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Angle's Divided House Aided Her Fall
Townhall.com ^ | December 20, 2010 | Guy Benson

Posted on 12/20/2010 4:42:16 AM PST by Kaslin

On the morning of November 2, 2010, Sharron Angle appeared well-positioned to become the next US Senator from the state of Nevada. Numerous polls showed her holding a modest, but steady, lead over one of the most powerful men in the country. Grassroots conservatives across the country gleefully regarded her campaign as reflective of the national mood and expected it to represent a signature win of the burgeoning Tea Party movement. Politicos and journalists marveled at her staggering third quarter fundraising haul of $14 million – a figure that ballooned to a grand total of $28 million by the campaign’s conclusion. As Nevadans cast their ballots that Tuesday morning, Team Angle projected a quiet confidence.

Some volunteers and local staffers were so confident, in fact, that they broke from traditional campaign protocol and abandoned their get-out-the-vote efforts several hours before polls closed. Some were so assured of Angle’s victory that preparing for the lavish victory party at the Venetian Hotel took precedence. But as the results trickled in, the gathering’s festive atmosphere turned increasingly grim. A stunned hush fell over the throng when the verdict came in: Sharron Angle had lost, and it wasn't even close.

How did this happen? In the immediate aftermath of Reid’s victory, Angle’s campaign staff grappled with the loss, cycling through the various stages of grief. Having reached the final point of acceptance, several conceded that Reid’s ground organization and overall strategy had been brilliant. The Reid operation’s execution -- aside from the candidate’s dreadful performance in the lone debate -- was virtually flawless. In the end, it may be that none of the potential GOP contenders in Nevada could have beaten Reid. His get-out-the-vote machine was top-notch, and his strategy was executed to perfection. According exit polls, 55 percent of Nevada voters disapproved of their senior senator’s job performance, yet he received over 50 percent of the roughly 700,000 votes cast.

Reid ran a great race, but another major problem plagued Team Angle: Competing factions and internal power struggles. For months, an open rift festered between two opposing camps, transforming the campaign into a model of dysfunction. On one side of the philosophical canyon were the candidate’s grassroots loyalists, who had catapulted Angle to her improbable primary victory. On the other was a small handful of professional Republican operatives who were hired to help run the general election effort. Former Angle staffers – nearly without exception – gave vent to myriad frustrations and grievances that accumulated over a period of four months. Although the campaign managed to maintain the public appearance of functionality and common purpose, behind the scenes, the campaign was at war with itself.

The tensions were reportedly caused by clashes between the professional operatives and campaign manager Terry Campbell, who did not return phone calls or answer email inquiries regarding this story. Each side harbored, and often demonstrated, outright contempt for the other. To the grassroots activists who “brought Sharron to the dance,” as an ex-campaign volunteer put it, the new consultants and directors were “arrogant” and “condescending.” To their detractors, the professional staffers were a clique of establishment types and hopelessly out of touch party elites. The professionals, in turn, developed a strong distaste for many of their counterparts. Angle’s political and ideological impulses frequently led her to side with the grassroots over the “elites.” In some of the ugliest disputes, each faction turned to two of the only campaign figures universally considered to be impartial voices of reason: Jerry Stacy, Angle’s Press Secretary, and Ted Angle, Sharron’s husband.

One episode that encapsulated this counterproductive tug-of-war was a spat over whether to allow a scheduled event with Sen. John McCain in late October to continue as planned. The grassroots campaign staff warned Angle that McCain's mere presence on the trail would cost her the conservative base. Some suggested that volunteers would quit. After initially supporting McCain’s visit, Angle was briefly persuaded to abandon the event. However, some of the GOP professionals called an emergency meeting to push Angle back into the rally with McCain, arguing that McCain's record as a decorated war hero would play well with the crucial independent voter demographic.

Longtime Angle team members believed this was proof that the hired guns were trying to 'moderate' their candidate's views. They instead floated a compromise: Angle and McCain would appear at the same event together, but not on stage at the same time. The grassroots feared that even a photograph of Angle with McCain would turn off the base. The veteran GOP operatives strongly dissented and ultimately prevailed. The rally happened, and the two appeared together as originally scheduled. But this was not the only time the factions clashed.

The candidate herself occasionally nipped conflict in the bud by making quick and unilateral decisions. She quietly put the kibosh on a low quality television ad produced by her grassroots supporters and regularly dismissed the advice of her professional advisers when they counseled her against attending town hall meetings and small, ad hoc rallies around the state.

