The Right Opinion
A Big Ten Strategy for GOP?
WASHINGTON -- Conventions are the seventh-inning stretches of presidential politics, a pause to consider the interminable prelude and the coming climax. Republicans gathering in Tampa face an unusual election in which they do not have a substantial advantage concerning the most presidential subject, foreign policy.
This is not because their nominee has weak foreign-policy credentials, which are not weaker than Barack Obama's were four years ago. And it is not because some of Mitt Romney's policy expostulations during the nominating process -- e.g., "We should not negotiate with the Taliban. We should defeat the Taliban" -- promise a limitless elongation of an 11-year exercise in mission creep that the public is sensibly eager to liquidate. And it is not because there are no ominous potentialities: Both Romney and Obama seem committed to a third regional war if, as is highly probable, Iran continues to pursue nuclear weapons. (Israel could make foreign policy central in the U.S. campaign by striking Iran.) And it is not because the world has become tranquil -- although the world, which Romney calls "dangerous, destructive, chaotic," is less so than at any time since the 1920s, measured by the likelihood of people dying from organized violence.
Rather, the eclipse of foreign policy is a result of this perverse Obama accomplishment: He has proved that the locution "growth recession" is not oxymoronic. During this recovery, now in its fourth year, the economy often has grown so slowly that job creation rarely, and then barely, matched the growth of the workforce. Perhaps Romney should rejoice that economic anxieties have marginalized foreign policy: The last time a businessman was nominated in a period of national security tensions -- Republican Wendell Willkie in 1940 -- he lost.
There have been 11 elections since two Democratic presidents committed the United States to a protracted war of attrition in Indochina -- John Kennedy by complicity in regime-change by coup; Lyndon Johnson by incontinent escalation. In those 11 elections, the Democratic Party, wounded by its riotous 1968 convention and its 1972 nomination of George McGovern, has elected just three presidents. Jimmy Carter won after Vietnam was lost. Bill Clinton won after the Cold War was won. Barack Obama won after the nation had recoiled against foreign overreaching: Iraq.
The eclipse of foreign policy underscores the rationality of Romney's selection of Paul Ryan. The youngest vice presidential nominee since Dan Quayle in 1988, Ryan guarantees that the Republican message -- certainly subliminally, perhaps explicitly -- will be Obama's immaturity, which is writ large in the childishness of his characteristic rhetorical evasion: Every difficult choice is, he says, "a false choice." And the maturity gap between the two tickets is underscored by the serial buffoonery of the oldest candidate for national office, the 69-year-old fellow currently a heartbeat away from the presidency.
One peculiarity of this political season's first seven innings was the selection of a fundamentally non-ideological presidential nominee by a Republican Party that, under the beneficent influence of the tea party, has never been more ideological or more ideologically homogenous. The Ryan selection ameliorates this incongruity.
The incongruity, however, explains why Romney may be able to win with a Big Ten strategy. Until last year, when Nebraska joined this athletic conference, it extended from State College, Pa., to Iowa City, Iowa. Romney enters the final innings competitive in those two states, as well as Ohio, Michigan and Wisconsin, which means he is poised to correct a Republican problem: The party has been too dependent on the South, understood as the 11 states of the Confederacy, plus Oklahoma and Kentucky.
In the last five presidential elections, Republican candidates have received an average of 64 percent of their electoral votes from the South. In 2000, George W. Bush became the first Republican to win the presidency while losing the electoral and popular votes outside the South. The party's Southern cast was one reason John McCain in 2008 did not carry any suburb contiguous to Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Detroit or Chicago.
Such places are habitats of persons who by now may be lightly attached Obama voters -- people who like the idea of him but not the results of him. As Holman W. Jenkins of The Wall Street Journal astutely writes, "Obama's great political talent has been his knack for granting his admirers permission to think highly of themselves for thinking highly of him." Romney's great political challenge is to wean them away by making them faintly embarrassed about their former infatuation.
