Posted on 07/26/2006 2:58:59 PM PDT by Jean S
Everyone has an opinion about why Ralph Reed lost the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor of Georgia. The most widely publicized theories miss the mark widely, and the best explanations for Reeds loss are largely ignored.
There is one fundamental reason to reject most of the explanations being advanced by the pundits. In a nutshell, most of the rationales offered for Reeds defeat are self-serving spin.
Secular liberals want you to believe that Reed lost because he was simply too religious. Christian conservatives want you to believe that Reed lost because he looked too liberal in aiding Jack Abramoffs gambling interests. Reformers insist that Reed was too hypocritical, acting pious in public while humping for dollars in private. And old-school populists insist that Ralph was exposed as too close to big business for aiding Enron and Microsoft.
In short, everyone wants to see Reeds defeat as validation of his or her own beliefs.
Of course, there is a little truth in all these conclusions. I am sure that the lusty e-mail dialogues between Reed and Abramoff disgusted some Christians. I am equally certain some voters feared Reed would violate church-state separation once elected. But to conclude that any one of these self-serving theories provides a single, simple explanation for Reeds loss is naive.
The unsophisticated debate over Reeds defeat has largely ignored or obscured some plausible contributing factors. Perhaps the most overlooked matter is crossover voting by Democrats.
Georgia has an open primary that allows any voter to participate in either partys election. Late in the campaign, some liberal groups particularly gay and lesbian leaders encouraged traditional Democrats to vote in the GOP primary against Reed. While a few local media outlets reported that and some homosexual websites now openly boast of the plans success the mainstream media wholly ignored the story.
For liberals, the headlines Scandal defeats Reed or Christians abandon Reed suited their worldview better than did Gay conspiracy sabotages Reed.
But dont get me wrong. Im not alleging that a gay cabal was primarily responsible for Reeds loss. But its one of several factors that played a role.
There are even more theories that have received scant consideration. Peggy Noonan, for example, ruminates on Reeds looks.
She recalls once thinking that Reed looked like a daguerreotype of one of the boy generals of the Civil War, his dark hair slicked back and his collar too big for his neck. Actually, thats exactly the visage that Reed maintained throughout his summer campaign. So if it turned off Miz Peggy, I suspect there are other Yankee women living in Dixie who also thought Ralphs hairdo and collars needed a makeover.
Some of Noonans other recent observations actually get closer to the heart of the matter. She complained of his advanced insiderism and tendency to seem in love with being a top and big-time operative. This was the central problem.
Political consultants are generally not very good candidates. They talk too much about campaign process and not enough about policy and vision. And they find it tough to analyze their own strengths and weaknesses objectively. I cannot help but believe Reed underestimated the real-world difficulties confronting his first-time candidacy.
And theres even the ignored matter of Casey Cagle, the man who trounced Reed. In the rush to discredit Ralph, almost no one seems to give this state senator any credit for winning.
One pundit who cruised both candidates websites acknowledged his surprised discovery that Cagle may have edged Reed in advocating traditional and family values.
Imagine that: the staunchest conservative winning a GOP primary. Few pundits seem interested in that novel angle.
Hill is director of Hill Research Consultants, a Texas-based firm that has polled for GOP candidates and causes since 1988.
One word.
Corruption.
he got less votes?
Yep. Someone who holds himself out as a Christian and then plays very unseemly patty-cake with Abramoff is kind of alienating his core group.
make that 'fewer' votes.
if he were a democrat he could celebrate a "moral victory".
His recorded voice called me at 8:45pm one night and woke me up. That didn't help him.
I voted against Tom DeLay for that very same reason.
Nailed it!!
I've seen this again and again. Political consultants are often very smart and knowledgeable and experienced. They help elect candidates who aren't as smart as they are; who don't always follow their campaign instructions to the letter; and who then don't always vote the right way or say the right things after they are elected. So the consultants eventually decide that they should cut out the middle-men (or women) and run for office themselves, since they know how to do it exactly right.
The consultants almost invariably end up getting trounced. Because those candidates who win have friendly, sympatico personalities and are able to relate to the voters, even if they aren't quite as smart as their political consultants.
The losing political consultants have a blind spot when it comes to analyzing their own limitations. They find it incomprehensible that dolts (including the dolts they once assisted) can win elections, but that they can't. They start to blame it on the dumb, apathetic voters. Or they blame the biased press. Or they blame the vicious smear attacks they endured from their evil opponents. Or they blame being outspent. But they never, ever blame themselves. That would be inconceivable.
And that is one of the reasons I voted for Cagle... he actually had experience holding an elected office.
Connected to questionable things, few knew him among voters and he had little appeal.
Hypocrisy
He had a penchant for wearing bad ties. That also might have been a factor......... ;-)
The Reed flop was a decisive slapdown to Rudy Guiliani's presidential ambitions. The race was a testing ground for Rudy's political pull---if any---in the South and Rudy's calculated plan to hijack the Republican party.
Guiliani's desperately trying to alter his liberal image; southern Christian votes are necessary to advance his 2008 political ambitions. Rudy's failed endorsement is a wakeup call to Repubs---Rudy is toxic.
(We'll see if Dewine, Topinka, Santorum, Hutchinson,
and Swann become victims of the NYC death knell.)
These Repubs should be advised that conservatives consider any alliance with Rudy Guiliani as a slap in the face to conservatives, and b/c of Reed's infamous defeat, it is also a distinctly losing proposition.
They should all get a copy of The Quotable Guiliani as well.
BTW, if you have them, FRmail links to any of the named candidates campaign committees. Thanks.
>>Secular liberals want you to believe that Reed lost because he was simply too religious. Christian conservatives want you to believe that Reed lost because he looked too liberal in aiding Jack Abramoffs gambling interests. Reformers insist that Reed was too hypocritical, acting pious in public while humping for dollars in private. And old-school populists insist that Ralph was exposed as too close to big business for aiding Enron and Microsoft.<<
>>Georgia has an open primary that allows any voter to participate in either partys election. Late in the campaign, some liberal groups particularly gay and lesbian leaders encouraged traditional Democrats to vote in the GOP primary against Reed.<<
David Hill just doesn't get it, especially about the cross over voting - Democrats wanted Reed nominated.
Hill should read the Georgia Freepers forum. Literally NOBODY there openly supported Reed by election time. Reasons:
1. He was double faced with conservatives
2. He could never win the general election -damaged and without his base.
This is right on. Ralph Reed is still one hell of a political consultant.
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