Posted on 10/15/2010 9:38:11 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The problem with a demonization strategy based on voter unfamiliarity with a candidate is that the candidate usually gets a chance to either confirm or destroy the impression before an election takes place. Harry Reid gambled on painting Sharron Angle as a nut, but in the end it was Reid who struggled to explain himself in the only debate in the Senate race for Nevada. Veteran political analyst Jon Ralston, no fan of Angle, declares her the winner simply by showing Nevadans that she was far from the portrait of a lunatic that Reid had painted:
Angle won because she looked relatively credible, appearing not to be the Wicked Witch of the West (Christine ODonnell is the good witch of the Tea Party) and scoring many more rhetorical points. And she won because Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid looked as if he could barely stay on a linear argument, abruptly switching gears and failing to effectively parry or thrust.
Ralston is not happy with the outcome — he quotes Percy Bysshe Shelley’s “Ozymandias” and says, “Look upon these works, ye mighty, and despair” — but he also notes that the media reached a consensus on the verdict, at least on Twitter:
NBCs Chuck Todd: Reids problem tonight is that while Angle wasnt great, his performance made her look passable.
Politicos Dave Catanese: Utterly subpar.
Political Wires Taegan Goddard: Reid didnt knock out Angle but she had him on the ropes. Have to give the edge to Angle …
Political writer Taylor Marsh may have summed it up best: Sharron Angle passed the Im not crazy test with flying colors. Focused too. This lady just might pull this off. Reid didnt take her out.
Give Ralston some credit here. It takes a heck of a leap to marry “Ozymandias” with Twitter, but Ralston nails it. He laments Reid’s terrible performance, starting with a meandering and sometimes incoherent opening statement and continuing through his sarcasm, condescension, and inability to answer Angle’s attacks. Ralston believes Reid may have talked himself out of his job.
Truthfully, though, Reid talked himself out of his job starting four years ago when he betrayed his constituents and signed onto the radical agendas of Nancy Pelosi and then Barack Obama. Nevadans had thought they sent an independent, conservative-leaning, pro-life, pro-gun Democrat to the US Senate. Instead, Reid shilled a massive tax-and-spend agenda. Sharron Angle just needed to show that she’s not as crazy or extreme as Reid in order to win, and after the last four years, it turns out that her mission wasn’t nearly as tough as Reid’s mission to make her look more extreme than his performance over the past four years.
“Ozymandias” is a poem that speaks to the futility of empire and dynasty. Although Ralston didn’t mean it in this context, it certainly seems applicable to the Reids, who appear to be heading for ignominious defeat in 2010.
Update: The New Republic wonders why Reid agreed to debate Angle at all, given his strategy of painting her as a lunatic:
Why Harry Reid agreed to have a debate with Sharron Angle is a bit of a mystery to me. If your campaign is based on portraying your opponent as loony, then why give that opponent a chance to look reasonable? Lyndon Johnson never debated Barry Goldwater. Then again, Im no political strategist. And neither, Ive come to see, is Harry Reid. So lets focus on what matters now: that a debate was held in Nevada last night between Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and his Republican challenger Sharron Angle. And its upshot wassorry, folksthat Angle improved her chances.
T. A. Frank continues with complaints that Angle “lied,” had “far fewer scruples,” and so on, accusing Angle of being in another solar system at one point in the debate. Clearly, Frank is no fan of Angle, but spends most of the column spanking Reid for being inadequate to the task and questioning his entire strategy. But that prompts another question: do we want someone running the US Senate who couldn’t find his own closing statement with both hands and a spotlight, literally?
I’m no fan of televised debates, but they’re a fact of life in politics these days (Frank says that LBJ never debated Barry Goldwater, as if that happened last year). A refusal to engage would be seen as either haughty arrogance or panicked desperation, especially the latter in a case where an entrenched incumbent spent the past several months painting his opponent as an idiot or lunatic, or a little of both. Reid had no choice but to engage her, and his carefully constructed facade crumbled under the pressure.
Read Jon Ralston’s analysis here :
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2010/oct/15/reid-lost-debate-angle/
EXCERPT
Lets get the easy part out of the way first:
Sharron Angle won The Big Debate.
Angle won because she looked relatively credible, appearing not to be the Wicked Witch of the West (Christine ODonnell is the good witch of the Tea Party) and scoring many more rhetorical points. And she won because Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid looked as if he could barely stay on a linear argument, abruptly switching gears and failing to effectively parry or thrust.
Whether the debate affects the outcome I believe very few Nevadans are undecided it also perfectly encapsulated the race: An aging senator who has mastered the inside political game but fundamentally does not seem to care about his public role (and is terrible at it) versus an ever-smiling political climber who can deliver message points but sometimes changes her message or denies a previous one even existed.
Look upon these works, ye mighty, and despair.
As I watched the debate, I felt all the years that Nevada has striven to surmount its seamy image fading away as the nation watched this sad spectacle. As Slates John Dickerson wryly put it on Twitter: After watching the Nevada Senate debate I really wish that what happens in Vegas could stay in Vegas.
I know we Nevadans get our backs up when the national media condescends. We are a proud bunch; we love our state. But as I surveyed the post-mortems in the 140-character world, where concision often yields brutal truth, you could almost sense the head-shaking as the national types opined:
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This is delicious. Wasn’t it the Reid camp that decided to give Angle only one debate back when she was down double by digits? I’m sure they’d kill for a rematch now but it’s probably too late to set it up.
I think most people knew Harry lied all night.
I truly hope this Reid is taken out. He was the main thrust of reckless spending under the real lunatic Pelosi. I have never understood you can read the bill after it is passed logic. Then they put no other future congress can change this bill. Which is B.S. Did you read that one. What a bunch of crooks.
If not for his ability to twist the truth, lie and lie some more, Reid wouldn’t be able to open his mouth.
Oh by the way, how did Harry make all his money as a government employee?
I didn’t see the debate, could you please explain the reference to pink helmets?
Harry is stupid and an extremist.
In defending his support for Obamacare, Reid made a loopy meandering answer about how women need mammograms because we care about breast cancer - which you can see watching NFL games with players wearing pink helmets. (the NFL is promoting Breast Cancer Awareness month with pink accented shoes,chin straps, gloves, etc...but no pink helmets)
Worse was when in started talking about colonoscopies, and the need to “uh, go up there’ and “snip out, uh...” LOL!
This is why we need Obamacare!!
She won just like we beat Japan... overwhelming nuclear destruction!!!!!!!
LLS
I can guess what color will it be for prostrate cancer awareness?
“I think most people knew Harry lied all night.”
Yes, it would employ a lot of fact checkers to check out all the lies Harry told. In fact the employment alone of all the fact checkers that would be required might spur the economy all by itself.
I started a drinking game during the debate. Had to drink every time Harry said “extreme”. I have a headache today.
I wanted to start a drinking game during any Obama speech where people had to drink every time Obama said “I, me, my, mine”...but decided not to because I feared most of my freinds would end up in the hospital.
Sorry I missed it, sounds like it was funnier than any current sitcom. Do you think maybe he had been drinking? While I’ve always considered him a slimeball comments like that make him sound like a political amateur.
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