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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Required Reading for Pansy-Assed Dems

Posted by on Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 11:35 AM

Frank Rich's brilliant piece on negative campaign ads—their history, their effectiveness, and their absolute necessity if Obama wants to win reelection—is required reading for all the weak-kneed, pansy-assed, hand-wringers in the media and the Democratic party:

Barack Obama has made his mistakes as a politician and as a president, but here is one thing he indisputably did right: pummel Mitt Romney with a volley of attack ads once Romney sewed up the Republican nomination. Obama was playing by the rules, honoring historical precedent in both parties, and pursuing the one must-do task before him in an election year (winning). And yet from the blowback that erupted once his Bain ad hit the fan—from his own camp, from the pious arbiters of Beltway manners, and, of course, from his adversaries—you’d think Romney was an innocent civilian under assault by a drone. What was everyone so shocked about? As far back as August 2011, Obama’s political hit men were signaling the inevitable to Politico: The president, “resigned to running for reelection in a glum nation,” had little choice “but to run a slashing, personal campaign aimed at disqualifying his likeliest opponent.” The Bain ad that Obama ran last month was no surprise either: It followed the template of those used by Ted Kennedy against Romney in the Massachusetts Senate race of 1994. (The ads helped: Kennedy won by seventeen points.) If anything, Obama’s variation on the theme is less nasty than Newt Gingrich’s Bain-bashing ad during the GOP primaries.

Nonetheless, the bipartisan civility police swooped down in full force to cry foul, with Cory Booker’s charge that attack ads are “nauseating” typifying the moralistic tone. “What ever happened to hope and change?” asked Bob Schieffer of CBS News. He apparently forgot that even the sainted Obama hope-and-change campaign of 2008 spent heavily on negative ads—more than the ­McCain campaign did. (Does no one recall the exquisite “Seven,” in which the old hero was presented as a doddering doofus unable to name the number of houses he owned?) David Brooks lamented that Obama’s negativity was “self-destructive” and left him “looking conventional.” Peggy Noonan gloated: “The president opened his campaign with a full-fledged assault on his opponent. This is a bad sign in an incumbent!”

Try selling that wisdom to George W. Bush, an incumbent who started assaulting John Kerry with attack ads as early as March in 2004 rather than reprise his “compassionate conservative” campaign of 2000 (much of it in reality a dispassionate disemboweling of Al Gore). Or to Bill Clinton, who started twisting the shiv in Bob Dole in April 1996, never for a second worrying whether a sorrowful Sunday-morning talk-show pastor might ask, “What ever happened to the Man From Hope?” Those two incumbents both won, as it happened.

The serious questions raised by the early Obama ads are not whether they were too much but too little: Was waiting until May behind the curve? Are the ads vicious enough to inflict lasting damage? Is there a nuclear option in Obama’s advertising arsenal that can blow Romney out of the water as LBJ’s immortal mushroom-cloud “Daisy” ad did Barry Goldwater on Labor Day in 1964? Given the anemic employment numbers and the pack of billionaire GOP sugar daddies smelling blood after their Wisconsin victory, a reboot of hope and change would truly be the reelection campaign’s most self-destructive option. Obama is embarking on one of the roughest political races in memory, not a nostalgia tour. He is facing an opponent with a proven record of successful carpet-bombing attacks, as Gingrich and Rick Santorum can attest. Just because that proposed super-PAC stink bomb branding Obama as a “metrosexual” disciple of a frothing-at-the-mouth Reverend Jeremiah Wright was aborted doesn’t mean that more of the same and uglier aren’t on the way. The premise of Romney’s entire campaign amounts to one long complaint against Obama, and shadowy donors whose names you’ll never learn can do the dirty work under PAC cover while Romney claims his hands are clean.

The president, any president, should go negative early, often, and without apology if the goal is victory.

Go read the whole brilliant thing.