Angle’s daily schedule was the subject of the campaign’s most ferocious battles. Her early supporters feared the “elites” were undercutting Angle’s knack for personal retail politics and trying to tamp down her strong conservative values. “They were trying to change who Sharron was in her heart and soul, but we knew that voters were tired of phoniness,” the former volunteer said. The professionals, meanwhile, worried that Angle’s instincts, coupled with the “unprofessional and undisciplined” people surrounding her, could lead to trouble if she deviated from the playbook.

Of particular concern was the habitual occurrence of midday scheduling changes being ordered by Campbell allies, with little or no warning. “They would call audibles at the last minute. This was a daily battle. What would end up happening was Sharron would show up at events, the media would be there, and she’d be ill prepared,” an aide complained. “On August 28, it was decided that she should attend a big Hispanic Expo, without telling us. She arrived with no Spanish language literature, no translator, no booth, and we got embarrassed in front of the Spanish language media. It was a disaster.”

Another avoidable misadventure was Angle’s infamous October appearance at Rancho High School in Las Vegas. Several “elites” adamantly lobbied against participating in the event, but the grassroots insisted upon her appearance. When a student asked a question about the ethnicity of some illegal immigrants portrayed in a campaign ad, Angle gave a rambling answer, at one point telling the predominantly Latino audience that some of them “look a little more Asian” than Hispanic.

The incident generated a torrent of negative media attention, which was especially damaging because of its timing. “At that point, I wanted to roll Sharron up in a carpet, put her in a bunker, and leave her there until the election was over,” the former aide said, half-jokingly. “Rancho happened the day after Sharron won the debate. That entire day, or even the whole week, should have been all about how Sharron did a fantastic job and soundly beat a man who debates on the Senate floor for a living. We felt we had accomplished what we needed to. People got to see that Sharron was not the extreme, crazy person that Harry Reid had been saying [she was]. In reality, she was just an honest, conservative, honest Nevadan who was upset with the direction of the country and the state. Instead of that being the focus, Sharron’s poorly phrased, but totally innocent, comments hijacked our narrative.”

Jerry Stacy, Angle’s well-respected Press Secretary, declined to discuss the campaign’s stumbles, or “take sides” in the messy conflict.. Instead, he sounded some of the few conciliatory notes in the hours of interviews conducted for this story. “I don't want to point fingers at anybody. Everyone worked hard. I don't want to pile on Terry [Campbell], or anyone else. It's counterproductive,” he said. “Ultimately, we all shared the same goal: trying to remove Harry Reid from office. All these guys were sincere in their desire to achieve that.” Both sides have echoed Stacy’s last statement, but pointed fingers at one another for failing to get the job done.

Amidst the blame game, Angle is plotting her next move. A well-informed source says Angle is seriously considering another run for statewide office. “Running for office gets in your blood,” the source said. “Sharron’s developed a huge donor list, she has lots of national connections, so there are several options she’s weighing.” This confidant wouldn’t say whether Angle has her eyes on John Ensign’s seat in 2012, but said she would likely make a decision about her future by “late spring.” Others dispute that any such explicit timetable exists, referencing post-election interviews in which Angle more vaguely mentions contemplating “lots of options.”

Following Reid’s deflating win, conservatives must ponder an unpleasant proposition: Could the debilitating ‘grassroots vs. establishment’ dynamic that poisoned the Angle operation replicate itself and wreak havoc on future Republican campaigns? Political activists and operators from across the Center-Right spectrum agreed that both establishment and Tea Party-aligned conservatives should view Angle’s loss as a cautionary tale.

“The establishment didn’t seem too excited about supporting Sharron Angle because she beat them,” said Brendan Steinhauser, the Director of Campaigns for FreedomWorks – a grassroots organization that organized the enormous 9/12/09 Tea Party rally in Washington, DC. “My colleagues in Nevada were disappointed to see some of the attitudes out there in Nevada. On the flip side, the grassroots were disorganized and unfocused on the ground. They clearly didn’t have what it took to defeat the Reid machine.” The “magic question,” according to Steinhauser, is how to foster cooperation among the varying conservative actors who may have stylistic and substantive differences, but ultimately seek to achieve the same goal.

“It’s a very delicate balance,” he explained, “and it starts with respect. At the end of the day, we’re allies in this fight. Smart political hands will embrace this new movement and thank newcomers for their hard work. People want to know that they’re valued and respected, not disdained. On the other hand, grassroots activists need to recognize that they don’t have all the answers and understand the value of professionalism. Sometimes, we all have to rely on professionals’ specialized knowledge to get a job done. You go to a mechanic to get your car fixed, right? The same applies to politics.”

