The Alternative History of Mitt Romney's Campaign, by the Man Who Killed It
Mitt Romney did all the things conservatives wanted him to do, and they're still not happy with him, because he hasn't managed to do those things in a way that would put him ahead of President Obama in the polls. After months of taking the advice of conservative bloggers and pundits — Romney picked Paul Ryan as his running mate, the entire Republican National Convention was built around mocking Obama's "you didn't build that" line, his spokespeople consistently clarified away any statement Romney has made that seemed out of sync with right-wing talking points on Obamacare, abortion, and immigration — and yet, according to poll averages, he is losing both nationally and in swing states. Someone must be to blame! And conservatives in the punditocracy are pretty sure it's not them.
The main scapegoat is Stuart Stevens, Romney's top strategist, both in and following a report posted Sunday by Politico's Mike Allen and Jim VandeHei suggesting the Romney campaign is in disarray. Stevens gets the blame for a convention speech that didn't mention the war or the troops, the Clint Eastwood speech, a cheesy bus tour idea, a message focused solely on the economy and how Obama has failed to fix it. Immediately following the story, Romney's campaign explained to a whole bunch of other news sites exactly how Romney's strategy is about to change. Those changes are:
Hot Air's Ed Morrissey notices that some of those things seem somewhat contradictory, and concludes that the Romney campaign is not struggling to come up with new ideas, but that "the media’s narrative-building apparatus is in disarray." However, he has to include conservative media in that disarray. Last week, the regular media wondered if Romney was doomed. Talk of the Romney campaign's new strategy or (strategies) comes as the conservative media has joined in on the doomsaying. But they do not see a single cause of Romney's struggle. Here are some disparate reasons for the doom, according to conservatives:
The Daily Beast's David Frum, who has been effectively ousted from the conservative movement, suggests the problem is not Romney's messaging, but his policies. A New York Times/ CBS News poll released Friday found that 77 percent of Americans want Medicare to stay as it is, rather than change it to "a system in which the government would provide seniors with a fixed amount of money toward purchasing private health insurance or Medicare insurance." That second option, which only 15 percent of those polled liked? That was Ryan's plan. The poll found a plurality would prefer the Bush tax cuts be extended only for those making less than $250,000 a year. The plurality thinks gays should be able to marry. The most unpopular Obama policy? Obamacare. Campaigning on that worked well for the Tea Party leading into the 2010 midterms and 58 percent want it repealed all or in part. But whenever Romney starts talking about that, he gets bogged down trying to explain how it's different than the Romneycare he passed (and still seems vaguely proud of) as Massachusetts governor. The problem with Romney right now is not that he's done one thing wrong. It's beginning to look like he and his supporters can't agree on one thing he should do right.
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Elspeth Reeve
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