 

Comments (27) RSS

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Urgutha Forka 1
Research shows that liberals react more strongly to positive messages while conservatives react more strongly to negative ones:

http://www.livescience.com/18056-conserv…

So negative ads are likely to help Romney more than Obama. Obama would do better to focus on positive ads.
Posted by Urgutha Forka on June 19, 2012 at 11:50 AM
2
I think Rich is right, and I think Obama knows this, he isn't like Kerry and will just roll over. We say in 2008 he knows how to fight back and put the negative ads out there.
Posted by Seattle14 on June 19, 2012 at 11:53 AM
Theodore Gorath 3
I am offended that you called democrats pansy-assed, and I am walking out of this post in protest.

[which direction is the nearest camera?]
Posted by Theodore Gorath on June 19, 2012 at 12:02 PM
4
@1, how about a mix of ads--positive messages targeted to motivate the base, and negative ones designed to sway undecideds?

New media and fine-tuning of targeting means there are lots of buttons to push and lots of ways to push them.
Posted by clashfan on June 19, 2012 at 12:12 PM
5
I like the idea of mixed ads as well, but we have to be a bit more agressive in our sales job. We can't do anything if we lose this campaign. I don't believe that the end justifies the means, but I do believe that one has to take a stand.
Posted by kevin11 on June 19, 2012 at 12:23 PM
6
@1
That should be factored in, but I think that Dan is talking about that very large constituency among liberals and Democrats which feels that they have to play by the Queensbury Rules while their opponent barfights, with the help of his friends.

Obama might take as a model the VERY successful ads done up here in Canada by the Conservative Party against then Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff. Ignatieff hadn't lived in Canada for years, and so the Tories had a series of ads centered around the theme of him being some entitled asshole who came back to receive the crown of governing Canada. The ads, with their devastating and on-target tagline of "he didn't come back for you" (and the ones attacking Ignatieff's weak point of public uncertainty of what he actually stood for) were incredibly effective, despite having the handicap that Canadians (as a rule) dislike negative ads far more than Americans do.
Posted by seeker6079 on June 19, 2012 at 12:24 PM
7
Great piece by Rich. Politics stinks. The goal, therefore, is to stink up your opponent more before he stinks up you.

So, for us pansy-assed liberals, the lesson is, hold our noses through the stinkiest parts, and do our part to help our side win. And, make no mistake, our side is the Dems and Obama.
Posted by Brooklyn Reader on June 19, 2012 at 12:24 PM
8
Yeah Dan, I value your political opinions - like the one about invading Iraq. And didn't you steal just a tad too much (a foot worth's!) of Rich's copyrighted work here? Lazy and a thief!
Posted by shermanstribe on June 19, 2012 at 12:41 PM
9
Agree that Obama needed to go negatively on Romneybot as soon as possible. Why wait? Romneybot has been running for President for the last six years (at least).
Posted by Patricia Kayden on June 19, 2012 at 1:02 PM
Free Lunch 10
Well, there's one thing that Obama has that Romney doesn't: policy that he can talk about.

Romney can't do anything but attack, because he's too aware of the unpopularity of his policies to talk about them. Thus the silence on the Dream Act, on which federal departments he plans to eliminate, on which social programs he would gut and which loopholes he would close to pay for his drastic increase in defense spending while cutting taxes on the 1%. He has no choice but run negative ads. What else would he say?

"As President, I promise to slash Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security in order to lower taxes on billionaires."

But Obama can talk about his policies. Yes, he absolutely should run negative ads. (I'm not sure the Bain approach is best, though.) Many of Obama's policies are wildly popular, whether enacted, or blocked by the GOP: bailing out the auto industry, construction bills to strengthen our infrastructure, state funding more police and teachers, raising taxes on the wealthy. Hell, even most provisions of the dreaded ACA poll strongly. That seems like a huge advantage over just going negative.
Posted by Free Lunch on June 19, 2012 at 1:10 PM
debug 11
@1 Liberals who vote most likely will vote Obama either way so no real reason to focus on them. All recent presidential elections are on wooing the fence sitters, not those who've already decided.

