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South Carolina Will Likely Choose Romney
· Saturday, January 14, 2012
To help his chances, he needs to rebut the Bain attacks, quickly and substantively.
Columbia, S.C.
Newt's a battering ram who'll wind up in splinters, but he can do plenty of damage along the way. The candidate people immediately speak of here when talk turns to the GOP primary is a man named Romneybut. "I like Romney but I could change my mind." "I like Romney but I like Santorum too." People take a kind of chagrined pride in the state's past reputation for crazed, malice-laden, bare-knuckle political brawling; they look away and laugh if you speak of Lee Atwater's old charge that a Democratic candidate had a "psychotic neurosis" and received electroshock therapy "hooked up to jumper cables."
But that was two generations ago, the old world. South Carolina's modern now, fully wired, demographically on the move. They still open up the first meeting of the statehouse GOP caucus with unifying prayer -- "My wife's being operated on at 2 p.m. today, I'd ask you to pray that the Lord guide the surgeon's hands," "Bob Smith died in a car accident last weekend, please pray for his family" -- but some people are looking down not only with reverence. They're also checking their BlackBerrys.
No one knows what's going to happen, because South Carolina takes pride in being prickly. They have a 30-year history of picking presidents, and nobody tells them who to pick. "New Hampshire thinks it's independent? Our great-great-great-great-grandfathers fired on the flag!" That's state GOP chairman Chad Connelly, sunny and garrulous. He's building up excitement and running out of breath doing it. "This thing is wide open. It's a battle royal. People are undecided. The debates will be decisive. South Carolina is the focal point of the world the next 10 days!" It is a great talent in life to spin relentlessly and not at all alienate the spinee.
All that said, if Mitt Romney wins here, he will win the nomination. And it's likely he will win here -- that Romneybut will become Romney. But it's a real question how much damage will be done to him along the way.
* * *
People don't embrace Mr. Romney, they circle back to him. They consider him, shop around for something better, decide the first product they looked at will last longest and give value, and buy.
The non-Mitt candidates continue, fracturing the conservative vote. Because no one dropped out after New Hampshire, no consolidation of the non-Mitt vote can begin here and get in the way of the buying. Newt Gingrich, tops in state polls a few weeks ago, has damaged himself by the means and manner of his campaign. Rick Santorum will have appeal, but he's voted against right-to-work legislation, and South Carolina is a big right-to-work state. Ron Paul will have appeal too, not only in the coastal cities but among active and retired military personnel, who've been fighting the wars the past 10 years.
Mr. Romney has the support of Gov. Nikki Haley, 39, an Indian-American who rose with the Tea Party and won after receiving Sarah Palin's endorsement. She backed him early, to signal to her supporters that it was OK. In an interview this week, she said the issues are "jobs, spending and the economy. Everyone in South Carolina knows somebody who's out of work." State unemployment is 9.9%, higher than the national average. "I've killed myself to bring jobs here. I need a president I can work with." "I don't want anyone tied to Washington. I have a great respect for business people to create jobs and make tough decisions. . . . Romney can do that."
Mr. Romney has a national organization that he can plug in locally, and money. And now momentum, which will prove crucial.
The chief argument here for Mr. Romney has been that he is electable, the most rightward viable candidate. That was powerfully reinforced by his victory in New Hampshire. "If he has a 25% ceiling, how come he just won with 39%?" His victory speech, more like an acceptance speech, was powerful: he finally brought all the strands together. This is what my candidacy means, this is what I'll do. That speech will have positive reverberations.
* * *
South Carolina continues to evolve. Retirees from the North increasingly populate the coastal towns and cities. They are economic conservatives, sympathetic to business. The top of the state, the Greenville/Spartanburg area is heavily Christian conservative, but less so. "It was the knot on the Bible Belt, now it's the knot on the fiscal belt," says a Romney backer. International companies, and their networks of suppliers, have had an impact.
The evangelical vote is split, and the economic calamity of the last four years has, in a way, become a values issue itself. Efforts to help the poor and the unborn, to have and raise children, to keep families together, are not made easier by a stressed economy. Social and economic issues are blending.
