May 6, 2004
GO TO SANCTUARY:
Kerry's Conundrum: To know him is to dislike him (Nick Gillespie, May 5, 2003, Reason)
As he becomes better known to the American public that somehow failed to learn much about him during multiple terms in the U.S. Senate, John Kerry is slipping in the polls. According to Gallup, over the course of March and the first half of April, the percentage of likely voters willing to punch his ticket slumped from 50 percent to 44 percent. Perhaps more alarmingly, the percentage of those with a favorable opinion of him has dropped from 61 percent in January to 54 percent a couple of weeks ago. According to a CBS News/New York Times poll, his unfavorables have crept up from 29 percent to 33 percent.Meanwhile, the press, despite plausible (if often insanely packaged) charges of Democrat-leaning bias, is hammering this junior varsity JFK for statements that are alternately bizarre, defensive, and confusing. It doesn't help that many of them are about relatively trivial matters. These include his recent grilling on Meet The Press, where he insisted that, yes, many unnamed foreign leaders earnestly want him to "beat this guy," George W. Bush. Kerry desperately tried to turn the conversation into a thought experiment on how he might have met such leaders despite his not traveling abroad since becoming a candidate. "You can go to New York City and you can be in a restaurant and you can meet a foreign leader," he said, in "standing by" his original statement. That's the sort of tactic that might have won college debates (Kerry was a forensics champion at Yale) but it isn't going to score many points with anyone since Socrates pulled a Brody. Similarly off-putting were his explanations about whether he tossed his war medals, or someone else's, or just his ribbons, or someone else's, at a 1971 "act of political theater."
The actual truth of any of this matters far less than the general vibe it gives off. And that vibe has even reliably Democratic members of the press writing pieces headlined "John Kerry Must Go" and crafting bon mots like this one by Robert Sam Anson in The New York Observer: "No one's saying that Mr. Kerry's cooked. But McGovern parallels give him a toasted look he didn't get skiing in Sun Valley."
What explains Kerry's failure to connect? Doubtless part of it is that his campaign lacks a unifying theme, or even the hint of a big message that is both broadly appealing and sufficiently distinct from anything offered by George Bush. All of Kerry's policy flip-flops, real and imagined, aren't helping, either. The Kerry team is seeking to remedy the problem with what it called "the largest single purchase of advertising time in a presidential race," according to The New York Times. The ads—$27.5 million of them—will focus on his "life story" and will "establish his leadership credentials, highlighting his decorated combat record in Vietnam."
But the problem may well be Kerry's personality and, hence, largely impossible to fix, at least short of long-term therapy. Though largely unarticulated at this point, his policy differences with Bush are likely to be relatively minor (especially compared to someone like, say, Howard Dean, who was willing to stake out a sharply anti-Bush position on every issue). Indeed, Kerry is for the most part a centrist Democrat and, in the past, a supporter of NAFTA, The PATRIOT Act, and war in Iraq. To the extent he is backtracking from his own record, he is confusing undecided voters as much as wooing them.
He should have done this two months, but it's not too late for Mr. Kerry to suspend campaigning, announce he's leaving the Senate to focus on the campaign once it adjourns for the Summer, and get the heck out of the headlight glare. His only realistic shot at the presidency is that he be a blank slate upoin which voters can etch the opposite of each of their particular dislikes of George W. Bush without reality intruding. Reappear briefly for the convention at which the acceptance speech should be short and bland. Duck the debates. Pump money into the Democratic base states that are at risk in a landslide. Head home in November to teach at the Kennedy school or luck into the presidency if there's another 9-11 or a new Great Depression. Posted by Orrin Judd at May 6, 2004 1:37 PM
Win the campaign by not campaigning - novel idea and with a candidate like Kerry it might work.
On a related note I still don't think he will resign his Senate seat.
Another 9-11 isn't going to help him. In a strange way, it'll help the country get more serious about the war, and it will help Bush win in a landslide. This country isn't serious yet. We're pussyfooting around and it's extremely distressing. Our enemies are very serious and they are global as can be.
Posted by: Sig at May 6, 2004 4:05 PM