A GOP strategist close to the National Republican Senatorial Committee and a number of prominent 2010 candidates, concurred with Steinhauser’s analysis, and offered an assessment of how best to construct an effective and balanced campaign team: “The big, national-level operatives don't always know what events are considered must-do, or what local folks are a must-befriend, because they haven't spent their lives focused on those things,” the strategist explained, before leveling an admonition to the other camp: “On the other hand, a lot of state-level operatives just lack the experience of working on the toughest, most scrutinized cut-and-thrust campaigns, like presidential efforts. A campaign that is run by the very best, smartest and most aggressive in-state operatives who have worked at high levels on races big and small, buttressed by grassroots folks and national-level folks, is probably the best formula.”


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Nevada
KEYWORDS: itwasthefraudstupid; votefraud; voterfraud
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1 posted on 12/20/2010 4:42:19 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Reid ran a great race??????????????????


2 posted on 12/20/2010 4:43:26 AM PST by Carley (PREPARE FOR THE REINSTATING OF THE MILITARY DRAFT)
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To: Carley

He must have, he was able to steal the election


3 posted on 12/20/2010 4:51:38 AM PST by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: Carley
Reid ran a great vote fraud scam..... Fixed....
4 posted on 12/20/2010 4:52:30 AM PST by rightwingextremist1776
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To: Kaslin

While RINO Repubs were a possible problem, it sounds like Angle was her own worst enemy. She needed to sort out the direction she wanted her campaign to take and to stick with it.


5 posted on 12/20/2010 4:53:31 AM PST by chickadee
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To: rightwingextremist1776

As soon as I saw that the SEIU was maintaining the voting machines in Clark County,I knew the fix was in.You don’t go into election day down 4 points and win by 6 without massive fraud.


6 posted on 12/20/2010 4:56:07 AM PST by pistolpetestoys ("Look around you;you're not alone!" Sarah Palin 8/28/10)
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To: chickadee

Another avoidable misadventure was Angle’s infamous October appearance at Rancho High School in Las Vegas. Several “elites” adamantly lobbied against participating in the event, but the grassroots insisted upon her appearance. When a student asked a question about the ethnicity of some illegal immigrants portrayed in a campaign ad, Angle gave a rambling answer, at one point telling the predominantly Latino audience that some of them “look a little more Asian” than Hispanic.

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

A candidate needs to have stock answers / talking points to the ten or twelve major issues, and certainly immigration is one of them. You steer the question to the talking point, and say what YOU want to say, and not necessarily answer the specific question. This one is on Angle. Bad mistake.

Also, this underscores the need to get the globalist RINOs out of the party and all connected entities, like campaign management. Sounds like the national consultants really missed the boat on what her campaign was all about.

Experience is what you get when you were looking for something else. But there are some good lessons to be learned here. Go with your core. Lead, don’t follow. Practice, practice, practice. Have your act together. Let’s hope we learn them.


7 posted on 12/20/2010 5:04:01 AM PST by Eccl 10:2 (Pray for the peace of Jerusalem - Ps 122:6)
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To: Kaslin; ding_dong_daddy_from_dumas; stephenjohnbanker; DoughtyOne; calcowgirl; Gilbo_3; NFHale; ...
RE :”Another avoidable misadventure was Angle’s infamous October appearance at Rancho High School in Las Vegas. Several “elites” adamantly lobbied against participating in the event, but the grassroots insisted upon her appearance. When a student asked a question about the ethnicity of some illegal immigrants portrayed in a campaign ad, Angle gave a rambling answer, at one point telling the predominantly Latino audience that some of them “look a little more Asian” than Hispanic.

The incident generated a torrent of negative media attention, which was especially damaging because of its timing. “At that point, I wanted to roll Sharron up in a carpet, put her in a bunker, and leave her there until the election was over,” the former aide said, half-jokingly. “Rancho happened the day after Sharron won the debate. That entire day, or even the whole week, should have been all about how Sharron did a fantastic job and soundly beat a man who debates on the Senate floor for a living

This is the one that really killed her, and as the author says it reversed what she had gained from beating Reid in the debate. The word around NV after this incident was that she was ‘crazy’.

8 posted on 12/20/2010 5:12:42 AM PST by sickoflibs ("It's not the taxes, the redistribution is the federal spending=tax delayed")
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To: Kaslin

Arrogant and condescending? Yep, sounds like GOP ‘consultants’ to me!


