added, thats okay. Campaigns ebb and flow."
Like Rosenthal and Cryan, most of the Democrats interviewed for this article both on- and off-the-record expressed confidence that the landscape this year tilts in favor of a Democratic victory and that Obama has plenty of time to again take command of the race. Many predicted that any bounce in polls caused by Palins selection could be followed by a plunge as her record and qualifications continue to be scrutinized.
Still, a wide range of conversations with Democrats yielded several reasons to doubt that Obama is quite the political naturalor the November shoo-in--that some of his most ardent supporters believed.
Among the problems: Obamas Summer Doldrums: After his months of exhausting trench warfare with Clinton ended in June, Obama faced a delicious opportunity--to further define himself to the American public and hone a transcendent message in advance of the August Democratic convention.
Yes, McCains campaign had enjoyed months of free kicks at the Democrats after the GOP primary race ended and the Obama/Clinton steel cage match continued. But most of those months were spent with the McCain camp in severe disarray, both on message Phil Gramms mental recession comes to mind and in campaign tactics, such the infamous green backdrop at his June 3 speech in a New Orleans suburb.
Yet the latest polls and the seeming ability of Palin to instantly transform this race would seem to indicate that voters got no overarching message from the Obama campaign other than he is a gifted, even inspirational political performer who aspires to change the country. The economic message Obama is now scrambling to hammer home was either absent or mixed in with a variety of other topics.
The thing voters likely remember most from the period is Obamas July trip to Europe a trip that prompted the McCain campaigns focus on the issue of elitism and celebrity and which some campaign officials now privately acknowledge was a mistake.
Did the Obama team spend this period quietly building up formidable ground operations in all 50 states? Possiblyand no one could question the fund-raising prowess that makes this 50-state strategy possible. But as the campaign frantically tries to combat Hurricane Sarah with a meat-and-potatoes economic message and an effort to identify McCain and Palin with an unpopular president, its seems logical to conclude that their chance of success would be greater if that thematic strategy had begun months earlier.
There are also some doubters, by the way, about whether it is wise to be trying to expand the national playing field as broadly as Obama is seeking toas opposed to putting chips on a select number of undoubted swing states.
Their 50-state strategy is insanity, said Schoen. If they dont use their financial advantage where they need it most, he added, citing states from Ohio to Nevada, and put every thing there and blow it out, they are at deep risk of losing.
Forgetting the lessons of 1992: One of the certainties of American politics is that it is hard for Democrats to win presidential elections without a deep connection to Main Street values and economics. That would seem doubly true for Obama, given the unstated but undeniable barrier his race presents in certain areas of the country. And few nominees have ever had such an inviting target as the economic record of the Bush administration from a ballooning federal budget deficit to higher unemployment rates to a mortgage crisis that could be the most menacing fiscal threat in decades.
McCain has shown little interest in economics throughout his career and Palins limited budgetary experience comes in a state that relies heavily on earmarks from Washington and the largesse of Big Oil. The primary economic cure voiced by the GOP tickets is more tax cuts and an unspecific pledge to be tough on congressional earmarks. Perhaps the only economic solution given prominence at the St. Paul convention was a push to allow domestic coastal oil drilling.
Yet still, the Obama campaign seems to be struggling to find a consistent, cohesive economic message. One can understand why aides would not want to muddy his mantra of change and his image as a post-partisan, revolutionary figure. But blue-collar voters in Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and Michigan likely wont vote for Obama because of some meta-narrative or a series of fabulous speeches.
The [Obama] campaign is beginning to look like other campaigns, said a former top strategist for past Democratic presidential campaigns, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Obama is struggling with working class whites just like John Kerry, Al Gore, Bill Clinton, Michael Dukakis did, and Walter Mondale. Hes struggling with voters in the border-state South. And hes struggling with an enormous wind at his back, a hatred for George Bush and a mainstream media that is little short of a chorus for his campaign.
Clinton, of course, was the only one of these Democrats to actually win the struggle. As he could tell Obama, voters want to know how their lives would be bettered by an Obama presidency in very specific terms. This connection (along with independent Ross Perot) is what powered his upset run against George H.W. Bush in 1992. Clinton probably would have offered Obama that advice personally months ago but the two men were scheduled to have their first campaign-year meeting on Thursday, just over 50 days from Election Day.