This is what you pick up about Mr. Romney in South Carolina: He is presentable, electable and a businessman. He knows what a spreadsheet is. He made money. He can help set up the circumstances where everyone else makes money too. And he is a conservative. He has the vibrations of a Massachusetts moderate -- Newt isn't wrong about that -- because he was a Massachusetts moderate. But now he holds conservative positions. He's not going to change them again, because you get only one chance to change in politics, not two. He is, therefore, perversely reliable. He's not going to get into the White House and announce: "By the way, I'm pro-choice again, ha."
* * *
The factor the media expected to hurt Romney -- evangelicals will, en masse, reject the Mormon -- isn't likely. Part of the reason is the big blend: Bias feels like self-indulgence in a time of crisis. What could hurt him, what actually promises to, is the Bain Capital attacks, the half hour minidocumentary and the commercials derived from its message. The documentary is first-rate agitprop: Mr. Romney has a nice smile but in real life he's a pious, new-class operator who swoops in, buys companies, breaks them up, lines his pockets, and calls it freedom. Might this gain traction in a high-unemployment state with a long populist tradition? I think so. You should see the faces of the people who talk about being laid off.
It's not clear whether Mr. Gingrich will air the documentary in South Carolina. If he does, he's going for broke.
Those who run the Romney campaign would be fools not to answer it, quickly and substantively, not only with a defense of free enterprise but with a defense of Bain. Are claims in the ad not true? Say it. Is there a case that more jobs were created by Bain than lost? Make it -- with workers in front of workplaces that now exist because Bain existed.
A full-throated, detailed defense of Bain that is also a defense of economic freedom and free markets might not only benefit Mr. Romney. It just might help valorize, or rather revalorize, the reputation of capitalism, which has taken a beating the past few years and not recovered. That, actually, might be a public service.
The Obama campaign wanted to launch its Bain attack in the fall. Mr. Romney can face the attack now, head on, and begin not inoculating himself from the issue but exhausting it.
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David Boette
Very interesting conclusion... Exhausting the Bain issue so it becomes old news when it matters most, in November, providing Romney get the nomination.
I haven't been on the Romney train because he lost to McCain... But my question now is, how did Romany lose to McCain, and what has been learned from it?
I'm in Florida, and it's either newt or mitt for me.
Posted January 14, 2012 at 3:33:45 PM
D.Williams
I've watched every debate since the beginning of the campaign. I well remember in the very first ones that on each panel asking the questions, there was always at least one persistant in their attempts to get the candidates to attack each other. They were very civil to each other and it was generally Newt Gingrich who responded that their opponent was Obama...not each other. Finally, on the FOX debate, every time the question came to Chris Wallace, every question was an attempt to drag Gingrich and Romney into a personal attack on the other until finally Gingrich...getting tired of the constant attempt, became pretty verbal with Chris Wallace about what he was trying to do instead of asking questions that the people wanted to hear concerning the candidates positions on issues. I feel Gingrich was justified in his response to Wallace. It was quite obvious that Wallace was angered..but it's what it took to stop it!
It was not Newt that started the personal attacks in the debates, I believe it was Michelle Bachmann. Newt did his best to keep the debates civil.
I watch FOX all the time, it was rare if ever that any commentator accused Mitt of vicious attacks, when he started with his ads in Iowa. Again, Newt made every attempt to get Mitt to back off and stay on the issues. When Newt finally started confronting the attacks,almost every commentator on FOX began attacking Newt as being angry and defensive and it hasn't stopped yet.
I guess FOX is happy now, you've achieved your goal, because it's all you people talk about now...repetitively all day and night on every program...it's never ending. It was Cain until he dropped out, now it's always Newt's vicious ads but not a word about Romneys. I guess it's payback for Wallace.
I don't know what it is about Romney, but you all have tried your best to turn people against every other candidate, you've claimed Romney the "winner" since Iowa, constantly saying that the others should drop out and throw their support behind Romney.
