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Blowing Smoke - With a politically incorrect puff, Mark Block lights up the presidential race.
NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE ^ | October 28, 2011 | Robert Costa

Posted on 10/28/2011 5:48:34 PM PDT by neverdem

Blowing Smoke
With a politically incorrect puff, Mark Block lights up the presidential race.

As I strolled up First Street, I spotted him immediately. Mark Block, as he likes to say, was “being Block.”

He was smoking.

To be exact, he was puffing a Marlboro Light. And like most in Washington, he was doing it outside on a Wednesday afternoon, banished from the indoors.

As Block paced, a drizzle began. Others took cover. Block lit up another cigarette, gripping an iPhone to his ear as he circled his campaign papers, which were piled in binders on the pavement.

When the drops fell harder, he picked up the folders and stepped under the awning of the Capitol Hill Club, muttering campaign musings to his caller as politicos streamed past.

Everyone noticed him, from business-casual interns to slick-haired lobbyists. One congressman gave him a thumbs-up; most incoming diners simply grinned.

Block, you see, is a celebrity this week. He is a YouTube sensation.

As chief of staff for Herman Cain, Block recently starred in an online video. In the 55-second spot, he talks up Cain’s effort. He also smokes.

“We’ve run a campaign like nobody has ever seen,” Block says in the clip, leaning against a fence. “But then, America has never seen a candidate like Herman Cain.”

As he takes a drag, Block looks straight at the lens. The camera zooms in, focusing on his gray eyes and drooping, salt-and-pepper moustache. Then Cain appears for the closing seconds.

Cain’s brief appearance is as memorable as Block’s monologue. The presidential contender slowly turns his head and smiles. “I Am America,” Krista Branch’s country hit, blares.

Cain’s cheeky expression — endearing, to be sure, but also a tad long — has unsettled more than a few viewers. So have Block’s intense, rambling remarks. But it’s trippy and it works, Block insists as we take chairs for lunch with Linda Hansen, Cain’s deputy chief of staff.

Late-night comics have celebrated and mimicked the clip. But the mainstream press, of course, is not amused. Inside the Beltway, Block’s smoking has stirred a certain horror.

Pundits are befuddled. Block broke — without shame! – an unwritten rule of political correctness. Even President Obama, a longtime chain smoker, takes his packs in private.

Block couldn’t care less. The video, in a couple days, has garnered millions of clicks. On cable television, it is a sizzle story. Talking heads on every network — some giggling, some wagging their fingers — have attempted to decode its meaning, its message, and its leading man.

Decode away, Block tells me as he orders black coffee. As long as folks are talking about Herman Cain, pumping oxygen into the shoestring campaign, he’s winning.

He’s also getting a kick out of the attention. A year ago, when he and Cain began to discuss a presidential bid, almost nobody in national politics knew him. And if they knew him, they thought he was finished as a political operative.

Over a decade ago, Block was banned from Badger State politics for three years after a brutal legal fight over his work on a judicial race. The state election board accused him of conspiring with an outside group on a slush fund. Block firmly denied the charge.

But he settled, he tells me, after running out of money to pay his lawyers.

Banished from politics, Block’s decade-plus rise as a Republican consultant was over, even though he was only in his late forties. His competing consultants, without pause, boxed him out of the Wisconsin GOP apparatus.

So Block looked elsewhere. Reaching out to old allies, he quietly began to work with outside conservative groups. Eventually, he was hired by Americans for Prosperity (AFP), a leading advocacy organization with close ties to Charles and David Koch, the billionaire libertarians.

It was there, during Pres. George W. Bush’s second term, when Block’s views on political strategy began to evolve. He figured the old model, of working within the party, was obsolete.

Direct mail, retail politics, campaign ads — all of these retained roles in the process, he thought, as he directed AFP’s Wisconsin chapter. But they were quickly being outpaced by the Internet, which enabled citizens to self-organize and campaigns to reach thousands with the push of a button.

