patching...
Update: Want North Canton News Delivered to Your Virtual Doorstep? Sign up for our Daily Newsletter! »
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!
Local Voices
Humorist. Defender of the Common Sense.

I Told You So

In early August, I wrote a blog giving the DNC a little advice.  I told them that, come late September, they should consider moving their money out of the presidential race and into congressional races in order to pick up seats.  I said that they needed to focus on the execution of getting out the vote, and abandon wasting millions on television ads.  I said that it was ugly for Mitt Romney:  that the math was automatically against him, that Paul Ryan wouldn’t help, and that the electoral map was not in his favor because polling (at the time) was frozen. 

As far as I know, they didn’t listen to me.  Which… is bizarre.  I mean, why would they ignore my genius?  I’m sure they got the message.  There’s no way it got lost in the vast wilderness of Crazy on the internet.  Certainly DNC chairwoman Debbie Wasserman-Schultz has my blog bookmarked on her home computer.

Anyways, I’m not one to say I told you so. 

Having said that, I told you so.

It’s late September, and things have only gotten worse for Romney.  Since I wrote that blog, we've had both conventions, with Obama’s (or: the empty chair’s) bounce following the DNC dwarfing Mitt’s after the RNC.  Then Romney made his blunder attacking Obama for “apologizing” before the facts were known about the embassy attacks.  Then he got smacked over the head when it came to the public’s reception of his 47% comments

He’s losing in almost all of the battleground polls; and dropping.  And it’s pretty much the consensus that he needs to perform a minor miracle in the debates to turn around his plummet and overtake Obama in these states.

And that’s probably not going to happen.

First of all, people’s minds are pretty much made up.  We’re about a month from the election; and, if it were held today, Obama would almost certainly win.  Secondly, Romney isn’t a particularly likable candidate, even to his own party, and his campaign strategy seems to be: 1) take quotes by the President out of context, 2) throw them at the wall and see what sticks, and 3) as soon as something starts to, put your foot in your mouth.

Surprisingly, that has not worked. 

The focus of the debates is almost certainly going to be on Romney, and there are too many doors to close.  He’s going to be on defense the whole time.  It’s going to be like a Rocky montage of campaign failures. 

There’s going to be questions about Romneycare; about foreign policy experience; about his taxes, his tax plans, and about Paul Ryan and Medicare. They’re going to ask about immigration and women's rights.  There’s going to be questions about the 47% thing. 

These are the questions a challenger has to answer against an incumbent, and his perspectives on all of these things are polling against him.  He'll have answers ready, but Obama will be ready with rebuttals, too.

Then the media will probably do what the media does.  It serves their interests to declare (especially the first debate) a tie, or a win for Romney.  If the consensus is anything but “I think Romney held his own” in the first debate, everyone will change the channel to whatever station isn’t airing a political ad, because they’re sick of it already.  A lot of people are simply not going to exhaust themselves by pretending to care about a second full debate.   And that’s if they were even willing to give Romney a shot to begin with.

And, sure, Romney could actually win the first and make up some ground.  He’s not a bad debater; and he is the challenger, which bodes well for him because his message (whatever it is) is "new."  But he would have to overcome himself and win all three debates decisively to make up this much ground.  

There’s also the small possibility that Romney will double down and try to pander to the far right.  He could make more thinly veiled dog-whistles to the trashy “Dreams From My Real Father” DVD-mailing conspiracy-theory folk that think Obama is a communist, or a Kenyan, or the 21st century incarnation of Gozer from Ghostbusters.

And, as I said in the original piece, that’s a losing strategy as well.  He cannot make up ground with radicals without losing moderates, and he needs moderates to win states like Ohio and Wisconsin. 

Romney is in the worst Catch-22 in political memory. And the DNC should take my advice and spend more money down-ticket.

Having said all that, I now I have some advice for you. 

Because right-wing pundits are not really very big on facts or science, they’ve already come out to say these polls are wrong.  They say polls are skewed left (even though many don’t even include Libertarian/Romney vote-stealer Gary Johnson), and their methodology is corrupted by the liberal media in a conspiracy to re-elect Barack Obama, and yada.  yada.  yada. 

Pay attention to who is saying this.  Pay attention when Rush Limbaugh and Karl Rove and Mitt Romney and every pundit and friend who insists that this overwhelming number of polls—almost unanimous in saying Romney is losing in all nine battleground states—is skewed.

Give them your attention, and write their names down somewhere.  And--assuming there are no catastrophic shifts in those “left-wing” polls, unforeseen scandals, effective efforts of voter suppression, or extraordinarily lax turnout-- when Barack Obama wins in the not-so-nail-biting fashion currently predicted, you will have completed your own little experiment.  You will know, when the dust settled, who was wrong.  And the next time you hear those people talk about politics, remember that, in a measurable and defined sense, they have a reputation you have personally observed for being incorrect. 

