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The Daily Strategist
by staff, January 27, 2012 05:44 PM EST
Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich has a wake-up call for Dems who hope for Gingrich's nomination by the GOP. Says Reich:
...No responsible Democrat should be pleased at the prospect that Gingrich could get the GOP nomination. The future of America is too important to accept even a small risk of a Gingrich presidency...I warn you. It's not worth the risk.
Even if the odds that Gingrich as GOP presidential candidate would win the general election are 10 percent, that's too much of a risk to the nation. No responsible American should accept a 10 percent risk of a President Gingrich.
The why of Reich's warning should already be clear to most politics-watchers. But just in case, Reich explains:
It's not just Newt's weirdness. It's also the stunning hypocrisy. His personal life makes a mockery of his moralistic bromides. He condemns Washington insiders but had a forty-year Washington career that ended with ethic violations. He fulminates against finance yet drew fat checks from Freddie Mac. He poses as a populist but has had a $500,000 revolving charge at Tiffany's.
And it's the flagrant irresponsibility of many of his propositions - for example, that presidents are not bound by Supreme Court rulings, that the liberal Ninth Circuit court of appeals should be abolished, that capital gains should not be taxed, that the First Amendment guarantees freedom "of" religion but not "from" religion.
It's also Gingrich's eagerness to channel the public's frustrations into resentments against immigrants, blacks, the poor, Muslims, "liberal elites," the mainstream media, and any other group that's an easy target of white middle-class and working-class anger.
These are all the hallmarks of a demagogue.
Reich understand the pro-Newt argument of many Dems, including, reportedly, at least some Obama campaign strategists:
Yet Democratic pundits, political advisers, officials and former officials are salivating over the possibility of a Gingrich candidacy. They agree with key Republicans that Newt would dramatically increase the odds of Obama's reelection and would also improve the chances of Democrats taking control over the House and retaining control over the Senate.
Reich doesn't dispute the odds that Obama and Dems would win big against Newt. It's just the disastrous potential of him winning the long shot that is too gruesome to test:
...I'd take a 49 percent odds of a Mitt Romney win - who in my view would make a terrible president - over a 10 percent possibility that Newt Gingrich would become the next president - who would be an unmitigated disaster for America and the world.
It's not hard to imagine the confusion, chaos and uncertainty that would likely come with a Gingrich Administration. Democrats rooting for Newt should give Reich's point due consideration.
by Ed Kilgore, January 27, 2012 10:46 AM EST
This item is crossposted from The New Republic.
Just when hardcore conservatives had seemed prepared to settle for Mitt Romney to avoid further exposure of intraparty divisions, Newt Gingrich's unlikely recovery brought those divisions sharply and publicly into view. As Politico reported yesterday, conservative elites ranging from Tom Delay to Bob Dole have gone to the media en masseto warn voters of the perils of Newt. The Republican Party has rarely seemed more divided, and at the heart of those divisions is a disconnect between Republican elites and the voting base over the crucial issue of electability. Ironically, it is a disconnect that the elites are themselves partly responsible for creating.
Electability, of course, has long been Mitt Romney's trump card, buttressed by a long series of general election polls showing him as the strongest candidate against Barack Obama. Beyond the polls, Romney best fits the entrenched Beltway conventional wisdom that candidates perceived as more moderate do best in close presidential elections. At the same time, most Republican opinion leaders think Gingrich could be a general election disaster, thanks to his long record of erratic public and private behavior and a personality that has often seemed unattractive to everyone other than stone partisans.
National Review's editors tried to make it plain two days ago:
Amid all the tumult of the last 18 years there has been this constant: Gingrich has never been popular. Polls have never shown more than 43 percent of the public viewing him favorably at any point in his career. Gingrich backers say that he is inspiring. What he mostly seems to inspire is opposition.
But actual voters don't seem to have gotten the memo. Exit polls in South Carolina showed that Gingrich beat Romney soundly (by a 51-37 margin) among the 45% of primary voters who said "can defeat Obama" was the candidate quality they valued most. The latest PPP poll of Florida, which gives Gingrich a 38 to 33 lead over Romney, shows the two candidates tied at 37 percent in terms of who has the best chance of beating Obama.
Rank-and-file voters, of course, do not typically spend time pouring over general-election polls, and likely they tend to view their own preferred candidate as most electable without taking polling date into account. (They also may not particularly trust polls, with the wild gyrations of primary polls this year perhaps proving them right.)
So something else may be going on to buttress broad-based assessments of Gingrich's electability among non-elites. One theory, recently aired by Jonathan Chait, is that the regular drumbeat of conservative propaganda treating Obama as a national disaster and an ideological extremist (sort of a combination of Jimmy Carter and George McGovern) has convinced Republican voters that conventional electability is no longer relevant. What's needed isn't a reasoned appeal to undecided voters, but an assault against the forces conspiring to prop up Obama.
Gingrich doesn't only benefit from this conviction--it's at the center of his sales pitch.
