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With Louisiana Polls Predicting a Loss, David Vitter Confronts His Prostitution Scandal Head-On
National Review ^ | 11/17/2015 | Alexis Levinson

Posted on 11/17/2015 7:08:44 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Baton Rouge, Louisiana -- With a loud crunch, the SUV carrying Senator David Vitter and his wife, Wendy, backed into the sedan his staffer was driving.

Both cars hastily pulled back into their opposite parking spaces in the lot of the Bayou Church in Lafayette, and everyone got out to survey the scene. Vitter looked first at the dent in the back of the SUV he had been in, and then he walked over to survey the damage done to his staffer's car. When it was clear all were unscathed, everyone got back in their cars and went on their way.

As a metaphor, a car crash seems almost too on the nose for Vitter's gubernatorial campaign. Once seen as the inevitable next governor of Louisiana, Vitter now finds himself in an unenviable position: He is the underdog, and he has little time to change that. It was scarcely a year ago that reporters were writing the obituary for Louisiana Democrats, as then-senator Mary Landrieu hurtled toward certain defeat to Republican Bill Cassidy in her bid for a fourth term as U.S. senator. Yet with just four days until the run-off election that will choose the Pelican State's next governor, a previously little-known Democratic state senator named John Bel Edwards now looks poised to hand Democrats an unforeseen victory.

Public polling over the past week consistently finds Edwards leading Vitter. A poll conducted Saturday through Monday by Louisiana-based JMC Analytics found Edwards with 51 percent, Vitter with 35 percent, and 13 percent undecided. Fifty-four percent of those undecided voters said they were leaning toward Edwards. Early voting numbers do not paint an attractive picture for him, either. Democrats turned out in higher numbers than they did during early voting in the primary, and there was higher turnout of black voters -- who vote overwhelmingly for Democrats in Louisiana.

"That, to me, suggests that the Democrats are going to be very enthusiastic about voting next Saturday," says John Couvilon, who runs JMC Analytics.

Republicans are generally not optimistic. Though many predict the final tally on Election Night will be closer than polls predict, few seem inclined to bet on Vitter. Several, asked if Vitter has a chance, describe the race as simply "over."

With four days left, there is little Vitter can do to change voters' minds, and he seems well aware of this. His best chance at proving the polls wrong is to make sure Republicans turn out in force -- and that they turn out to vote for him.

Edwards has managed to peel away some Republican votes from Vitter. The West Point graduate has aggressively touted his conservative credentials -- particularly, his pro-life position, a major selling point in Louisiana. That has helped him find an opening that was never there for Landrieu, and it also has helped him woo moderates who might otherwise fall into the Republican column. As a result, Vitter spent the weekend bashing Edwards as a conservative in rhetoric only, insisting that Edwards's record does not back up his rhetoric.

But that also means Vitter cannot afford for Republicans to stay home on Saturday. That was the overarching message at Vitter's campaign events on Saturday, the last day for Louisianans to vote early in the run-off: Go vote, and take your friends.

"At this point, the debate is pretty much over," he told supporters, who had gathered in a conference room at the Clarion Inn in Gonzales to watch Louisiana State University get clobbered by the University of Arkansas on Saturday evening. "At this point, it's all about who shows up. That's what it's about."

But Vitter's campaigning style suggests he has little expectation of changing minds or winning over new voters. He is not a particularly charismatic candidate, and he seems ill at ease in retail-politicking scenarios. The Bayou Church's chili and gumbo cook-off, where about 20 teams have set up booths to dish out the goods and compete for the glory, should be a candidate's dream event: no shortage of voters to talk to, and great photo ops of the candidate tasting the goods and oohing and aahing over who has the best gumbo.

But there are only two reporters there to take photos because the campaign did not publicly announce the event. And there are few photo opportunities, because Vitter eats almost nothing. He tastes a couple of bites of gumbo at the first booth, run by the local police department, but the small Styrofoam bowl vanishes almost as soon as he walks away, and he does not eat anything else. His wife, Wendy, does the heavy lifting on that front, tasting multiple chilis in pursuit of the spiciest one. (She eschews gumbo because she loves chili and finds the prospect of alternating between the two unappetizing.)

As Vitter wanders around the event, dressed in checked dress pants and a white button-down shirt and trailed by half a dozen staffers in Vitter-campaign T-shirts, he rarely approaches people. Mostly, he talks with those who seek him out and introduce themselves; supporters take the initiative and introduce him to others. For a brief stretch toward the end of his visit, when no voter presented himself, Vitter and his wife stood in the middle of the lawn, gazing around aimlessly.

He seems reluctant to engage on policy issues with cook-off attendees, even with those who declare themselves undecided voters. "Go to David Vitter dotcom," he urges voter after voter, when they ask for his plan on a specific issue. The details, he says, are all online.

