Posts Tagged ‘concern trolling’

The political sorcerer’s apprentice gets desperate

Monday, October 6th, 2008 by Swopa

At Talking Points Memo today, Josh Marshall quotes a reader on John McCain’s public tantrum at a rally in New Mexico:

What a weird spectacle McCain’s speech was this afternoon. It was as though McCain went out of the way to take every criticism that has come his way and attribute it to Barack Obama.

Well, of course that’s what he did.  Remember, McCain is just taking orders from Karl Rove B-teamer Steve Schmidt these days, and projecting your failings onto your opponent (in the hope that accurate criticisms of you are seen as confusing, “he-said-she-said” crosstalk) are just as ingrained in the Rovian gospel as trying to defuse your opponent’s perceived strength.

Unfortunately for McCain, as I noted two months ago about the latter effort, trying to apply a past strategy by rote — without adapting it to current circumstances — isn’t going to do much good.  At this point, Schmidt is visibly flailing like Mickey Mouse as the sorcerer’s apprentice in Fantasia, frantically flipping through pages in the master’s book of spells in search of something that will the rising water from engulfing him… and not having any more luck.

John McCain regrets letting Steve Schmidt destroy his chances of winning the White House

Friday, September 19th, 2008 by Swopa

Apparently unwilling to let the Washington Redskins dominate today’s news of awkward backtracking all by themselves, John McCain has taken a look at the latest polls and realized a strategy of nonstop lying might not have been such a stroke of genius after all.

Josh Marshall today links to a video showing McCain saying this has been “a tough campaign” and adding, “I regret, and sometimes I’m offended, by some of the negative aspects of this campaign.” Not so offended, of course, that he plans to change his ways — he hastens to add that the race “is probably going to get a lot tougher.” He just wants to pretend that it’s not his fault.

As self-absolvements go, this is probably one of the least effective since Lady Macbeth was muttering “Out, damned spot, out!” But McCain doesn’t have much choice. By letting Karl Rove B-teamer Steve Schmidt take effective control of his campaign a few months ago, McCain signed away his power to steer his own message, and it’s too late to get it back.

The irony is that for all the adulatory articles written about Schmidt after his intra-campaign coup (no doubt aided by the endless lobbying of reporters by Schmidt and his old boss, Rove), his supposedly brutal assault on Barack Obama’s character did very little damage. The “celebrity” nonsense never rose to the level of a disqualifying caricature the way previous barrages did to John Kerry, Al Gore, and Michael Dukakis.

What did help McCain in the polls, at least temporarily, was the nomination of Sarah Palin as vice president, which reinforced a positive image of McCain as an outsider willing to shake up the established Washington, D.C. order. But the Palin nomination was a spur-of-the-moment fluke.

Had the McCain team really tried to build that outsider narrative and run on their own credentials and policies, they might still be leading the race. Instead, though, Schmidt got carried away with his own aggressiveness, leading to the brazen phoniness of the “lipstick” hissy fit and the ghastly sex-education ad that tried to depict Obama as a pervert. Especially in combination, these tactics seem to have shocked enough consciences in both the MSM and the broader public that it’s McCain who is now saddled with the lasting negative image.

Maybe if Schmidt had been less concerned with cultivating worshipful profiles of himself — and less susceptible to believing them — he wouldn’t have misjudged the public mood so badly. It’s not the kind of rookie mistake you can imagine Karl Rove making.

(Cross-posted at Firedoglake.)

Blogads

Google Ads


Categories

Archives