A Newt-Obama debate would be a chance to expose the baleful realities of the president's record and his un-American values. And voters would not be the only ones persuaded--one of Gingrich's blogger fans suggested that even Obama himself might succumb to Newt's powerful logic and communications skills:
[W]e need Newt as the nominee [because] he's the candidate who has best been able to articulate just how bad Obama has been for the country. If he spent even an hour debating Obama, Obama would probably be convinced that his tenure has been a disaster.
This argument, unrealistic as it may seem, is in harmony with the conviction of ideologues everywhere that bold, uncompromising candidates have the power to conjure hidden majorities out of the morass of mushy-moderate politics. Indeed, some hard-core supporters of Howard Dean's 2004 candidacy expressed similar views. What's unusual is that such a baldly ideological argument has been wholly absorbed by the rank-and-file of a major political party, as evidenced by their decision to move further right in response to the two straight electoral defeats of 2006 and 2008. Of course, they were encouraged in this process by the explicitly ideological messaging of the conservative establishment, including media outlets like Fox News.
As a result, it is now a matter of fundamental faith among conservatives that the GOP went astray during the Bush years by betraying its conservative principles, competing with Democrats in the center, and blurring the differences between the two parties. The 2010 election results, which followed months of harsh Tea Party rhetoric in which virtually the entire GOP participated, seemed to confirm beyond reasonable doubt that lurching right is the way to win.
On the heels of that electoral success, the GOP rank-and-file is strongly disposed to project the move-righ-to-win doctrine onto 2012. In Gingrich some have seen a candidate who has positioned himself as the heir to movement conservative heroes from Goldwater on, and who has offered a very specific vision of how he will achieve that moment of national satori, when a conservative electorate finds its unapologetic champion. After the two Florida debates, it's possible Gingrich's case for being an invincible debater is now losing credibility; if so, his threat to GOP elites could lose steam as well. If not, the last hope of National Review and its co-conspiratorsis to convince Republican voters--who have spent the past four years hearing that far-right rhetoric--that a moderate Mormon is more electable than a strident ideologue. If they're unsuccessful, they have no one but themselves to blame.
by James Vega, January 27, 2012 09:51 AM EST
In a New York Times Op-ed piece oday Pew Research Center President Andrew Kohut makes a critical distinction between American attitudes toward "income inequality" and "unfairness"
...while Americans are hearing more and more about class conflict, there is little indication that they are increasingly divided along these lines. People don't necessarily want to take money from the wealthy; they just want a better chance to get rich themselves. They care about policies that give everyone a fair shot -- a distinction that candidates in both parties should understand as they head into the 2012 campaigns.
...A Gallup poll last month found 54 percent believing that income inequality was an "acceptable part of our economic system" -- a slight increase, in fact, over the 45 percent that held that view back in 1998....What's different these days is that a despondent public, struggling with difficult times and an uncertain future, is upset over a perceived lack of fairness in public policy. For example, 61 percent of Americans now say the economic system in this country unfairly favors the wealthy.
Although the strong support Occupy Wall Street received might, at first glance, seem to support the view that Americans want income redistribution, it really doesn't. What Occupy was challenging that deeply resonated with many observers was the concentrated economic and political power of the 1% and their ability to use that power to "rig the game" in their favor and against the 99%.
As Kohut notes:
Pew's surveys in recent years present a detailed picture of these frustrations. One major complaint is tax policy: Dissatisfaction with the tax system has grown over the past decade, but the focus is not on how much respondents themselves pay, but rather on the perception that the wealthy are simply not paying their fair share. Just 11 percent of Americans say they are bothered by the amount they pay, while 57 percent of respondents say they are bothered by what they believe are unfairly low amounts paid by the wealthy.
...The issue here is not about class envy. Rather, it's a perception that government policies are skewed toward helping the already wealthy and powerful. While a December Gallup poll found few respondents wanting the government to attempt to reduce the income gap between rich and poor, 70 percent said it was important for the government to increase opportunities for people to get ahead. What the public wants is not a war on the rich but more policies that promote opportunity.
In a related NYT piece Stanley Fish echoes the same point:
The difference between equality and fairness can be illustrated by considering the issue of Mitt Romney's taxes. In the eyes of most Americans, it is O.K. that Mitt Romney makes more money than they do; there's no demand for the equalizing of income so that he can be brought down to their level. But it is not O.K. (or at least the Democrats will argue) for Mitt Romney to be paying a lower tax rate than his housecleaner. It's unfair. So inequalities that arise from the unequal abilities of people and even from the unequal distribution of luck and birth are all right; but the kind of unfairness that occurs when someone plays by different rules than the rules you are held to isn't...
