Romney's Lament: He Blinded Me With Science
by
Larry Stein
Copyright 2012 Larry Stein,
All rights reserved.
Published in eBook format by eBookIt.com
ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-1149-1
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Obama's October (and September) Surprise
Commercial airways in the 60 days preceding the Presidential Election may not be a complete no fly zone for super PACs, but at a minimum flights will be limited, expensive, and difficult to change. Conventional wisdom is wrong. Super PACs will have less impact than expected.
Under campaign finance law television stations must give each presidential campaign reasonable access, freedom from censorship, and during the 60 days preceding the election, the lowest unit rate available. Neither super PACs, nor the political parties, enjoy these advantages. In fact a television station violates the law if a super PAC is offered a reduced advertising rate (See Federal Election Commission Advisory Opinion 2006-31). It would be an illegal campaign contribution for a station, e.g. Fox News, to offer a super PAC reduced rates.
The law should favor the President. Mitt is expected to catch more super PAC money, while the President will field more small contributions directly to his campaign. In the crucial run up to the election, a dollar from the President's campaign will buy more advertising than a dollar from a Romney super PAC.
Equally important is flexibility. In the closing days of a campaign resource allocation may change rapidly, a state may come into, or go out of play. Super PACs have no preferential access to airtime. With the expected deluge of political adds in battle ground states, as well as increased commercial adds during the start of the fall season, advertising time will be limited. To get on the air super PACs may have to commit, and lock in resources, earlier than the campaigns. Money may be wasted in states that are no longer battlegrounds. (To keep up on which states are battlegrounds, and other political news, checkout http://www.politicalwire.com)
Message flexibility is as important as geography. Campaigns may need to cut an ad at the last minute to confront a new issue. Since adds from a campaign are free from censorship, stations accept content without review. Ads from super PACs must be reviewed, which can delay airing of the ads.
The President's surprise is that, while, less money may be spent by him in the final days of the election, he will have as much, or more, advertising time in battleground states as the challenger.
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Chief Justice Roberts's Upholds the Moral Authority of the Supreme Court
Upholding the Affordable Health Care Act preserved the legacy of the Robert's Court. Harvard Law Professor Lawrence Tribe, who taught both the President and the Chief Justice, yesterday predicted that Justice Roberts would vote to uphold the law (although he expected a 6-3 decision joined by Justice Kennedy).
Court watchers focused on Justice Kennedy, as the possible swing vote, because of his occasional bouts of moderate judicial philosophy. Justice Robert's, as Professor Tribe understood, was the key because of his concern for the moral authority of the court.
The Supreme Court has at times had a liberal judicial philosophy and at times a conservative tilt. But after Bush v. Gore and Citizens United the Court teetered on the precipice of partisanship. The injudicious flirtation with the Tea Party by Justices Alioto and Scalia, exacerbated the problem. Combining dismantling of the President's health care plan with the other two decisions would have been an unholy trinity. The Supreme Court is designed to be above politics. That is the rational for lifetime tenure. Justice Robert's upholding of the individual mandate has institutional significance that equals the legal import of the decision.
Friday, June 29, 2012
Mitt Romney's campaign slogan is Thomas Dewey insipid, and yet, Tea Party insidious. As awful as it is, it may be the perfect prism for the campaign.
Romney is a bland candidate running as the non-Obama. His messaging is intentionally vague and empty. Even when he appears to drift into substance, such as his "First Day in Office" ads, it is an illusion. He is either, saying that he will repeal and remand acts of the president, or pointing out where the president failed. In a bad economy, trying to make the election a referendum on the incumbent is a good, but deathly boring, strategy.
But the slogan is also seeking to align with Birther Babylon, without having to actually enter the city. The innuendo is that the sitting president is not one of us. He is the other. We believe in America, he does not. Hopefully, this part of the message will fall as flat as Romney's rendition of "America the Beautiful".
Saturday, June 30, 2012
In his two electoral successes, beating Shannon O'Brien for governor and winning the Republican nomination, Romney has had the same ring strategy. He uses superior resources to out punch his opponent, with most of the blows at, or below, the belt. He out spent O'Brien by 50%. His advantage in the Republican primaries was far greater.
Obama is a prodigious fundraiser. His campaign will probably raise more money than Mitt's. Including super PACs, and other third parties, Romney will have the cash advantage. But campaign finance rules will negate part of this advantage (see my earlier post "Obama's October (and September) Surprise"). Obama also has the advantage of incumbency. No campaign resources are used when he flies into the swing state of Colorado, to survey the fire damage and, to offer federal assistance.
Can Romney win a fair fight? Looking at his protruding chin, I suspect he has a glass jaw.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Children’s smiles can light up the world. At its best, politics is about them. Taken in Egypt last fall. 2011© Larry Stein
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
I Still Have a Chance of Salvation
Before blogging on the swiftboating of Romney, I have a personal note.
I started to make a right hand turn because the only oncoming