Weekly Opinion Editorial
POST MORTEM ON THE ELECTION
by Steve Fair
Yeah, I know I was slightly off(about a 100) with my prediction of Romney getting 309 electoral votes. Since last week’s election, many are offering their take on
why Romney lost the election. Here’s my
analysis:
First, nationally Republicans concede too many
demographics. Political consultants
advise candidates to ignore the minority voter because according to Karl Rove,
“97% will vote Democrat.” Ignoring
minority voters just makes Rove’s observation a self fulfilling prophecy. It is true that minorities vote overwhelming
Democrat, but that wasn’t always the case.
During reconstruction most blacks were Republicans and as recent as 2004
Hispanics were voting R. Republicans
must reach out to those demographics if we are to ever win the White House
again. We can’t concede huge blocks of
voters to the competition and expect to be successful.
Second, Romney didn’t fire up the base. In order for a
candidate to get elected, he must energize the base. Party regulars must be excited about the
candidate. Romney failed to do
that. He was consistently boring during
the primary, but his campaign organization was solid unlike his
competitors. He won the primary through
organization, not through inspiration and momentum. There is nothing wrong with organization and
in fact it is a primary component in winning races, but you need an exciting
candidate to get voters to the polls. There
was a creditability gap with Romney and social conservatives that he could
never close.
Third, America
has changed. The American dream is not
that you can come to this country, work hard, take personal responsibility and
be successful. The new American dream is
now one where a large percentage of the population is on government assistance
or working for the government. The time
has come where those who are dependent on government are able to vote into office
whomever they want for President. That
is a sad fact, but one that hard working private sector citizens are going to
have to face. Government produces
nothing- it is dependent completely on the private sector. Government consumes- citizens produce. That is a basic truth, but in the new America, such
talk is heresy. Government has become
the ultimate reality for a large segment of the population. In that altered reality, government provides
employment, food, shelter, education, health care, and security. Personal responsibility is de-emphasized and
in fact discouraged. We not only have
stopped teaching a man to fish, but we have taken away his pole.
Fourth, hurricane Sandy
helped President Obama. During a major
crisis, Americans want to see their government responding. Obama effectively used the natural disaster to
his advantage. Even New Jersey Governor
Chris Christie bear hugged the President and was extremely complimentary when the
President visited his state after the storm.
That changed Obama from a candidate to a President and it the timing was
to his advantage. Granted all of the
state hit by the storm were solid Obama states, but the media coverage of the
President during the aftermath of the storm boosted his image in battleground
states.
Fifth, the President did a good job of defining Romney and
avoiding his record. Whenever Romney would point out something
about his record, the President would cry, “negative.” Pointing out facts about an elected
official’s record is not negative campaigning, but in our apathetic, sound bite
driven world, critical thinking skills are not the norm. I have never seen an incumbent run from his
record more than the President did, but he did so quite effectively. If you didn’t know better you would have
thought Romney was the incumbent.
Obama’s record was never challenged in the media, but Romney was
criticized unmercifully for being a success in the private sector.
Sixth, social conservatives didn’t vote in high
numbers. Christian conservatives can win
just about any election if they just turn out.
For a variety of reasons, many choose to stay home and not vote. Many didn’t trust Romney and his position on
abortion. He just didn’t talk about it
and if he did he danced around the issue.
"What was
presented as discipline by the Romney campaign by staying on one message, the
economy, was a strategic error that resulted in a winning margin of pro-life
votes being left on the table," said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president
of the anti-abortion Susan B. Anthony List.
Some are saying the Republican Party has to change our
message and positions on the issues if we are ever to recapture the White
House. It is not our platform that is
the problem- it is the candidates we have been running. We keep running safe candidates. We need to take a bold step and run someone
who will energize the base and get our voters to the polls.
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