This is a critical distinction for politics and vital for 2012. As Fish correctly notes:
President Obama can take the fairness mantra all the way to the bank -- and to a second term.
by Ed Kilgore, January 26, 2012 06:49 PM EST
Some of you may have noticed that today I took over primary blogging responsibilities (at least during weekdays) at the Washington Monthly's Political Animal site. It was a solid opportunity to have a greater impact on daily political discussions. But I wanted to let you know I will remain as Managing Editor here at TDS, which will continue to pursue its mission of promoting civil, empirically based discussion of strategic issues important to Democrats. We'll have plenty of fresh content, particularly as this election year intensifies.
by J. P. Green, January 26, 2012 04:20 AM EST
Being chosen to deliver the opposition party's rebuttal to the President's State of the Union Address is a mixed blessing under the best of circumstances. It's a tip of the hat to the status of the designee, but it's not always so easy to look good when your assignment is to go as relentlessly negative as possible. Despite some of the pundit gush, Gov. Mitch Daniel's speech was one of the most dreary, joyless SOTU rebuttals ever. This is the face of the GOP's future? See Rachel Maddow's hilarious take-down here.
As long as you're noodling about Maddow's website, might as well watch her shred Politifact. Krugman agrees, elaborates.
For more credible fact-checking, Daniels gets a well-deserved spanking from FactCheck.org's Lori Robertson.
Terry Greene Sterling has an excellent report, "Obama and the Dems' Strategy to Win in Arizona: Heavy Courtship of Latinos " at The Daily Beast. Sterling notes "the wildly popular Arizona "citizenship clinics" sponsored by the social-justice nonprofit, Mi Familia Vota, and the Spanish-language television network, Univision" and adds "Latinos make up about 30 percent of Arizona's population though historically have low voter turnout. But the "sleeping giant," galvanized by what it sees as racist legislation and state policy, recently flexed its muscle.Hispanics were a key force behind two recent political coups--the recall-election defeat of immigration law sponsor and Tea Party Republican state Sen. Russell Pearce, and a Latino firefighter's trouncing of an established Anglo politico for a Phoenix City Council seat."
Harold Meyerson nails the economic nitty-gritty of Obama's SOTU address.
A new Wall St. Journal/NBC News poll has very good news for President Obama and Democrats: "Some 30% believed the country was headed in the right direction, up eight percentage points from a month ago. Some 60% said the country was on the wrong track, down from 69% in December..." As Sara Murray and Janet Hook report at the WSJ, the poll "raised caution signs for Mr. Romney's strategy of putting the economy at the center of his campaign...Partial results from the poll, released Wednesday, found voters feeling more positively about the economy and of Mr. Obama's handling of it."
The long-range implications of the Citizens United decision are even worse than you thought.
Larry J. Sabato, Kyle Kondik and Geoffrey Skelley discuss "The Republicans' Electoral College Newt-Mare" at Sabato's Crystal Ball. Their article provides color-coded maps demonstrating the disastrous potential of Newt's nomination. Say the authors: "Under this map, all of those states -- Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin -- would be tough territory for Gingrich. If his candidacy were a disaster, those new Republican gerrymanders could unravel. The close battle for the Senate could also be affected -- Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Ohio and Virginia all have competitive Senate races this year, and all of those states get bluer on our map under a hypothetical Gingrich candidacy."
Ron Brownstein sorts it all out at National Journal in "Romney's Florida Formula: Return to Divide and Conquer," discusses Mitt's resurgence and argues, "...To overcome Romney in Florida, Gingrich must consolidate the party's populist wing more effectively than he's doing so far. And, especially since Gingrich is being outspent so badly in the state, his best, and perhaps last, opportunity to do that will come when he steps on the stage in Jacksonville Thursday night." Expect mayhem.
by staff, January 25, 2012 10:52 AM EST
Dial testing and follow-up focus groups with 50 swing voters in Denver, Colorado show that President Obama's populist defense of the middle class and their priorities in his State of the Union scored with voters. The President generated strong responses on energy, education and foreign policy, but most important, he made impressive gains on a range of economic measures. These swing voters, even the Republicans, responded enthusiastically to his call for a "Buffet Rule" that would require the wealthiest Americans to pay their fair share. As one participant put it, "I agree with his tax reform - the 1 percent should shoulder more of the burden than the other 99 percent. He [Obama] talked about being all for one, one for all - that really resonated for me." These dial focus groups make it very clear that defending further tax cuts for those at the top of the economic spectrum puts Republicans in Congress and on the Presidential campaign trail well outside of the American mainstream.
These voters overwhelmingly liked what they heard from Obama-- even those who voted against him in 2008 appreciated the address. But they continued to show deep skepticism that the President would be able to translate these words into actions. The more Democratic participants mostly blamed Republican obstructionism while the more Republican participants insisted that Obama might talk a good game, but his actions in office did not reflect the words in this speech. But participants across the political spectrum all agreed that Washington is broken and that progress on the important issues would be difficult until Congress addresses the corrupting influence of lobbyists and special interests.