Being unconventional, Block recalls, was the better way to score points, to change minds, to win elections. Be it a quirky video or an itinerary focused on small towns instead of large media markets, political ripples, not big splashes, had lasting impact.

Over the next couple of years, Block shared these thoughts with Herman Cain, an AFP spokesman — who, like Block, appeared to be in the dusk of his political life, as well.

In 2004, Cain, former chief executive of Godfather’s Pizza, lost a Senate primary in Georgia. He was charismatic, a fine speaker, but as with Block, most assumed he was yesterday’s news, especially after Cain was diagnosed with Stage IV colon cancer in 2006.

As they kept meeting on the activist trail, the pair — both frustrated with their stalled careers and increasingly enthusiastic about alternative campaigns — clicked.

Block wanted back in the political game. Cain wanted another shot at the national spotlight.

By late 2009, Cain — cancer-free and a popular talk-radio host in Atlanta — saw an opening. But he hadn’t settled on how to make his next move. He confided with Block, who was busy boosting the Tea Party movement. They talked history, looking at how other political figures, often from outside of the establishment, won public office.

The Gipper featured in their talks. Ronald Reagan, both noted, spent years doing radio commentaries in the late 1970s, connecting with conservative voters. And when he ran for president in 1980, that experience elevated him among the GOP base, which respected his work in the trenches.

Now both men know that Cain, who has never held elective office, is no Reagan. But Block sensed something Reaganesque in the way Cain communicated at AFP events, drawing and holding massive crowds, weaving humor into policy discussions.

Block stewed for a few months, mulling these ideas. When he could, he’d travel to watch Cain wow conservatives at grassroots conferences, even though most of them didn’t know much about him..

Clearly, Cain wanted more. The question was what.

In his mid-fifties, and with little to lose, Block settled on an outrageous idea: running for the presidency, using AFP-style, outsider tactics. If anything, he reasoned, it’d be a hell of a ride.

Block didn’t rush to tell Cain about this thought, which lay dormant in the back of his mind for a couple months. They were close friends and had hinted at the idea a few times in conversation. But talking about it seemed absurd, especially three years before the election. That is, until Cain started to bring it up himself.

Block remembers the moment vividly. It was on a cold winter evening in March 2010.

“This whole thing started in Wisconsin Dells, Wis., at the Defending the American Dream Summit,” an AFP event, Block says.

Cain spoke, as he usually did, about the failures of the Obama administration. He spoke about his hope for the future. Then he went off-script in his conclusion: “I wanted to let President Obama know that in 2012, there will be a new sheriff in town.” The crowd roared.

Was he hinting at a potential candidacy? Block thought so. So did Linda Hansen, who at the time was a leading Wisconsin conservative.

Hansen, a former GOP county chair, was backstage with Cain that night. She asked Cain the same question. She was excited when he didn’t shush the idea.

Block began to get calls from reporters, asking whether Cain was eyeing a run for the White House. Block denied the rumor on the record, but told Cain days later that the excitement over the idea, however farfetched, was real. A few media members, he told him, were already looking for more information. Bloggers were buzzing.

Cain was calm when he heard Block detail the calls. It was only a little tease, a throwaway line, but it had stirred the waters — and he didn’t mind. Indeed, Cain’s positive response confirmed Block’s hope: that Cain was very close to considering a candidacy.

A couple of weeks later, Block, Cain, and Hansen met for dinner in Las Vegas after attending another conference. “Table five at the Capital Grille,” Hansen remembers, laughing.

Block nods. “We started looking at it with a cold eye, mapping things back from November 2012 to 2010, discussing certain criteria about what would need to happen,” he says.

When the trio agreed on a broad strategy, based around what they’d learned in Wisconsin, they paused and let the enormousness of a White House run sink in. Hansen prayed silently, thinking about what they were pondering. Block, a gruff, no-nonsense fellow, did the same.

