Posted on 08/14/2010 9:51:38 AM PDT by jazusamo
The Democratic strategy in the 2010 election is simple: Change the subject. And given the subject on everyones mind, who can blame them? That subject is the economy and related matters like spending, the deficit, debt, and President Obama. These are the last things Democrats want to talk about.
Instead theyd like to reduce each race for the House and Senate to the personal level. Their aim is to emphasize the individual flaws of Republican candidates. In the Democratic game plan, the economy and national issues are taboo.
This microstrategy is one of pure desperation. Its all thats left when macro-political trends are going against you. Indeed, Democrats start with two strikes against them. A midterm election is usually a referendum on the presidents performance, and this years is no exception. And the most important measure of the presidents success or failure is the condition of the economy.
Given this, the campaign is on a track thats likely to produce a Republican landslide in November. So Democrats are eager to create a separate track, a parallel campaign aimed at minimizing their losses.
The strategy is clever in that it lures the media into playing along. Media types cant help themselves. Those covering the campaign need new things to report on each day. And Democrats are prepared to supply or otherwise draw attention to just those things, the smaller and more marginal the better.
We saw numerous instances of this last week. When GQ magazine reported that Rand Paul, the Republican Senate candidate in Kentucky, had kidnapped a female student while he was in college, the story was widely disseminated by the media. Later, the victim came forward to explain there was no kidnapping, only a college prank that she went along with willingly. Despite its short life, the story distracted attention from bigger issues.
Then there was the Colorado primary, the results of which were interpreted by Politico as good news for President Obama and Democrats. This was a stretch, but it was a fresh angle on the campaign. The New York Times on its website said the president was savoring one of the sweetest victories of the midterm election season. The White House did everything it could to encourage this line of thinking.
Obama had supported appointed senator Michael Bennet, who handily defeated his primary foe, former state house speaker Andrew Romanoff. (Romanoff had the backing of former President Clinton.) White House political chief David Axelrod said the Bennet victory showed that 2008 Obama voters would participate in an off-year election.
But that wasnt all. The Colorado results undermined predictions of a wave election in 2010, a tide sweeping Republicans into office across the nation, Axelrod told the Hill. Elections will be decided on a race-by-race basis, depending on the candidates and campaigns, and not some wave. Get it? Axelrod was saying the small, personal stuff matters more than larger issues such as the economy.
For Democrats, Colorado brought another supposed benefit. In an assessment that many independent analysts tend to agree with, John Harris of Politico wrote, [Democrats] said the most favorable news for them may have come from the results on the Republican side. Harris was referring to the victory of local prosecutor Ken Buck over former lieutenant governor Jane Norton for the Republican Senate nomination.
Bucks problem? He was supported by Tea Party activists and had committed a gaffe, a caught-on-tape remark that he ought to be elected because he didnt wear high heels. Yet Bennets weaknesses appear to be greater than Bucks, a fact the media overlooked.
The Republican primary attracted 68,573 more voters than the Democratic primary, and Bennet got fewer votes than Jane Norton, the Republican runner-up. The first postelection poll, conducted by Scott Rasmussen, gave Buck a 46 percent to 41 percent lead over Bennet. And Bennet is anxious about the possibility of an Obama campaign appearance. Well have to see, he told ABC. Well obviously do whats right for the campaign. This is a signal to Obama to stay away. And it came from a candidate whos not brimming with confidence.
The Buck victory touched off a whole series of stories about the offbeat Republican candidates, as Politico called them. The list includes Senate candidate Linda McMahon in Connecticut, Rand Paul, and Colorado gubernatorial nominee Dan Maes. Politico referred to them as a former professional wrestling executive, a libertarian ophthalmologist, and a man who thinks bicycle use could empower the United Nations.
For sure, these are candidates with peculiarities, and its the idiosyncrasies and quirks and tendency to say unusual things that Democrats and the press are concentrating on. But theres no reason to believe the Republicans who lost to these alleged oddballs would fare better against Democrats in the fall.
While Democrats and the media are codependents here, a few journalists deserve credit for exposing the strategy. Obama and his party are seizing on gaffe after GOP gaffe, intent on making the election anything but a referendum on the majority, Politicos Jonathan Martin wrote. Democrats are moving faster and more aggressively than in previous election years to dig up unflattering details about Republican challengers, Philip Rucker reported in the Washington Post.
Will the strategy work? With a powerful anti-Obama, anti-Democrat, antiliberal storm brewing, it wont help much. Democrats are pursuing it for lack of an alternative. In 2010, its a strategy for losers.
Pathetic and Desperate.
” A vote for “X” is a vote for Zer0, Pelosi, Reid, Frank and Dodd.”
“A vote for “X” is a vote for more Jihad on America”
As if they wouldn't do it if they had any other choice. It's their 'go to' strategy, all the time, every time.
Lures the media? Hell, the media is pushing the strategy - probably even suggested it!
BTW, Fred Barnes is a "squishy" Conservative (don't want to call him a RINO). Whenever the race card is played - or any other Democrat tactic is used - he's always the first to apologize!
Yet with the useful sheep - it will work... as they will follow right along and believe every word they hear & read.
I just find it so very hard to believe that there are so many active Marxists in the US.... and then I realize that the public schools in this nation have been run by the Marxist teachers unions for enough generations now... that you add in the idiots and the brainwashed masses....
Obama, Islam and the Democrats have TV too. The 5 networks own every channel and they ALL support Obama including Fox/Saudia. Idiots who watch TV keep the regime in power.
TV turned Shirley Sherrod from a virulent racist to a victim and mother theresa in about 2 hours.
Keep watching sheeple.
Over and over again.
Exactly...They always play to it but the beautiful thing this time is it's all they have. :)
Barnes, last night on Special Report, in the panel, stated he was in favor of amnesty..I wasn’t aware of this before...I’ll have to reassess ALL his comments and writings..
I agree, this can be directly attributed to our public schools of the last 30 or more years.
Excellent! That’s a direct question that would get few direct answers.
Fewer people trust the media, says Gallup.
I wasn’t aware of that either but I believe he’s dead on the money with this.
Yep. Has Barnes never heard of Sarah Palin? The attacks on her began instantaneously, as soon as McCain named her and continued throughout the campaign, even while the rats were ahead in the polls. So it has been in every election since Nixon. This is no last minute desperate strategy. Dumbest article Fred has ever written.
Dems are simply sticking with what has worked for them in the past. After all, they have the whole mainstream media for their attack dogs. The game changers are talk radio, the internet and FOX News. Americans with free minds can attack back.
Is election time getting near?
Then it’s time for the RATS to start shouting and yelling and weeping and wailing how the Republicans are gonna steal your Medicare and take away your Social Security.
This old saw no longer has teeth.
For all his hipness and being so upscale, I figured nobama would come up with something at least a little original.
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