This was not the easiest audience for Obama; although slightly more participants voted for him than McCain in 2008, it was a significantly Republican-leaning group (44 percent Republican, 32 percent Democratic). At the outset, these voters were split 50/50 on Obama's job performance and just 50 percent gave him a favorable personal rating. But the President gained ground after the speech; his job rating rose 8 points and his personal standing jumped 16 points, to 66 percent favorable.
by staff, January 25, 2012 10:43 AM EST
(Cross-posted from the Huffington Post)
In his 2012 State of the Union Address, Barack Obama issued a ringing call for government to take the lead in rebuilding an economy that works for all Americans and to revive the promise of a more cooperative politics that carried him to the White House in 2008. While many of the specific measures he urged are likely to resonate with the public, it remains to be seen whether he can persuade the majority of Americans to set aside their long-festering mistrust of government and give him a mandate to pursue an aggressive policy agenda.
What about the specifics? In advance of President Obama's State of the Union address, I laid out five things to listen for. Against that template, let's look more closely at what he said.
#1: For better or worse, an incumbent president's record is at the heart of his reelection prospects. He cannot run away from that record; he must run on it. So what is the narrative that links the crises of 2008-2009 and the disappointments of 2010-2011 to our hopes for a brighter future?
Toward the beginning of his speech, Obama offered his account of our recent economic history. Even before the recession, he said, jobs began going overseas while wages and incomes for most American were stagnating. And then the crisis hit, sparked by mortgages sold to people who couldn't afford them and inadequately regulated financial institutions who made bad bets with other people's money. He reminded the country that in the six months before he took office, the economy lost four million jobs, and another four million in the early months of his presidency. Since then, however, the private sector -- led by manufacturing -- has created millions of new jobs. And so, he concluded, "The state of our Union is getting stronger. And we've come too far to turn back now." Rather than changing course, the task before us is to "build on this momentum."
#2: The American people know that the U.S. economy has changed fundamentally and that the "success story" of the future will differ from those in the past. But what is that story?
In broad terms, Obama is betting on the continued revival of U.S. manufacturing, backed by targeted public investments in sectors such as clean energy and infrastructure. As he has before, he called for a major effort in the areas of education and training as well as support for basic research. While globalization is here to stay, he added, we cannot allow our competitors to victimize us with unfair trade practices, and he advocated a new Trade Enforcement Unit that will be charged with investigating "unfair trade practices in countries like China." And to accelerate domestic job creation, he urged corporate tax reform that ends subsidies for outsourcing while reducing taxes for companies that remain, and hire, in America.
#3: The plight of hard-working Americans -- those struggling to remain in the middle class and those struggling to get there -- must be front and center. How did the president frame his appeal to this bedrock of our economy and society?
As he did in his Kansas speech last month, Obama invoked a country and economy where "everyone gets a fair shot, everyone does their fair share, and everyone plays by the same set of rules." Symbolizing these principles, he called for tax reforms that follow the "Buffett rule" -- namely, "If you make more than $1 million a year, you should not pay less than 30 percent in taxes." At the same time, the president virtually dropped the theme of inequality, which had figured centrally in the Kansas speech. This was a wise shift: in America's public culture, the principle of fair opportunity is more powerful than is equality of wealth and income.
#4: Public trust in our governing institutions is at or near all-time lows. To the extent that Obama's agenda revolves around an activist government, how did he seek to persuade Americans that its policies can actually improve their lives?
While acknowledging public cynicism about government and calling for reforms of Congress and the executive branch, the president appeared to be hoping that the content of his economic agenda would trump doubts about the effectiveness of the public sector. He may well be underestimating the intensity of negative public sentiment and overestimating its willingness to accept what many will portray as a new burst of activism.
#5: Barack Obama is not just a candidate; he's the president, and the people expect him to speak as the president. How did he balance his strategy of drawing the line with the Republicans against the imperative of conducting himself as the president of all the people?
For the most part, Obama addressed the country as president rather than party leader. While giving no ground on his key priorities, he spoke of differences between the parties more in sorrow than in anger and tried to identify some common ground, even on the core issue of the role of government. He called on everyone to "lower the temperature in this town" and to "end the notion that the two parties must be locked in a perpetual campaign of mutual destruction." And he observed that "when we act together, there is nothing the United States of America can't achieve.
Throughout his speech, Obama invoked the principles of fairness, collective action, and common purpose. Conspicuously absent was the theme on which the Republican Party rests its case -- namely, individual liberty -- a contrast that prefigures a 2012 general election waged over clashing partisan orientations as well as competing accounts of the president's record.
by J. P. Green, January 25, 2012 07:50 AM EST
In his live blogging of the SOTU, Andrew Sullivan was mostly unimpressed with President Obama's speech, which drew rave reviews elsewhere. While many Obama supporters focus on his formidable public speaking skills, Sullivan sees Obama's great strength more in his 'long game' strategy.