(c) 2012, Washington Post Writers Group

21 Comments
TruthInAction in Texas
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 4:43 AM
Oh, George, you've done so well lately. You've wondered off, but we expect you back soon.
Tod-the tool guy in BROOKLYN, N.Y.
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 5:48 AM
Taliban and Al Qaeda tactics has caused the Pentagon to re-evaluate, and even reorganize America's special ops. We've learned how to think "outside the box." President 44 is "outside the box", as D'Souza poiniently illustrates, in 2016. My Tea party wants to downsize the Executive Branch, so the private sector can grow/flourish. Pesident 44 wants to downsize America! "Four one-way air tickets to Chicago--please--- for Jan.,2013, out of Reagan Int'l airport. Put the tickets on my bill, not the taxpayers! "Uncle George Will!!!"
KN in Arkansas
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 8:38 AM
"Four one-way air tickets to Chicago--please-"
Let them drive to Chicago in a Volt.
J Henry in USSA
Monday, August 27, 2012 at 2:00 PM
Let them walk, in the snow and rain. Without an umbrella.
JTG in Indiana
Monday, August 27, 2012 at 2:03 PM
Destination change to Kenya.
wjm in Colorado
Monday, August 27, 2012 at 6:01 PM
Perfect, send them on a trek to Kenya! I'm all in on that one......
Pepin the Short in G-Vegas
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 10:43 AM
I was eagerly awaiting a return of the foreign policy topic. It did not come. This one is perhaps a bit rambling.
JJStryder in Realville
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 2:01 PM
Wendell Wilkie? George you have a tendency to over analyze. This again is one. Every election has its own dynamic. This one is all about Obama and the democrat failures in multiple areas. For me 16 trillion in debt is a big new dynamic that no other election in history must address to survive. "The Ryan selection ameliorates this incongruity" ...Oh brother!.
sunforester in left coast
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 3:48 PM
Things are bad indeed when foreign policy promises are not the telling difference between two Presidential candidates, but promises about how to fix the sorry state of our economy is. Yes, the Republicans have greatly profited by agreeing to the Tea Party mandates and direction, and it will certainly win them the election in November.
However, Republicans will do well to remember not to stymie this Tea Party momentum with their own minority agendas that fly in the face of back-to-basic American concepts of individual freedom and honorable self-sufficiency. It is well and good that Christians have ratcheted down their incessant push of intolerant religious beliefs that send the rest of us running away screaming from their desire to have us all sit in their church and act just like they say. It is well and good that Republicans are starting to ratchet down their old moderate stance of getting elected by promising just as many handouts to freeloading voters as their liberal colleagues have over the decades.
Just because the Republicans are on a roll does not give them license to betray the Tea Party on whom they depend. It is not OK to consider winning the election a call to inflict religious rules on the rest of us, including sustaining the intolerant abolition of the sale of sex and drugs that create black markets which destroy our peace, our neighborhoods, and our citizens. It is not OK to consider winning the election a mandate to inflict religious rules that snoop and pry into personal decisions that are fundamental to our freedom to decide our own fates. Should the Republicans choose to pander to their religious minority, the effects will be felt immediately at the subsequent election, after a long and loud denunciation of this betrayal.
sunforester in left coast
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 3:48 PM
It is not OK to consider winning the election a call to maintain handouts of our precious tax dollars to privileged people for their personal needs. Ryan is on the right track in winding down the worst excesses of Medicare, but that is still too much of we the people's money being handed over to the most corrupt, financially well-off generation in our country's history. All that free stuff needs to be cut off, and the sooner the better.
We are voting in the Republicans so that they work for us, not the other way around. We want to keep our own money to pay for our own personal needs, not to pay for "charity" that is patronage from our political elite in actual reality. The only thing that our tax dollars should pay for is our common good, so Romney/Ryan need to show us that their approach that weans our corrupt freeloading voters from expecting their ill-gotten loot is committed to a not-so-distant time when NO taxes are handed out for anyone's personal needs.
