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Cracking the 2012 CodePosted on Apr 21, 2011WASHINGTON—Handicapping an election 19 months away seems relevant only to political junkies except for this: Expectations, as shrewd investors know, affect actions. The Republican presidential field might be more formidable if President Obama were less strongly favored. And over time, what Congress does will be shaped by the presidential campaign’s direction. Views of 2012 are heavily influenced by the metaphors that prognosticators invoke. Will it be 1984, 1988 or 1992? Obama’s camp loves 1984. President Ronald Reagan’s popularity plummeted during the economic downturn of his first two years, and Republicans did badly in the 1982 midterms. Then the economy roared back and so did Reagan. He won the landslide Obama’s handlers dream about. Republicans like 1992. In the year before the election, the smart money was on President George H.W. Bush’s re-election. But out of nowhere came a young Democratic governor named Bill Clinton. He took advantage of economic discontent and the way Ross Perot’s independent candidacy shook up the campaign. Bush lost with only 37.5 percent of the popular vote. Republicans want to believe Obama is as invisibly vulnerable now as Bush was then. Advertisement I like 1988 (the year the first President Bush defeated Democrat Michael Dukakis) as a metaphor for the Republicans’ stature problem. That year, the Democratic hopefuls came to be known as “the seven dwarfs.” This wasn’t fair to them, and it may not be fair to this year’s Republican field, whatever its eventual size. But the dwarf line speaks to an image deficit shared by both fields. Of the current GOP bunch, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty is the Dukakis of 2012. I say this as someone who is fond of Dukakis and believes he was an excellent governor of Massachusetts. He just wasn’t a great presidential candidate. The strength Pawlenty and Dukakis share is the absence of any glaring shortcomings. Dukakis was the remainder candidate, the guy most likely to be left standing. That looks like Pawlenty’s role this year. But it’s also hard to see Pawlenty escaping Dukakis’ eventual fate in a general election. Mitt Romney, the sort-of, kind-of front-runner, is intelligent and well-organized. But his lack of constancy on certain issues and the Massachusetts health care plan (which he should be proud of fathering, but has had to disown) hurts him with primary voters. Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour is the guy you would most want to have a drink with, but that’s not necessarily the key to winning a nomination. Gov. Mitch Daniels of Indiana is bright and substantive. He should run, but I don’t think he will. Then there’s the rest—Newt Gingrich, Michele Bachmann, Donald Trump and Jon Huntsman. I can’t see any of them making it, but keep an eye on Trump’s economic nationalism and his tough-on-China rhetoric. If he cans the birther nonsense, The Donald might surprise people. For the election, here’s the math: With the new census, the states Obama carried last time (plus the lone elector he won in Nebraska) start him with 359 electoral votes. From his original states, Obama can lose Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, Virginia and North Carolina and still win exactly the 270 electoral votes he needs—as long as he holds his other states, notably Pennsylvania and Florida, and that single elector from Nebraska. Under this scenario, if he also lost the one Nebraska vote, the Electoral College would be tied, 269-269. This gives Obama a lot of maneuvering room, but note that Pennsylvania and Florida both trended Republican last year. So Obama is certainly the favorite, but I’m not in the camp that sees the election as over before it starts. And in the congressional races, something could happen in 2012 that’s never happened before: Both houses could switch parties but in opposite directions. The Democrats could take back the House—the GOP is defending a lot of Democratic-leaning seats—while Republicans could take over the Senate, given the difficult array of states Democrats must win. If this actually happens, remember you read it here first. New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
By Inherit The Wind, April 26, 2011 at 9:19 am Link to this comment
If dems weren’t such idiots they’d realize that Pawlenty took Minnesota from financially stable to a debt-ridden financial disaster, running huge deficits on the back of dogma-based tax cuts, especially for the wealthiest.