Sullivan's insightful "How Obama's Long Game Will Outsmart His Critics" featured in a controversial Newsweek cover story, as well as in The Daily Beast, made a compelling case that President Obama is playing a very shrewd hand, much to the dismay of his critics, left and right. As Sullivan says of Obama's critics:
...I don't even recognize their description of Obama's first term in any way. The attacks from both the right and the left on the man and his policies aren't out of bounds. They're simply--empirically--wrong....given the enormity of what he inherited, and given what he explicitly promised, it remains simply a fact that Obama has delivered in a way that the unhinged right and purist left have yet to understand or absorb. Their short-term outbursts have missed Obama's long game--and why his reelection remains, in my view, as essential for this country's future as his original election in 2008.
Sullivan notes his own disappointments with a few of Obama's policies, then recounts the Romney/GOP litany of attacks and responds with a description of the mess Obama inherited from Bush:
...None of this is even faintly connected to reality--and the record proves it. On the economy, the facts are these. When Obama took office, the United States was losing around 750,000 jobs a month. The last quarter of 2008 saw an annualized drop in growth approaching 9 percent. This was the most serious downturn since the 1930s, there was a real chance of a systemic collapse of the entire global financial system, and unemployment and debt--lagging indicators--were about to soar even further. No fair person can blame Obama for the wreckage of the next 12 months, as the financial crisis cut a swath through employment. Economies take time to shift course.
Then Obama's response:
But Obama did several things at once: he continued the bank bailout begun by George W. Bush, he initiated a bailout of the auto industry, and he worked to pass a huge stimulus package of $787 billion...All these decisions deserve scrutiny. And in retrospect, they were far more successful than anyone has yet fully given Obama the credit for. The job collapse bottomed out at the beginning of 2010, as the stimulus took effect. Since then, the U.S. has added 2.4 million jobs. That's not enough, but it's far better than what Romney would have you believe, and more than the net jobs created under the entire Bush administration. In 2011 alone, 1.9 million private-sector jobs were created, while a net 280,000 government jobs were lost. Overall government employment has declined 2.6 percent over the past 3 years. (That compares with a drop of 2.2 percent during the early years of the Reagan administration.) To listen to current Republican rhetoric about Obama's big-government socialist ways, you would imagine that the reverse was true. It isn't.
Despite the failure of Obama's most optimistic recovery projections to materialize as quickly as he had hoped, Sullivan explains that "the stimulus did exactly what it was supposed to do. It put a bottom under the free fall. It is not an exaggeration to say it prevented a spiral downward that could have led to the Second Great Depression."
Despite the most treasured of Republican conceits that theirs is the party of tax and spending cuts, Sullivan clarifies Obama's record:
...Not only did he agree not to sunset the Bush tax cuts for his entire first term, he has aggressively lowered taxes on most Americans. A third of the stimulus was tax cuts, affecting 95 percent of taxpayers; he has cut the payroll tax, and recently had to fight to keep it cut against Republican opposition...
As for spending, Obama again trumps the GOP record:
...His spending record is also far better than his predecessor's. Under Bush, new policies on taxes and spending cost the taxpayer a total of $5.07 trillion. Under Obama's budgets both past and projected, he will have added $1.4 trillion in two terms. Under Bush and the GOP, nondefense discretionary spending grew by twice as much as under Obama.
As Sullivan sums up their respective claims to fiscal rectitude:
...You could easily make the case that Obama has been far more fiscally conservative than his predecessor...Obama has had to govern under the worst recession since the 1930s, and Bush, after the 2001 downturn, governed in a period of moderate growth. It takes work to increase the debt in times of growth, as Bush did. It takes much more work to constrain the debt in the deep recession Bush bequeathed Obama.
Sullivan also sets the record straight about the economics of 'Obamacare':
Continue reading "Sullivan's 'Obama's Long Game' Article Rattles GOP" »
by J. P. Green, January 24, 2012 11:05 AM EST
Just to make it clear what kind of future they envision for America, Republicans have chosen union-busting Governor Mitch Daniels to respond to President Obama's state of the union address. Meanwhile, workers take their protest against Indiana's so-called 'right-to-work' law to the home of the Republican speaker of the Indiana House, Brian Bosma. Video clip here.
Dana Bash, CNN's senior congressional correspondent, reports on "GOP angst: Gingrich's rise could be their downfall." A typical quote unearthed by Bash "If he's the nominee, it's a disaster. There is no way to sugar-coat it," said one GOP congressional strategist describing the tension after Gingrich won South Carolina." At CNN, see also James Carville's memo to the Republican establishment, "You have a disaster on your hands."
If you wondered if there was something a little, well, odd about the over-the-top audience responses to Newt's every comment in recent debates, you are not alone, as Rachel Weiner notes in The Fixx.
Democrats don't have to worry much about losing the Jewish vote, according to Peter Beinhart, writing at The Daily Beast: "Every four years, Republicans vow to use Israel to pry Jews from their nearly century-old allegiance to the Democratic Party. And every four years, they fail. The reason is that only about 10 percent of Jews actually vote on Israel...Most American Jews don't really vote as Jews at all...They vote as secularists...Jews aren't that far left on economics, but on the issues where secular and traditionalist Americans clash--abortion, church and state, gay rights--their secularism pushes them into the Democrats' arms."