9 posted on 12/20/2010 5:13:37 AM PST by 9YearLurker
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To: chickadee

If someone could have gagged her , she might have made it.


10 posted on 12/20/2010 5:17:00 AM PST by Venturer
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To: chickadee
It seems that we can all have a cool head and realistically assess what went wrong with the Angle campaign.

Why the difficulty in doing the same with O'Donnell?

I guess emotions ran higher with that one, with “Tokyo Rove” and all that; but really Angle was the heartbreaker, 0’Donnell was never even close.

11 posted on 12/20/2010 5:26:47 AM PST by allmendream (Tea Party did not send the GOP to D.C. to negotiate the terms of our surrender to socialism.)
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To: Kaslin; Al B.; Clyde5445; Brices Crossroads; onyx; Lakeshark
On the other was a small handful of professional Republican operatives who were hired to help run the general election effort.

These people are poison. The same thing happened to Miller in Alaska---he brought in some of Huck's people and they promptly pushed him to put distance between himself and the Palins in order to appear more moderate. He did and has regretted it ever since, especially after those same operatives released private emails between him and Todd, who felt betrayed by Miller's refusal to strongly back Sarah in the MSM.

12 posted on 12/20/2010 5:26:52 AM PST by Virginia Ridgerunner (Sarah Palin has crossed the Rubicon!)
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To: Kaslin

Yeah, those thousands of NV voters who did not vote in any other NV race except for the US Senate race, and mysteriously all voted for Reid...had nothing at all to do with it.


13 posted on 12/20/2010 5:31:46 AM PST by apoxonu
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To: Kaslin

note to the Tea Party candidates:
Let the elites get you elected before telling them to go phock themselves...


14 posted on 12/20/2010 5:44:52 AM PST by phockthis
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To: Kaslin

States controlled by conservatives - and there are 30 - need to start voter fraud investigations. Throw the union thugs and rats in prison. If it’s not done, expect more and bigger fraud in 2012.


15 posted on 12/20/2010 5:47:31 AM PST by sergeantdave
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To: allmendream

I thought Christine O’Donnell was an appealing candidate. The Beltway media went into the same kind of overdrive frenzy against her as it did with Palin. There wasn’t enough time for O’Donnell to recover from it.


16 posted on 12/20/2010 5:51:46 AM PST by chickadee
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To: chickadee
While RINO Repubs were a possible problem, it sounds like Angle was her own worst enemy. She needed to sort out the direction she wanted her campaign to take and to stick with it.

Very true, she stumbled and bumbled, mostly because she tried to listen to people that wanted her to move to the center.

I donated to her and contrary to this article, really believe that the biggest reason the dirty harry got the most votes was because of voter fraud.

Sharron wasn't the sharpest knife in the drawer but way better than dirty harry.

17 posted on 12/20/2010 5:54:31 AM PST by USS Alaska
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To: chickadee
As long as you didn't look at her resume, her history, or listen to what she said; she was a DREAM candidate!

But if you looked at her history, her resume, and listed to what she said; she was a NIGHTMARE.

Delaware already knew her well enough, more exposure wasn't helping her case. She outspent her opponent 2 to 1 and couldn't get within 10%. She was the MSM’s chosen flag-bearer for the Tea Party movement - the face and voice they wanted associated with it in the voters minds.

Much as Bill Maher paying her salary to say stupid things on TV for them to all have a good laugh at the silly conservative, the left salivating to put this woman on TV should have been a wake up call to anybody capable of waking up.

18 posted on 12/20/2010 5:57:06 AM PST by allmendream (Tea Party did not send the GOP to D.C. to negotiate the terms of our surrender to socialism.)
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To: Kaslin

I’m glad that this highly visible campaign laid open its wounds for everyone to analyze. Living in the Republican stripe of Pennsylvania, I’ve had the opportunity, while volunteering, to witness the clash between the party’s minions and grass roots enthusiasts. The only time I saw expertise and thoughtful professionalism was during Bush/Cheney in 2000. Every other campaign, I would leave the volunteer headquarters at night shaking my head in disbelief over the arrogance and sheer stupidity of the party’s staff.


19 posted on 12/20/2010 5:59:19 AM PST by LoveUSA (You don't notice the night light until it gets dark.)
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To: Kaslin

Reid’s vote fraud program was the mechanism for his win.


20 posted on 12/20/2010 6:03:22 AM PST by G Larry (When you're right, avoid compromise!)
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