Mitt and the threat of Abandonment
On Sunday’s “Meet the Press,”
David Brooks and Joe Scarborough took turns criticizing Mitt Romney’s
messaging and strategy. Bay Buchanan, who has emerged as one of the
Romney team’s most public faces, responded by insisting that her
campaign is well-positioned to win:
We are in a dead heat. Nationally, we have two polls showing a dead
heat, a tie. And the momentum is ours. You see that the president’s
numbers have come down. Mitt Romney’s numbers are coming up.
It’s hardly novel for a campaign to play dumb in the face of
discouraging news about its prospects for victory. But as the
frustration and panic of conservative opinion leaders grows, the Romney
campaign has an extra incentive to try to look like a winner. Over the
next few weeks, Republican campaign committees, outside money groups,
fund-raisers, and down-ballot candidates will make bottom-line judgments
about Romney’s standing that will affect how they allocate their money
and how they treat Romney in their messaging.
The risks for Romney are two-fold. One is the simple appearance
problem. It’s one thing for the other party to claim that a presidential
candidate is flailing and running a poor campaign; that’s standard
fare. It’s different, and more problematic, when the media and political
world joins in this conclusion – something that Romney has been dealing
with for the past few weeks. And it’s even worse when the candidate’s
own party joins the chorus, as is also the case for Romney now.
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