New poll has vulture capitalist and bomb-thrower in stat-tie in Sunshine state. Talking Points Memo average of three polls has Newt ahead by 6.2.
Greg Sargent reports on a new WaPo-ABC news poll which indicates that Romney is tanking with blue collar voters."...Among whites with incomes of under $50,000: His negative numbers among them have jumped 20 points, from 29 percent to 49 percent. "
Demos has a new report, updating the status of voter-suppression in Florida and other states, and concluding "Congress, clear-sighted state legislators, the U.S. Department of Justice, election officials, voting rights activists and concerned Americans must continue to fight against vote suppression proposals and for legislation that affirms all citizens' fundamental right to vote and have those votes counted."
Susan Saulny's New York Times article, "As Race Moves to Florida, Facing Political Implications of a Housing Crisis," discusses how the crisis spells trouble for Mitt and Newt, in particular.
If President Obama is looking for a well-stated idea or two for his SOTU, he could do worse than check out Robert Borosage's suggestions at his Campaign for America's Future blog. He should also read Robert Reich's "Jobs Won't Come Back to America Until the Government Pushes Greedy Corporate Executives to Invest at Home" at Alternet.
by Ed Kilgore, January 23, 2012 11:15 AM EST
This item is crossposted from The New Republic.
After Newt Gingrich's smashing victory in South Carolina on Saturday, here's my wagering advice: You can still put your money on Mitt, but don't bet the farm. Not this year.
The results for Mitt Romney weren't pretty. After finishing a poor fourth in both Iowa and New Hampshire, Newt carried all but three SC counties (including Nikki Haley's Lexington County and Jim DeMint's Greenville County), every congressional district, and every region of the state.
But the really bad news for Mitt is in the exit polls, which show that his support resides in precisely that narrow corner of the Republican electorate least in sync with the party's conservative zeitgeist. Romney carried voters with postgraduate educations or incomes over $200,000; self-identified moderates and residents of core urban areas; opponents of the Tea Party and supporters of legalized abortion. And Romney's past pattern of being a solid second-choice option for voters preferring someone else may now be in danger: Only 38% of SC voters said they would "enthusiastically" support him if he is the nominee, a number uncomfortably close to his actual 28% of the vote.
Romney's vote in SC was also alarmingly concentrated among voters who made up their minds in 2011. In other words, he did not campaign very well in the state, despite a lot of advantages in terms of local party endorsements and money. (For all the talk of Gingrich's SuperPAC expenditures in the state, Mitt's SuperPAC at a minimum matched them, and overall pro-Romney spending on television ads probably just about doubled the pro-Newt air war.)
Everything about the dynamics of the South Carolina race suggests that Gingrich's attacks on Romney as an out-of-touch corporate pirate meshed smoothly with weaknesses Romney himself exposed, in his clumsy handling of publicity about his missing tax returns, his offshore wealth, and his vast speaking fees. Meanwhile, the success Mitt had in Iowa (with a major assist from Ron Paul) in encouraging conservative doubts about Gingrich's commitment to The Cause was obliterated by the former Speaker's stunning ability to get conservatives to identify criticism of his record or of his personal life with the hated partisan and ideological enemy--the media elite. Some of this was perhaps fortuitous: Gingrich will probably never again enjoy such useful foils in televised debates as Fox News' Juan Williams or CNN's John King, and we are approaching another phase in the nomination contest with few scheduled candidate debates. But by luck or by design, Newt is beginning to build a Teflon shield around his stormy past, reminiscent of those old-time southern segregationists who were able to discredit questions about corruption or misgovernment by attributing them to the common enemy "up north." Romney is not benefitting from a similar sense of partisan and ideological solidarity.
Yet even if Gingrich can continue to preempt--or as in South Carolina, exploit--criticism of his past, and can also continue to convince primary voters to ignore general election polls and imagine him vanquishing Barack Obama in debates, the landscape is about to get much more difficult. The Florida primary on January 31 offers him a chance to do some more lasting damage to Romney, and all but eliminate talk of Mitt's "inevitability." But it's a very expensive state, and unless Sheldon Adelson can be talked into really loosening the purse strings, Gingrich will have no prayer of remaining competitive financially. Romney's Restore Our Future SuperPAC has already spent $4.8 million in Florida, mostly for anti-Gingrich ads, and Mitt's campaign has probably banked an early lead among the nearly 200,000 Floridians who have already cast absentee or early votes. Moreover, Gingrich will still have to contend with competition from Ron Paul and Rick Santorum, neither of whom are showing signs of getting out of the race (though Paul is likely to concentrate on small-turnout caucus states, and it's hard to imagine Santorum raising the funds to compete seriously in Florida).