There are varying theories about just why Vitter's fortunes have shifted. Some point to Edwards's social conservatism. Others say that the unpopularity of Bobby Jindal, the current Republican governor, is dragging Vitter down. Still others say it is simply Vitter himself who has turned off voters: Some people just don't like the man.

Edwards has resurrected an issue that Vitter thought he had moved past: In 2007, the senator's telephone number was disclosed as part of the records of the D.C. Madam, Deborah Jean Palfrey, who was charged with running a prostitution ring. Vitter confessed to "a serious sin" but declined to elaborate, he said, out of respect for his family. Three years later, he won reelection in a wave year with 57 percent of the vote, and the matter appeared to be closed.

But the prostitution scandal became a central issue in the gubernatorial campaign last week, when Edwards began running an ad alleging that Vitter "chose prostitutes over patriots." The ad relies on the D.C. Madam's phone records, which show Vitter answering a call from her service shortly after he missed a vote to honor soldiers.

The renewed focus on the scandal has caused some problems for Vitter. The moderators of the debate Monday night showed the results of a poll they conducted that found 55 percent of people saying they would be less likely to vote for Vitter because of the prostitution scandal. And a survey conducted during the primary by a super PAC involved in the race found that voters had negative associations with the senator. The answers to the free-association survey question, provided to National Review, asked voters to name their "greatest hesitancy about voting for David Vitter for governor." The words used most often: "morals," "personal life," "untrustworthy," "past," "prostitutes," "scandals," "bad," "values."

Last week, Vitter's campaign began running an ad in which he acknowledges the scandal, and over the course of the week, he has touted endorsements from "family values" conservatives such as Family Research Council's Tony Perkins. At Monday's debate, he devoted his closing statement to talking about the scandal:

Fifteen years ago, I faced my darkest day in life when I had to look my kids in the eye and tell them how badly I'd failed my family. What they gave me in return was the best day of my life, when they and Wendy offered complete love and forgiveness. And that was absolutely the single best day of my life, and the most powerful motivator I had for the rest of my life. I've used that every day since then to do right by them first and foremost, and also to work hard to recommit to the people of Louisiana.

Asked afterward why he had chosen to focus his closing statement on that, he insisted it had nothing to do with the current political discussion.

"That is the most important experience of my life, earning that redemption," he told reporters. "That is the single defining moment of my life that makes me who I am today, and brings strength to my character."

Openly acknowledging his mistake has made fans of some voters.

"It takes a man to stand up and admit, ‘I made a mistake' -- I appreciate that; that's why he's got my vote," Christopher Catfish Mallang, a bounty hunter from Lafayette attending the cook-off with his wife and daughter, tells NR. (Catfish is really part of his name -- he pulls out his driver's license to prove it.)

"We've all made mistakes," he adds. "You can't hold a man back for the rest of his life because of one mistake."

Vitter's campaign attributes his underdog status to the attacks on him in the primary, when he drew fire from all sides as the clear front-runner.

"The primary was a bruising primary, and the dynamics were that there were eight people and entities with all their guns focused on me," he tells NR at an early-voting rally in Livingston on Saturday.

The other factor he points to: Jindal, whose 27 percent approval rating, Vitter says, is dragging him down. "People are frustrated, myself included, that he's been completely AWOL for the last three years. And I'm going to provide the strong, hands-on, active leadership that people want."

Democrats are more than happy to tie Vitter to the unpopular Jindal, whose presidential bid has often taken him out of the state.

"I think it's actually more that Jindal and his incompetence are just trickling down to the Republican candidates," representative Cedric Richmond tells NR. Richmond, who represents the New Orleans area, is the sole remaining Democrat in Louisiana's congressional delegation. "So if you add who John Bel is, and then you throw in Jindal, it becomes the perfect storm."

Vitter and Jindal openly cannot stand each other. Neither seems able to hide his deep-seated disdain for the other, and Jindal declined to endorse Vitter in the run-off. Not that Vitter would have wanted his endorsement anyway; he is the first to point out that he has "butted heads" with the current governor.

Not all Republicans are ready to count Vitter out. The campaign has made notable shifts in the final days, in an effort to change course. Local reporters say the campaign's occasional release of a public schedule is new -- previously Vitter's campaign did not release that. Vitter has shifted his message to address the prostitution scandal head-on, while simultaneously accusing Edwards of using the issue to distract from his record. Vitter has even alluded to impropriety on Edwards's part, repeatedly noting that Edwards attended an event at what Vitter calls "an adult hip-hop night club" on the same day he missed a forum with a family-values group. And Vitter has also aggressively jumped on the issue of Syrian refugees in the wake of the recent terrorist attacks in Paris.