Going negative works, especially if there's truth in those ads.

Besides, as of "Citizen's United" Obama doen't have to get his own hands dirty. He can go stop to stop doing the one thing he does best "public speaking" and let phantom dollars crank out the attacks.

Posted by debug on June 19, 2012 at 1:28 PM
12
Check out how a small town in Troy saved it's library by capitalizing on tea party negativity http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pla….

Pro-Obama folks can do the same with Romney's policies.

It's important to pay attention to the local elections where your vote can make a huge difference. Local leaders later become congressional reps and senators, governors, etc.

Even the local school board can make a difference - creationism instead of science anyone? How about revised history?
Posted by Barbara on June 19, 2012 at 1:32 PM
13
yes, and the problem is obama doesn't blame enough; he should explain that the 20 year decline in wealth and income of the middle class is deliberate gop policy and one percenter scheme.

instead, he continually paints the gop policy as a contest of two visions or ideas -- as if they honestly just got it wrong. drove a car into a ditch.

the moral narrative needs to be, "they fucked you up, deliberately, for their greedy unearned profiteering."

Then you get the mandate to master them.

Posted by master the evildoers on June 19, 2012 at 2:26 PM
Urgutha Forka 14
Yeah, that's a good point that liberals are already going to vote for Obama so might as well target the undecideds with a mix of positive and negative.

In fact, now that I think about it, Romney's negative ads are probably going to fall on more deaf ears than Obama's neg ads will. All the conservatives are already going to vote for Romney anyway, so hitting them with more neg ads is likely wasted effort.
Posted by Urgutha Forka on June 19, 2012 at 3:10 PM
15
so glad electing obama meant an end to divisive politics as usual.....
Posted by you are so full of shit on June 19, 2012 at 3:23 PM
passionate_jus 16
@15

Guess you didn't notice what the Supreme Court did in Citizens United, did you?

The Bain ads work because all Rmoney has is that he is a "strong businessman who creates jobs and knows how to run a business". If Obama can destroy that meme before it gets into the voters' subconsciousness, then he will win handedly.
Posted by passionate_jus on June 19, 2012 at 3:33 PM
Bauhaus I 17
When has Frank Rich not been some kind of wonderful?
Posted by Bauhaus I on June 19, 2012 at 3:39 PM
18
I agree with those calling for a mix of ads, but isn't that obvious and inevitable?

Going negative in an aggressive and tough manner does not mean 100% of ads are attacks on Romney and the Republicans. It means negative ads are a prominent, unabashed, and significant part of the mix.

Swing state voters are going to see a flood of ads from both sides, and both sides will mix things up in terms of negative and positive. Don't be surprised if each chooses around three negative ads for every one positive ad--this is going to be a close election, and that means it will be mean.

Yes, negative campaigns alienate some voters, and can suppress turnout--but the percentages argue strongly that Rich and Savage are right, and aggressively attacking Romney gives Obama his best chance of winning.

Obama-supporters who dislike this strategy should hold their nose and bite their tongue, since criticizing the President's campaign plays right into the hands of the Republicans, who are sure to cynically and hypocritically complain about anything and everything that would help Obama win, especially negative ads.
Posted by Functional Atheist on June 19, 2012 at 5:06 PM
19
Also recall that campaigns can now micro-target ads. The most obvious would be running negative ads on a TV slot aimed at Southern white men--say, a NASCAR race. They can cut it a lot finer now, too. Facebook will sell positive ads targeting us because we click on SLOG.

Click on more liberal sites? Order organic food? OnDemand indie films? Expect to see positive ads aimed at getting out the vote, telling you good things about Obama.

Click on FOX dot com, et al.? Netflix Bruce Willis blockbusters? Use your credit card to buy, say, and NRA membership? Watch for lots of negative ads telling you bad things about Romney.