Will the surge Gingrich has already exhibited in national polls during the last week carry over to Florida? He better pray it does. Without an upset win in Florida, Gingrich faces a hiatus in the campaign that could prove deadly, as party elites become alarmed about the consequences of an extended contest, and the many skeletons in his closet threaten to burst into view. Newt is already looking at an almost certain loss on February 28 in Romney's native state of Michigan, and is already in the hole for Super Tuesday on March 6, thanks to his failure to get on the ballot in Virginia.
So it's do-or-die for Gingrich in the Sunshine State. And for Mitt Romney, it's time to play error-free ball before the unlikely double-rise-from-the-grave of his unlikely rival begins to convince party leaders that he's no better than zombie bait.
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Below you will find recent items published at this site that we feel have significant continuing value.
Ed Kilgore
Managing Editor
This item by James Vega was originally published on January 15, 2012.
Last weeks' story -- reported in Huffpo and elsewhere -- about a group of James O'Keefe's confederates who attempted to vote in the New Hampshire primary using falsified ID's "in order to prove voter fraud is possible" has not gotten the attention it deserves.
In principle, the perpetrators' actions are no different than walking into a church and robbing the minister at gunpoint (while covertly filming the crime) in order to "prove" the need for metal detectors in church doorways.
As it happens, the perpetrators in O'Keefe's criminal conspiracy didn't even get away with it. A poll watcher recognized one of them as using a false ID and alerted the authorities. The debate is now whether O'Keefe's criminal "perps" should be prosecuted for committing a serious crime that carries a jail sentence.
But the deeper issue that has not gotten any attention yet is the profound moral red line that the O'Keefe gang has now crossed. To understand it, one just has to look back at the past.
The history of political extremism in the 20th century offers a vast number of examples of actions by groups traditionally called "provocateurs" - extremists who pretended to be members of some opposite group and then committed crimes in their name in order to discredit them. In American history the most extensive use of this tactic was by anti-union forces in the 1930's who infiltrated union demonstrations and then attacked police or bystanders in order to provoke a violent clash and police crackdown on the demonstrators. Another example were covert payments by segregationists to Black teenagers to throw rocks and bottles during some civil rights demonstrations.
The inescapable fact is that the moment that any group decides it has the moral right to commit covert illegal acts in order to "prove they are possible," it then becomes morally reasonable and even obligatory to take the next step and commit illegal acts while pretending to be members of some other group because "our opponents are going to do it anyway; we're just exposing the real truth about what they are going to do."
Just consider how small a step it would have been for the O'Keefe gang to have used African-American or Latino fraudsters and then release the video as proof that actual voter fraud had occurred, rather than as proof that fraud is technically possible. Even if the video at some point identified the fraudsters as actually working for a conservative group, once the video began to circulate on the internet, the distinction between "staged" voter fraud and "actual" voter fraud would be completely lost.
In fact, this is already happening with the video filmed by the O'Keefe gang. On many conservative sites the video is being presented as documentation of actual voter fraud not "staged" voter fraud. Before long, tens of thousands of people will be passionately citing this video as "smoking-gun proof" that actual voter fraud is occuring.
(O'Keefe has deliberatied encouraged this kind of confusion about his videos and has also directly falsified them in the past. Images of the famous "pimp suit" he claimed to have worn during covert taped interviews with members of ACORN were actually edited into his videos after the fact, dramatically altering the viewers impression of what the people being interviewed were seeing. Any moral line between adding phony pimp suits to a video after the fact and hiring African-Americans or Latinos to act as fraudsters is quite literally impossible for normally honest people to distinguish).
Right-wing "provocateur" actions of even greater malevolence are already being committed in the Wisconsin recall campaign. Opponents of the campaign to recall Governor Scott Walker are openly boasting on conservative websites of misrepresenting themselves as petition gatherers for the recall and throwing out the signatures they collect or of providing misleading information to people who wish to sign. Other opponents brag that they have deliberately signed petitions with false names in order to invalidate the petitions and the recall process in general.
There is no reason to mince words: these are nothing less than right-wing extremist attacks on American democracy itself. The perpetrators can be called with perfect justice both "subversives" and "un-American." Democrats should not only demand that they be punished to the maximum extent of the law but that conservatives and Republicans should publically denounce these acts and join in the demand for forceful prosecution. Anything less on their part will represent a shameful wink of tacit approval and repugnant evidence of moral complicity.
This item by J.P. Green was originally published on January 11, 2012.
Watching video clips of Romney's flip-flopping on just about every major issue is a tiring experience. But his lurid history of pandering to exploit the latest trends in political idiocy should not distract voters from the raw truth of what he stands for today, which is an all-out capitulation to the agenda of the vulture capitalists.
The Nation editor Katrina vanden Heuval explains it well in her WaPo op-ed, "Extremist in Pinstripes." Vanden Heuval reviews Romney's extremist positions on social issues, immigration, increasing the military budget and notes his call to push the Supreme Court even further to the right with his appointments.
