The 1960 campaign between Nixon and Kennedy featured the
first televised debate between presidential hopefuls. Nixon had been campaigning all day before the
debate, he refused to wear makeup before going on stage and on black and white
television his beard stubble was prominent.
Kennedy, by contrast, rested and prepared extensively beforehand and
appeared confident and relaxed during the debate. Immediately following it
Nixon’s mother called him to ask if he was sick. He wasn’t, but after seeing the effects of
his performance he may have been, as Kennedy’s poll numbers inched ahead of
Nixon going from a slight deficit to a slight lead. The debate had 70 million viewers. People
who watched the debate on television overwhelmingly believed Kennedy had won,
while radio listeners (a smaller audience) believed Nixon had won. A stark example of how appearance and style
can overwhelm substance in an election which is, at its core, a popularity
contest.
Fast forward to the current Republican primary and the
battle between the “front-runner” Mitt Romney and newly surging Rick
Santorum. When it comes to style versus
substance, Santorum has all the style, while Romney has all the stiffness of a
1960’s Dick Nixon. I first made this observation
following the Iowa caucuses and watching the two candidates “victory”
speeches. Neither candidate used a
teleprompter (a device the Republican party has tied so closely to Obama that
it may equal political suicide for one of their own to use it, even though it’s
a practical and useful device). Anyways,
Romney’s speech came off as a studdered mess.
He spit out catch lines about building the economy mixed with attacks on
Obama, but all in an unorganized and disconnected mess. He didn’t tell a story and he didn’t tie
anything together with a theme or his vision for the country. Contrast that with Rick Santorum’s
speech. Rick told the story of how his
grandfather, an Italian immigrant, mined coal to put food on the table for his
family. How Rick grew up in a home of
blue collar values and a blue collar work ethic and that those are the values
that he stands for. I’m a staunch
Democrat and I found myself enthralled by Rick Santorum’s speech.
Voters want honesty, authenticity and character. Santorum exudes these values while Romney struggles
to define what he stands for. Rick
Santorum may know that the media is going to roast him if he says what’s in his
heart of hearts, but guess what, he says it anyway. He doesn’t care what the media does. Rick says what he believes and believes what
he says. He doesn’t stray from his
values the instant a new poll comes out.
Contrast that with “Multiple Choice Mitt.” Romney typifies the type of politician who
caters every speech to his audience and always tells you what you want to
hear. Flip-flopping gold. Rick knows his views on homosexuals and women
are old fashioned and unpopular, but he believes in them and he stands by them. I’m a Democrat and I disagree with many of
his policy views, but he is an authentic man and I like him. Mitt Romney is a robot.
So why do I think Rick is the better choice to beat Obama? A
few reasons. Let’s start with the
current results: Rick’s won four states and Mitt’s won four states, but what’s
more telling is that Rick leads Mitt by double digits in Michigan. Harking back
to the Al Gore rule: if you can’t win your own state, you’re a loser. Mitt was born in Michigan and his Dad was a
popular governor there and now Rick’s beating him there. This could mean that Rick would perform
stronger in key Rust Belt swing states like Ohio and PA. Next, Rick can energize the Republican
base. As I stated in a previous article,
the Republican party is “severely” lacking enthusiasm for the “severely”
conservative Mitt Romney. He’s the “best
of the worst” candidate. Republicans don’t
get excited over him, they just think he has a better chance to beat Obama than
anybody else, but that’s exactly what they said about John McCain and we all
know how that worked out. Santorum first
came to Congress running a low budget grass roots campaign and he’s done the
same thing in this election, tying the Romney Campaign-machine with states won,
while using half the resources. But more
importantly, Santorum can energize and capture the Tea Party enthusiasm of the
2010 elections. If anyone is “severely”
conservative it’s Rick, not Mitt.
Now this is a strategy choice the Republican’s will have to
make. They can try to grab independents
and the middle of the country by nominating Mitt or they can energize their
base and nominate Rick. Mitt isn’t gonna
get anyone excited, but if Obama falters, he may be able to catch those looking
to jump off the Obama ship. Rick
probably won’t catch those voters, but there is an important demographic he can
grab: the Reagan Democrats. White
suburbanites who are socially conservative yet fiscally liberal. Hillary Clinton Democrats. Independent Catholic males. Santorum may not get the gay vote, but let’s
face it, no election has ever turned on the gay vote. And Rick may not energize young people, but
young people don’t vote anyways and once Ron Paul is gone those voters will
either go to Obama, or not vote at all.
The chances of Mitt energizing young people is about the same odds as
him dropping into the 99%.
So to summarize, Rick is stronger than Romney for three key
reasons: 1st, he’s authentic, while Romney is fake, 2nd:
he can energize the Republican base more than Mitt, a sound strategy in general
elections especially given we are only two years removed from the Tea Party’s emergence
and 3rd: Rick can win middle class Catholics and Independents in the
rust belt. And even though he alienates
young people and homosexuals, an election has never, and may never, turn on
those demographics.
The true test will be what happens in Michigan. If Mitt comes back and wins Michigan I’ll eat
my words, but if Rick wins it, I will stand triumphant. If the economy continues to improve, neither
candidate will be able to beat Obama, but Rick stands a better chance. If the economy loses energy as an issue, Mitt
will not have a single leg to stand on, as he is the economic, business, candidate
and if that happens the Rep’s stand a better chance of going to war with Obama
on social issues and in that case Rick is the guy. Rick is a communicator. Even when it comes to his controversial
stances he has a great ability to explain them in common sense terms.
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