If only in one instance. 

And then, the next time they say something, you can make predictions on your own as to whether or not that person’s bloviating amounts to anything credible. 

Whether or not you end up capping those predictions with “I told you so” is up to you.

 

 

==

@PatrickInPublic now has 33 followers on twitter.

@InvisibleObama currently has 69,030.

#YouDoTheMath

 


 


Roger

2:55 pm on Monday, October 1, 2012

I'm confused by your by line as "humorist"....if anything, you're exactly the opposite which is so often the case with left wing socialists with their own little agenda. I find your long winded ramblings while well written somewhat disturbing and naive.
So, let's just say Obama does win in November and in four years spins this nation
into a financail collapse due to his inability to stop spending on all his social
misdirected programs and running the debt to $20 trillion. When this does happen, which it will, Can I expect you to do another one of your little columns and admit that "I told you so"?

Reply

MZ

4:40 pm on Monday, October 1, 2012

Which is worse, the Romney apology blunder, or the administration blaming the violence on a movie for weeks when they knew it was premeditated? Which is worse, the "Romney blunder" or Obama still pushing the false narrative at the UN long after he knew the truth?

Reply
Comment_arrow

Patrick Giusto

9:17 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012

I would (personally) tentatively agree with you (I assume) that the mishandling of the terrorist attack is a bigger "blunder." I tend to give every politician a little leeway when it comes to newsflash situations like that, but it certainly seems like it was mishandled from what I see and read about it so far. It's just such an odd news event.

The problem is that it's irrelevant to the discussion at hand. The battleground polls really haven't moved a whole lot; which would lend itself to meaning that people are dug in on their picks already, or they don't care about the "blunder" in the first place.

But let's assume the poll lag hasn't caught up to the event. The first debate is tomorrow, and that's going to usurp it as the bigger political news event. The problem for Romney is that people generally watch debates like they're sporting events, having already picked someone to root for-- especially these days. Those that don't will (at least in part) rely on the media to tell them how to feel about the debate. And I mentioned in the blog the media will probably lean Romney, regardless.

So, I would expect the polls to close a little. He could try and wing a few good lines tomorrow, but I'm really not sure how much that will convert people, as opposed to just making for good TV. And it's a gamble, because if those lines aren't well received, he's done for. I really don't see how he can change his fate at this point.

But if I'm wrong, you can tell me so.

Phyllis Stager

11:13 am on Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Also...the Lockheed Martin inevitable layoffs of thousands have been requested to ignore the 'notice' law until after the election by the White House. The law says they must notify those they intend to layoff 60 calendar days in advance or face monetary penalties. The Administration told Lockheed they will 'pay' the penalties for not complying with the law.

Yep, the Administration will pay the penalties with OUR money! LOL!

Have you heard about this in the media? LOL!

Reply

The original Bill

10:35 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012

The law says 90 days not 60. LOL! You Fox News robots kill me. Seriously? The White House told Lockheed not to announce layoffs til after the election? LOL! Yeah that is entirely believable. Not. You know just because Hannity or O'Reilly says it doesn't make it true. LOL! In fact 90% of what they do say is a fabrication. LOL! They are entertainers not newsmen. LOL!

Reply
Comment_arrow

Phyllis Stager

11:12 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Bill, I hate to tell you this, but you are worse than O'reilly or Hannity. You only skimmed the Warn Act. If you had actually read it you would see that 60 days is accurate. There are also 30 day and 90 day notifications, depending on the circumstances. However may days it matters not when it comes to the Administration offering to pay the legal fines or costs of any law suits by employees who do not get the timely notification.

That means YOU and I are PAYING!

This is a political finesse at our expense....

Cheers, Kiddo!

Comment_arrow

James Thomas

12:47 pm on Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Bill,
just because it's true doesn't mean that if Hannity or O'Reilly or FOX says it, it then becomes false. Oh Wait..... John Edwards said that because it was in the Inquirer it had to be untrue. Someone here is a robot but it ain't the FOX news crowd.

James Thomas

10:05 am on Thursday, October 4, 2012

Patrick,
You might want to start hedging your bets.
I saved this article to my computer and will revisit it after the election. After last night's debate I think the field has leveled out.

Reply

James Thomas

12:40 pm on Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Patrick,
are you madly hedging yet? The polls are starting to turn. Are you at a "Surrender Dorothy" moment yet? I expect not because both of us are waiting for the actual results. See ya on Wed. the 6th.

Reply

Leave a comment