A presidential run — it was something Block had thought about for years, but he had never gotten close to one, at least on a national level. After his legal troubles, he was stuck in the minor leagues. But with Cain and Hansen, he felt as if he was back.

“On Day One, that night in Vegas, we told him there are a lot of suspects out there, but we are not going to run against them. We are going to run as ourselves,” Block says. “With little infrastructure and, at the beginning, little money, that was our option. And he agreed.”

In every sense, what Block planned was a guerilla campaign: no D.C. consultants, just ordinary Americans who were interested in something fresh. He tapped a few Wisconsin folks, people he and Hansen trusted and admired. But beyond that the team was tiny.

Since then, Block says as he finishes his coffee, things have fallen into place. Not perfectly, or entirely as planned, but he remains optimistic. “Nobody thought we could do it,” he says.

Yet here he is — all eyes on him in the heart of Capitol Hill. His campaign video is the talk of a town that barely knows him; his candidate is leading in the latest New York Times/CBS national poll, as well as in many primary states. He’s a star; Cain’s a star.

And he’s still smoking. Halfway through lunch, Block gets up for another cigarette.

Linda Hansen playfully shakes her head. “When we were debating whether to leave the cigarette in the video, I just looked at him and said, ‘That’s you.’ The only thing missing in the video is an iPhone in your hand, a coffee in the other, and a cigarette dangling out of your mouth.”

That is Mark Block,” she says as he rolls his eyes.

“Just Block being Block,” he says. “Block being Block. That’s all right; that’s me.”

He pauses and raises an eyebrow. “Can you imagine Karl Rove or Dave Carney [Rick Perry’s strategist] doing the same?”

At that, he and Hansen share a chuckle. One of many they’ve had this week.

Robert Costa is a political reporter for National Review.



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Front Page News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: americans4prosperity; block; cain; hermancain; kochbrothers; markblock; politicallyincorrect
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To: lahargis

But you dont have a campaign, do you? I wonder why that is.


21 posted on 10/28/2011 6:21:38 PM PDT by HANG THE EXPENSE (Life is tough.It's tougher when you're stupid.)
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To: Doctor 2Brains

Really?


22 posted on 10/28/2011 6:22:47 PM PDT by HANG THE EXPENSE (Life is tough.It's tougher when you're stupid.)
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To: Doctor 2Brains

Really?


23 posted on 10/28/2011 6:23:08 PM PDT by HANG THE EXPENSE (Life is tough.It's tougher when you're stupid.)
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To: MNJohnnie

You’ve turned pretty foul in your old age...


24 posted on 10/28/2011 6:24:07 PM PDT by Road Warrior ‘04 (I miss President Bush greatly! Palin in 2012! 2012 - The End Of An Error! (Oathkeeper))
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To: not2worry

How can Cain relate to anyone who is any other race except black? Excuse me... I am AWC and my neighbor is AHC. What the heck? He cannot relate to anyone but his own race. That is what the problem is WHEN HE SAYS that. Do you get it?


25 posted on 10/28/2011 6:24:54 PM PDT by lahargis
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To: lahargis
I absolutely loved it.

There is no put-upon group larger than smokers.

It was the sort of in-your-face "bite me" ad that we've all been craving, and it worked.

26 posted on 10/28/2011 6:25:11 PM PDT by elkfersupper (Member of the Original Defiant Class)
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To: MNJohnnie

Calling me a Perrybot in itself is sleazy.


27 posted on 10/28/2011 6:26:06 PM PDT by lahargis
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To: neverdem

I don’t like smoking, but I’m a pretty BIG fan of liberty and personal freedom - I love the ad!

It’s also smart, just as with “999” Mr. Cain demonstrates an ability to change the topic and define the agenda that is second only to that of Sarah Palin.

If he drives the elite media even HALF as nuts, I’ll be tickled.


28 posted on 10/28/2011 6:26:41 PM PDT by bigbob
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To: HANG THE EXPENSE

ummm. okie dokie...?!?