She provides a disturbing account of Romney's blase certitude in support of draconian cuts in Pell grants, Medicaid and food stamps, children's health programs and aid to people with disabilities to "give multinationals a tax holiday" and give millionaires a nearly $300K tax cut, and adds:
This shouldn't come as a surprise. Romney, as Mike Huckabee once famously noted, "looks like the guy who laid you off." At Bain, he was the guy who fired you. In a review of 77 major deals that Bain capital did when Romney headed the firm, the Wall Street Journal found that "22% [of the businesses that Bain invested in] either filed for bankruptcy reorganization or closed their doors by the end of the eighth year after Bain first invested, sometimes with substantial job losses." Of course, Bain produced remarkable returns for its investors, including Romney.
Romney's flip-flopping proclivities are the easy target for commentators and pundits. But no one should be deluded by speculation that Romney will flip back toward moderate conservatism, if elected. As vanden Heuval argues,
...This isn't the plan of a moderate. The conservative garb isn't something Romney has donned for the primaries. These policies...are consistent with Romney's background as a corporate raider. And as his fundraising shows, they play well in the plush offices of big finance where Romney made his fortune. He is a champion for the 1 percent, peddling a program that will ensure that working Americans bear the cost for the mess left by Wall Street's extremes while the buccaneer bankers, corporate raiders and private equity gamblers are free to go back to preying on America.
Vanden Heuval's article should provoke a sobering reassessment among those who have entertained the fantasy that Romney would govern as a moderate. As E. J. Dionne points out, chameleon Romney has proven highly adept as deluding his fellow Republicans across the party's ideological spectrum that he reflects their views. Dems should not be so gullible, for there is every reason to believe his election would unleash the worst elements of vulture capitalism.
This item by J.P. Green was originally published on January 2, 2012.
In his The Plum Line column, Greg Sargent reports on "The GOP's game plan to end Obama's presidency," based on "the book," a 500-page memo the GOP has compiled, featuring the President's quotes and videos the Republican plan to use against him. Sagent explains:
National Republicans who are putting together the battle plan to defeat Obama face a dilemma. How do they attack Obama's presidency as a failure, given that voters understand just how catastrophic a situation he inherited, continue to like Obama personally, and see him as a historical figure they want to succeed?...The answer is simple: Republicans will make the argument that Obama fell short of expectations as he himself defined them.
...The game plan is to remind Americans of the sense they had of Obama as a transformative figure in order to claim that he fell short of the promise his election seemed to embody:
One reason for the strategy, notes Sargent, is President Obama's likability. The GOP apparently is concerned that personalized attacks against the President could backfire, because polls indicate that many who disapprove of his record like him nonetheless.
The "Obama vs. Obama" strategy is rooted in a double-barreled assault: "Republicans will now attack him for failing to transcend partisanship and achieve transformative change." Sargent elaborates on the strategy's built-in weakness :
...Obama had barely been sworn into office before the national Republican leadership mounted a concerted and determined effort to prevent any of Obama's solutions to our severe national problems from passing, even as they openly declared they were doing so only to destroy him politically. Republicans have admitted on the record that deliberately denying Obama any bipartisan support for, well, anything at all was absolutely crucial to prevent voters from concluding that Obama had successfully forged ideological common ground over the way out of the myriad disasters Obama inherited from them.
Further, polls indicate that the public is not likely to be hustled by the GOP faulting Obama for inadequate bipartisanship, especially since the president has taken so much heat from inside his party about excessive bipartisanship. Most voters now know that Republicans have no intention of extending anything resembling a bipartisan spirit toward the President. Blaming the President for the failure of bipartisanship is a very tough sell.
The second prong of the GOP strategy, blaming the President for the failure to achieve transformative change, is also made problematic by the public's awareness of Republicans' refusal to negotiate in good faith on anything. Also, whether you like the Affordable Care Act or not, Dems can make a compelling case that the legislation is, in fact, transformative. Dems, however, have failed thus far to vigorously defend the legislation and 'sell' the extraordinary benefits of the act for millions of citizens. It's about turning the ACA into a political asset, instead of a source of concern.
In terms of the economy, Sargent notes another major flaw in the GOP strategy:
While it's true that disapproval of Obama on the economy is running high over government's failure to fix the economy, the independents and moderates who will decide the presidential election agree with Obama's overall fiscal vision -- his jobs creation proposals and insistence on taxing the wealthy to pay for them. They also recognize that Republicans are more to blame than Dems for government's failure to implement those proposals...
If the Republicans stick with the flawed strategy of 'the Book,' Democrats shouldn't have much trouble crafting a persuasive response. In a way, GOP complaints about the failure of bipartisanship and the inability to create transformative change call attention to their responsibility for both failures. Instead of 'Obama vs. Obama,' their strategy could end up looking like 'Republicans vs. the GOP.'
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