If the Republicans stand by the Tea Party, we will stand by them. We don't take well to minority agendas that steal our freedom and our money. Remember that, people, at your Convention - the Tea Party will be watching you closely
FED Up in Philly PA
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 3:56 PM
Charlie Crist - Sour grapes
Seems he's vying for some sort of office yet.
The power is just too alluring for these career politicians, that they would sell their souls, just to grab onto and hold some sort of power.
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57500539-503544/charlie-crist-backs-president-obama/
Namvet-68 in Pennsylvania
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 7:01 PM
I'm afraid if we lose the election, we will lose America
Gregory in Yakima Wa.
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 7:07 PM
George Will continues to yammer like a nutty uncle at a family gathering.
Non-ideological Romney's biggest challenge is to convince enough independents that his policies will not be set by his party. Regressive policies on gays, government knows best policies on birth control, dismissing science on matters of real importance such as environmentalism and climate change are anathema to all but a small minority of the voting public.
Ryan may be comfort to conservatives but they were going to vote for Romney anyway. It looks like Romney made a so what decision in a no win situation. George Will is a sad reminder that conservative intellectualism is a thing of the past.
wjm in Colorado
Monday, August 27, 2012 at 6:05 PM
You are the yammering sodomite Gregory in WA, and thanks again for another incoherent clueless diatribe of delusional liberall talking points. Keep em coming you useless idiot. Maybe Biden will hire you, to make him look smarter.
Jim in Ione, Wa.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012 at 11:49 PM
NOTICE: anyone reading & annoyed by the libtard "Gregory" please be aware that his views do NOT represent EASTERN Washingon! He belongs with his fellow lobotomites in WESTERN Washington, somewhere near Seattle.....where the rest them live & somehow manage to procreate.
Tex Horn in Texas
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 7:12 PM
@ Sunforester: some interesting points you make, some valid, some perhaps not so valid. For instance, I'm a Christian, but I have never forced my beliefs on anyone. So too most Christians I know. Like most religions, we Christians have our devout believers. Some so devout that they try to force their beliefs on others. I noticed that you did not include non-Christian believers in your assessment. It is among those that I see the most adamant and unforgiving in-your-face-take-it-or-leave-it types. So, please don't lump all Christians into your little summation.
I like what you have to say about the Tea Party and agree with you whole-heartedly that the Republicans should not betray them. A good day to you, Sunforester.
enemaofthestatistquo in GA
Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 9:11 PM
Obviously, Gregory has been swilling the White House Beer.
wjm in Colorado
Monday, August 27, 2012 at 6:06 PM
I think they may be playing in poop together.
Old Prof in Dallas
Monday, August 27, 2012 at 10:58 AM
Establishment Republicans will be seriously challenged by any effort to wrench corporate noses from the rich feed trough of "tax incentives" and government special interest-supported projects. As RR said the closest thing to eternal life provided on Earth is that enjoyed by government programs. The Tea Party is on the right track. It's challenge is to focus upon politically-achieveable objectives.
pete in CA
Monday, August 27, 2012 at 1:37 PM
George! Really!!
"the world, which Romney calls "dangerous, destructive, chaotic," is less so than at any time since the 1920s, measured by the likelihood of people dying from organized violence."????
Anybody who will look at what is happening in Egypt, Syria, and the others and say that would make excused and close his eyes to the gas chambers in Hitlers Germany and surrounds. Just because our media fails to do it's job of keeping us informed doesn't mean nothing is going on.
Jim in Ione, Wa.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012 at 11:51 PM
NOTICE: anyone reading & annoyed by the libtard "Gregory" please be aware that his views do NOT represent EASTERN Washingon! He belongs with his fellow lobotomites in WESTERN Washington, somewhere near Seattle.....where the rest them live & somehow manage to procreate.