29 posted on 10/28/2011 6:27:19 PM PDT by lahargis
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To: lahargis

Go read your posts. Your posting style is “school girl with a crush” drivel about Perry.


30 posted on 10/28/2011 6:29:44 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (Giving more money to DC to fix the Debt is like giving free drugs to addicts think it will cure them)
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To: MNJohnnie

I’ll take that as a compliment.


31 posted on 10/28/2011 6:31:46 PM PDT by lahargis
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To: lahargis
Then, he blows smoke, GREAT, nice cigarette ad campaign.

Since smoking bothers you so much, allow me to bother you some more.




The anti-smoking propaganda and the fight to stop the nanny staters is the very crux of the fight for individual liberty in this country. If it "offends" some people, then they deserve to be offended, because the only people that smoking in a campaign ad would offend are the kind of people that are the problem in this country!
32 posted on 10/28/2011 6:31:55 PM PDT by arderkrag (Georgia is God's Country. LOOKING FOR ROLEPLAYERS. Check Profile.)
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To: arderkrag

Used to smoke, I would never go back there! Thank GOD I gave it up :-)


33 posted on 10/28/2011 6:32:54 PM PDT by lahargis
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To: lahargis
I'm sorry but your hyper emotional bot worship of Perry is not really a very convincing argument for your guy

. That you worship the guy simply because he is from the same state of you is childish.

Cult of Personality candidates are no more attractive just because you slapped a Conservative label on him.

34 posted on 10/28/2011 6:34:56 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (Giving more money to DC to fix the Debt is like giving free drugs to addicts think it will cure them)
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To: MNJohnnie

I have only lived in Texas for 9 months. Lived in Wyoming in the ENERGY CAPITAL OF THE NATION for 12 years. Hence, energy candidate, Perry for Pres.


35 posted on 10/28/2011 6:37:09 PM PDT by lahargis
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To: lahargis
Let see. In 1993 Cain was one of the leaders in the fight against Clinton Care, the precursor for Obama care.

What was Rick Perry doing in 1993? Well look at this, he was campaigning FOR Clinton Care!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Perry#Early_political_career

In April 1993, Perry, while serving as Texas agriculture commissioner, expressed support for the effort to reform the nation's health care, describing it as “most commendable”.[27] The health care plan, first revealed in September, was ultimately unsuccessful due to Republican congressional opposition.[28][29][30][31][32] In 2005, after being questioned on the issue by a potential opponent in the Republican governor primary, Perry said that he expressed his support only in order to get Clinton to pay more attention to rural health care.[33]

36 posted on 10/28/2011 6:37:30 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (Giving more money to DC to fix the Debt is like giving free drugs to addicts think it will cure them)
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To: LibertyRocks

You seem to have some positive feelings for the average American voter... which would be the person who elected Obama. To me, the average American voter (by definition an Obama voter) is a piece of crap.


37 posted on 10/28/2011 6:37:33 PM PDT by Doctor 2Brains (If the government were Paris Hilton, it could not score a free drink in a bar full of lonely sailors)
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To: lahargis

Seems the real Perry record doesn’t match your school girl crush postings about him.


38 posted on 10/28/2011 6:38:30 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (Giving more money to DC to fix the Debt is like giving free drugs to addicts think it will cure them)
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To: MNJohnnie

You don’t need to go there with me. I need an energy President with a GREAT jobs background. I cannot take Cain’s Beamer program either where he taught Burger King kids how to smile. Where is his record? He doesn’t really have one expect as a business exec. That is where he gets lucky because who knows how many abortion votes we wouldn’t have liked, etc.


39 posted on 10/28/2011 6:41:29 PM PDT by lahargis
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To: Doctor 2Brains

That’s rich... You act as though Obama won with 99% of the vote! (pun intended)


40 posted on 10/28/2011 6:42:13 PM PDT by LibertyRocks
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