Your becoming disgusting...people have a right to hear each candidates position on the issues,through every primary and they have a right to stay in as long as they want. We haven't even gotten into the 3rd primary yet, and you and the "expert" pundits are not going to control who we support.
The media is creating a frenzy that is completely uncalled for. Why aren't you spending some of your time reporting on Obama's abuse of Presidential power...and Harry Reid's abuse of his as Senate leader for blocking over 30 House bills from a vote. The only jobs Obama is interested in "creating" are union jobs because he's in their hip pocket. If you would give a quarter of your time to real news and truth maybe it would counteract the lies being told about the Republicans by the "Socialists" who control the Democratic party now. Do none of you care whats happening to this country???? it's being flushed down the toilet right under your nose!
Fair and balanced....not anymore
Posted January 14, 2012 at 5:22:44 PM
D. Cleveland
Romney won't get past the Romney-Care issues and his consistent, historic anti-gun stance. Of course none it really matters.
The only difference between the RNC and the DNC is degree of bad intent towards the U.S Constitution and personal freedoms. Eric Rush said it as well as anyone, "It is sad, but moreso horrifying that the difference between the Republican and Democrat leadership is, respectively, analogous to an assailant who wants to hit you on the head from behind and take your wallet, versus one who would hit you on the head, then rape and beat you within a nanometer of death before lifting the wallet.
People in the tea-party movement understand this – or understood it. This is why they have been marginalized by GOP and liberal elites alike."
While everyone crys about how badly Romney is being treated by the truth of who he is and Ron Paul is consistently, conveniently demonized and marginalized; the RNC continues in it's plan to throw another election to the Democrats. And the majority of the American voting population remain stupidly following the RNC/DNC script. The RNC / DNC do not care which of their two anointed operators, Obama or Romney, wins the election farce - as long as one of those two wins and the stupid, gullible American populace convince themselves that they actually had a choice.
If the American people are and remain in this pitiable state of self-deception - it is because they are comfortable in this state of being and deserve the government they get from their non-choice choices. Unless there is a general mass Patriotic Constitutionist awakening and a vast out pouring of rage at the state of corruption in the U.S. political system - real Freedom and Liberty are finished. Those of you that are actually, honestly looking for the truth will find it. The rest of you will vote for whomever the RNC/DNC tells you to vote for; and of course you'll damn me for telling you things you don't want to think about. You're welcome - and God Bless America in her time of need. If a Nation would be Free, the men and women of that Nation must choose Freedom and then willingly pay Freedoms price. Now we get to choose, people.
Posted January 14, 2012 at 10:06:24 PM
M Rick Timms. MD
Any of these guys will be better than Obama. It is critical that we select real Conservatives in the House and Senate Republican primaries and win both houses. We can then control the legislative agenda and make the president move to the right. If that is Obama, the country will be lost either through economic collapse or terrosist attack, such as an EMP.
What worries me most is how the media controls public opinion. Using the cover of about 500,00 people in Iowa and NH, they select the two or three that the rest of us get to consider, while they knock off any grassroots challenge to the guy they want. They want Romney. That is, until the general election when they will be showing us all the Mormon stories and critical details of his leadership record.
Meanwhile they will completely ignore the damage that Obama has inflicted on this nation and our constitution. His school applications ( foriegn applicant) and records ( not a genius ) will not be opened. His trip to Pakistan as a student will never be explained. Even now, none of these questions are being adressed..
Something is wrong. There is such a sense of manipulation in all of this that I am beginning to lose confidence in the process. I will still play ball, but I am preparing for the anarchy that is to come, regardless of who wins.
If we win, the 47% on the free ride will take to the streets like Greece. If obama and the progressives win, the economy simply fails. Either way, the lights are gonna go out for a while. It won't matter what kind of bulb you put in the socket.
Posted January 14, 2012 at 11:40:34 PM
wjmccrindle
@Dr Timms
I am with you, congress is the key. If Constitutional Constructionists can take the legislature, anyone in the oval office can be controlled. The Legislature is the key, controls the purse and the rule of law.
Posted January 16, 2012 at 11:17:25 AM