That issue could be a wild card in the final days. Vitter has gone on the offensive, joining a number of Republican governors in declaring that as governor he would sign an executive order to prohibit Syrian refugees from settling in Louisiana. "That is a crucial issue, in many ways a life-and-death security issue for the people of Louisiana," Vitter told reporters after the debate. "What happened in Paris is sure as heck relevant, because we know at least one of those terrorists got into Paris as a Syrian refugee."

It's a "very emotional issue" that could help sway some voters back into Vitter's camp, says JMC Analytics' Couvilon.

But with just four days to go and early voting already finished, there are fewer voters left to sway.

-- Alexis Levinson is senior political reporter at National Review.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Louisiana
KEYWORDS: davidvitter; louisiana; prostitution; scandal

1 posted on 11/17/2015 7:08:44 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

The multiple rapes and molestations never seemed to hurt Cliton. I guess that’s because his constituents don’t see anything wrong with getting you a little ‘sumpin, sumpin” on the side.


2 posted on 11/17/2015 7:10:59 AM PST by mothball
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To: mothball

Why should Louisiana voters be against a guy who solicited prostitutes. Hell, they have been electing crooked politicians for decades. Which is worse? Having a fling with a prostitute or stealing money? Is Edwards by any chance related to former Governor and convicted felon Edwards?


3 posted on 11/17/2015 7:16:00 AM PST by Old Retired Army Guy (frequently.)
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To: mothball

If Vitter loses, chalk one up for another Democrat in the Senate. That’s one less vote to repeal all of Obama’s damage ( especially Obamacare ).


4 posted on 11/17/2015 7:16:20 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: mothball

Dems don’t go out there and decry that stuff. Democrats openly disdain churchgoing. When they get some on the side, that has the ring of authenticity.

The Republican brand is ‘God and Country’. The idea of coming after Planned Parenthood while secretly arranging for the abortion of your love child, for example, is the kind of hypocrisy that makes you want to run for the real, morally-compromised-but-honest-about-it, thing.


5 posted on 11/17/2015 7:16:35 AM PST by RinaseaofDs
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The FReeptown FReepathon Keeps Chugging!

Come Along And Donate!

6 posted on 11/17/2015 7:21:17 AM PST by DJ MacWoW (The Fed Gov is not one ring to rule them all)
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To: Old Retired Army Guy

“Is Edwards by any chance related to former Governor and convicted felon Edwards?”

No, but he does look exactly like Sloth from The Goonies.


7 posted on 11/17/2015 7:24:28 AM PST by mothball
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To: SeekAndFind

Interesting, Nat Review has Levinson do a recap of Vittner s foibles 4 days before election.


8 posted on 11/17/2015 7:37:05 AM PST by mosesdapoet (My best insights get lost in FR's because of meaningless venting no one reads.)
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To: SeekAndFind

AS I posted in another thread on FR, these latest polls (RCP) make no sense whatsoever.

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2015/governor/la/louisiana_governor_vitter_vs_edwards-4314.html

Vitter led by high double digits until end of September and then suddenly collapsed to a 34 point swing in 30 days? How can that be if there was nothing new brought up by Edwards?

The prostitution news was yrs old and Vitter was elected by a wide margin to the Senate AFTER that story broke.

Plus there are questions about past accuracy of the companies who did the last three polls. PPP a Democrat Pollster did the previous three and had Vitter up by big margins.

I surely have no idea who will win but this does bring to mind the recent Republican win in Kentucky where Bevin was supposedly even to down in the final polls and yet won by a resounding 9 points.


9 posted on 11/17/2015 8:09:53 AM PST by billyboy15
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To: SeekAndFind

Conservatives should turn out for David Vitter. I know that his prostitution scandal is unsavory but it happened many years ago and I think we should be willing to forgive the guy. And as far as polling is concerned, we all know what happened in Kentucky. If you live in Louisiana, turn out for David Vitter!


10 posted on 11/17/2015 8:22:58 AM PST by No Dems 2016
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To: billyboy15
Nro is just pushing the DC spin.
Most of these Nro are Dems .
The Obamabot from Buzzfeed started at Nro

the three polls being pushed are marketing firms crap and just paid for
Push polls to push the Vitter will lose to keep gop voters at home. Its the Bevin - Ken C playbook all over by the Dem media and DC uniparty .

11 posted on 11/17/2015 8:52:01 AM PST by ncalburt ( Amnesty-media out in full force the)
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Berosus; bigheadfred; Bockscar; cardinal4; ColdOne; ...
Thanks SeekAndFind.

12 posted on 11/21/2015 9:20:43 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Here's to the day the forensics people scrape what's left of Putin off the ceiling of his limo.)
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