Is there ANY Republican governor (besides possibly Schwartzeneggar) that DOESN’T turn their state into a debt-ridden taz-cut hog? Christine Todd Whitman did it to NJ over 10 years ago and the current GOP thug, Chris Christie can’t figure out how to solve without cutting funding to schools, road maintenance, snow clearing and safety inspections….DUH!!!! Raise taxes on the RICHEST NJ residents, jerk!
The republicans are great politicians but the worst governing party since before the Civil War. The Dems are the weakest, most spineless and back-boneless party since the nation’s founding.
We are doomed…..
Report thisBy samosamo, April 23, 2011 at 5:56 pm Link to this comment
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Hopeful senario e.j. What I see missing is the voter fraud such as
getting the supreme court in 2000, or the neocons on that court,
to view a petitioner worried about harm to his chances of losing
votes thus, with absolutely NO signing, those 5 criminal justices
were able to shut down a recount in the deciding state because
they, theoretically, decided that petitioner, w , would be
irreparably harmed if the recount continued. And that was a
non-signed decision in a goddamn NATIONAL ELECTION!! Hell,
gore probably didn’t even know w’s slick lawyers had paid those
scotus members to file such a petition and much less so that
gore should have done so. That was the 2000 election
The 2004 just about could be worse. There the sec of state of
ohio blackwell did everything he could, just as brother jeb in
florida did, to obfuscate and deny people the ability to vote. So,
not to go into those details, read the book ‘What Happened in
Ohio?’.
What will determine the 2012 is how effective the department of
voter fraud can give the election to the already chosen
candidate. Watch closely because there will be, already, a rather
large contingent of wannabes on the republican side, hopefully
there will be several on the democrat side. The trick will be
watching the main ingredient of the department of voter fraud,
the M$M (mainstream media) who will decide the final field
possibly late in this year but surely by early 2012. Keep an eye
on who the M$M will ‘cull’ out of the debates, discussions or how
much coverage will go to anything outside of what he M$M will
sanction. That will be the controlling card.
Whatever the outcome, 2012 elections promise to be as screwed
Report thisup and messed up as any election ever held, making it come
close to a military takeover of the nation, as if that hasn’t already
been done now anyway, the pentagon is just stealing the money
right now.
By John Poole, April 23, 2011 at 7:24 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
November 13th, 2012 Obama: “We got ‘im!” (Qaddafi)
Report thisBy Jeffrey C. Goldfarb, April 23, 2011 at 5:14 am Link to this comment
The 2012 elections are likely to be a continuation of the 2010 elections. The stakes are high. Two competing visions of America are competing. The Republican victory of 2010 were expected. http://www.deliberatelyconsidered.com/2010/11/the-results-were-expected/
2012 will either put an end to this, or not.
Report thisBy Nilla F. Syks, April 21, 2011 at 5:37 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Arnie Gunderson for President!
Report thisBy driving bear, April 21, 2011 at 5:08 pm Link to this comment
I suggest Mr. Dionne look back a the the 1980 election.
In Jan 80 a poll was taken and showed a republican candidate with 8 % support in the upcoming gop primary. That candidate was Ronald Reagan.
Second Mr. Dionne assumes that the economy will improve between now and Nov 2012 and I cannot say for sure that it will,
So it is looking more and more likely that the 2012 election will be more like 1980
Report thisBy Alan, April 21, 2011 at 5:02 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Well, just look at it, the 2012 election, that is,
Report thisbrought to you by Ringling Brothers, Barnum, and
Bailey. Soon in the ring, dunderess Palin vs.
blunderer Trump vs. etc. etc., a battle for
circus history. And above it all, the high wire
act of Barack Obama, the progressive who’s never
there when you need him. Geez he sounds like
an insurance salesman don’ he?
Oh, I forgot, there’s a crowd of onlookers
who actually paid to see this show,
the dumbed down burgers and fries and fox team recruited by the man to vote against their very own
interests. Get your tickets folks! get your
tickets!