And, of course, the reverse from the Romney camp.
Posted by clashfan on June 19, 2012 at 6:57 PM
20
I live in a swing state and I see a pretty equal amount of Pro-Obama and Anti-Romney ads. There are also a lot of ads that attack "Washington" run by something called the "New Majority Agenda", whatever that is, and some ads that say "The EPA is trying to keep us from using coal energy" which is hilarious to anyone who knows what EPA means.
Posted by random_lez on June 19, 2012 at 10:26 PM
21
Look the reason these racist pigs cry foul is because they hate Obama. "How dare that uppity nigger, think he is going to get away with insulting a white man?!!!" That's what they are thinking. That the media plays along by not metnioning this elephant in the living room is revolting.
Posted by alisamc http://amcstubbornturtle.blogspot.com/ on June 19, 2012 at 11:31 PM
malcolmxy 22
The problem isn't the voracity of the attack, it's the general lack of knowledge amongst the electorate.

Right now, as demonstrated by the comments above, you hate them and they hate you...and neither of you have any understanding of the actual issues at play and simply know to hate the donkey or the elephant.

We've become a nation of dueling idol worshipers, and in that respect, the negative ads are nauseating.

The Bane stuff by the president was actually pretty decent, but the problem was that he used them to hide his own record on the economy, and made them his economic message in his reelection bid (until he resurrected his crappy jobs legislation, though that was a pretty brilliant political move).

Decide how you feel about the issues that aren't gay marriage (since the Executive Office of the Federal Government has ZERO say in that matter), and then ask the questions of the candidates on those same issues.

Can any of the people who are up in arms either way pick out 5 issues that they care about and then accurately articulate the 2 candidates positions on all 5? If not, then the negative crap is simply obfuscating the issues.

Again, I was perfectly cool with the Bain stuff as standalone political rhetoric, but I wouldn't mind a bit of solid message that explained Obama's economic plans for his second term mixed in as well.
Posted by malcolmxy on June 20, 2012 at 4:03 AM
23
Daniel.
Have you checked in on how your fav homo-retailer is doing?

JC Penny stock peaked at over $43 a share in February.
Currently it is $21.
ouch.

The old CEO bailed yesterday.
The new CEO, Ron Johnson, blames Penny's problems on its marketing.

maybe they haven't featured enough gay dads in their advertising?

couldn't you be a darling and run out and buy some more of those dingy Tshirts you so love?
Posted by J.C.Puny on June 20, 2012 at 5:54 AM
24
23

wow.....

Back in February,
the department store chain faced criticism
from the American Family Association's One Million Moms project
for its hiring of Ellen DeGeneres to be the company's new spokesfaggot.

Back in February.
When the stock was at $43.
instead of $21......

In a direct response to the boycott campaign of One Million Moms,
JCPenney ran a Father's Day ad featuring a same-sex couple.

gutsy.
and very trendy.....
Danny gushed and slobbered about it all over the Slog on May 31.

His exact words were: "Well done, JCPenney. Suck it, haters."

Well Done, Indeed!

One Million Moms say, "Suck It Yourself, Danny......"
Posted by JCPenny. Required Shopping for Pansy-Assed Dems on June 20, 2012 at 6:30 AM
venomlash 25
@23,24: J.C. Penney isn't bleeding cash because it ran ads with gay people in them, you nitwit. Their problems are due to a poorly designed and confusing ad campaign that didn't attract customers very well.
Posted by venomlash on June 20, 2012 at 7:02 AM
26
they should run ads with gay dads riding unicorns over the rainbow
Posted by hue9 on June 20, 2012 at 3:33 PM
GymGoth 27
In other words, this president has no accomplishments to speak of, is making our economy worse, and has booted his pledge to bring us together from day one.

When that's all you have to run on then I guess negative lying ads about your opponent are all you have left...
Posted by GymGoth on June 27, 2012 at 9:40 AM

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