The Expectations Game: Anyone who thinks the presidential election should be a layup for Obama should remember that Democrats have broken the 50 percent barrier in presidential elections only twice since 1944.
Did Obama himself forget?
Even if he didnt, he let a narrative take hold in the news media and among many of his own supporters that led to expectations that he should be far ahead, leading to disappointment when he isnt.
A lot of Democratic elites thought this was a slam dunk. And I thought, no its not, said Lake, the pollster. People in this town were already measuring drapes. And I was thinking, have you been in the real world lately?
If you have been involved in campaigns, you thought it was going to be close for a year, she added. And I think a lot of Democratic elites are waking up to that.
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
LOL. The stupid right-wingers beat the super-genius left-wingers once again.
If true, it ought to start showing in some of the state polls. NM moved today. Maybe some of the others soon. We are about 10 EVs away now.
Their 50-state strategy is insanity, said Schoen. If they dont use their financial advantage where they need it most, he added, citing states from Ohio to Nevada, and put every thing there and blow it out, they are at deep risk of losing.
This guy is naive. He really believed Obama and the Chitown Crew meant it when they said they would play a 50 state strategy. This was a bald-faced ruse to allay the Dem establishment to turn over party coffers and controls and move them to Chicago.
In one month's time there will be emerging stories of Democrat office seekers complaining they are not getting fair shares of party funds for their own campaigns.
Not yet, I read that and the first thing that struck me was the “experts” lack of understanding of how important it is to be “real” and trustworthy, change change change is nice, but unless “us” in the hinterlands trust the guy, we won’t vote for him.
Add in Obama utterly failing the Commander in Chief roll, to me, he should fail in November simply due to that reason.
We have three wars going on, I’d rather not see a fuzzy cheeked neophyte anti war advocate running the effort and directing our Friends Sons and Daughters.
The last couple of days I’ve been getting the feeling that something is up. Biden is now talking about how Hillary is more qualified than he is to be the VP. Obama said something yesterday that was very strange, something that sounded like dropping out. They are all so nervous now, that they can not win this year.
“Joe Trippi, a consultant behind Howard Deans flash-in-the-pan presidential campaign in 2004 and John Edwardss race in 2008, said the Obama campaign was slow to recognize how the selection of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as McCains running mate would change the dynamic of the race.”
There’s a guy who obviously gives stellar advice. Like Obama, a proven track record of success. Mr. Hindsight.
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
“They are all so nervous now”
They’re running against a very good looking woman.
The woman issue hurts also because of his rejection of Hillary.
Plus Democratic national campaigns have become psychodramas to compliment their self-perceived intellectuality and caring, echoed via the MSM. They know that is weak, one reason why they are so thin-skinned.
Issues...whatever. Obama and McCain aren’t that far apart.
Trippi is an idiot. They realized that immediately, not slowly.
Didn’t see SD then today? 55 McCain 41 BozObama.
By Democrat standards, this guy could be the nominee for President in 2012.
Now those extensive ground operations in states where McCain leads by double digits are just money suckers into black holes.
America is not yet a liberal country.
The only other pick that would be worse than DiFi would be Boxer or Pelosi.
Just my two cents worth and I didn't mean to hijack the thread but thought it goes with the meltdown and all.
One of those two times was 1976, when the donks managed a whopping 50.08%.
In that map, blue = Republican, right? Meaning that the colors are correct for once.
>> A Democratic meltdown?
Framing (i.e. definition) is *everything*.
The key period was the conventions.
The Dimocraps framed poorly; the Republicans not only pulled off a stunning update of the parameters and message only three days before the convention, they framed themselves and their opposition very well during the convention. Dare I say “professionally”? And credibly.
There isn’t enough time before the election for the Dims to correct their failure and re-frame things; nor is there a key event to use as a pivot point.
It’ll be a close election but IMO the Donkos are already toast.
Boxer and Pelosi make DiFi look both intelligent and centerist by comparison.
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