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Mark Shields
Mark Shields
19 May 2012
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A Minimum Level of Likeability

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A Minimum Level of Likeability

Lee Atwater, who died too soon at the age of 41 from a brain tumor 20 years ago, had already managed the winning bare-knuckles 1988 presidential campaign of George H. W. Bush, who then appointed Atwater the chairman of the Republican National Committee.

Before he collapsed while speaking as party chair at a March 5, 1990, Washington fundraising breakfast for then-Texas Sen. Phil Gramm, Atwater, an expert judge of political horseflesh, had once confided that Gramm (whose presidential ambitions were already a semi-open secret) was the most disciplined candidate he had ever seen. If there were 10 calls for money or support on Gramm's political must-do list for a Monday, Gramm, according to Atwater, would have all 10 completed and be looking for more calls to make — before 10 a.m. on Monday morning.

But, Atwater unequivocally added, Gramm (who would eventually run unsuccessfully for the White house in 1996) would never be elected to the nation's highest office. Why? Because American voters, according to Atwater, insist upon a minimum level of likeability in their presidents.

When one of his listeners asked him then to explain the victory of the painfully ill-at-ease Richard M. Nixon, who once privately told political aide John P. Sears that he politics would be perfect — except for the (expletive deleted) people, Atwater said simply that in every century, there is one exception to that rule.

Atwater was almost certainly right. The vote for president is probably the most personal any of us casts. We are far more to evaluate and to vote for or against a member of Congress based upon whether we agree with the individual candidate's public positions on the economy, education, health care and taxation than upon how we personally feel toward that congressional candidate.

That's not the way it is in most voters' presidential choices, where we have almost an information overload about the personality, childhood and family background of the presidential nominees — all the way to one of the candidate's siblings publicly complaining to the nation how Mom always liked the candidate best.

What makes this anecdote theory relevant to 2012 is that the confidence of many of those seeking to re-elect President Barack Obama rely upon their conviction that the current field of Republican candidates (which, admittedly, has not generated enormous enthusiasm) contains no challenger personally as likeable or appealing to voters as the incumbent.

What that argument ignores is that whoever does emerge from the long, difficult primary slog to become the nominee will be given a large dose of benefit of the doubt by an electorate that respects anyone who can successfully navigate that political crucible and prevail.

Understanding that one of the two major-party nominees almost inevitably be the next president, voters, other than blind partisans, assume there are some skills or strengths both the finalists.

So why did voters in 1968 bypass the more likeable Hubert Humphrey for Richard Nixon? Think about the national mood: There were half a million American troops fighting and dying in an unpopular war in Vietnam; U.S. cities, fraught with racial tension, erupted in riots; Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy were assassinated; in short, the country was on the edge of a national nervous breakdown. Colorless but apparently competent, stability trumped likeability.

If in the next election year, Americans are suffering through unemployment numbers and pain not felt since the Great Depression, Democrats should be nervous that voters in selecting a president could once again disregard Lee Atwater's minimum level of likeability rule.

To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

COPYRIGHT 2011 MARK SHIELDS


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Interesting how we struggle to find ways to characterize the superstitious mob as applying something resembling humanity to their decision on how to vote. Sorry, I don't buy it. The advertising companies know all too well how arbitrary and just plain herd-stupid the average fat, lazy, beer-drinking, television-mesmerized consumer is.

And we are getting more so every year, as education and the concept of self-betterment become increasingly unavailable and not even sought after by the average American.

It's like Ronald Reagan said. Are you happier now than you were back into the reaches of your limited memory?

If not, the current guy is toast, and the new guy is in. EXCEPT for the star-power phenomenon, that is.

Obama has that, and despite the utter incompetence of his economic agenda, given the intense, self-destructive bent of the Republican opposition, he just might get to thumb his nose at the dopey masses for four more years.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Masako
Sat Jun 11, 2011 4:58 PM
----RETRO side show DIS-tractions at a time like this?

SURELY Shields knows these '90's Show' concerns couldn't matter less
as our 4 decades old, Globalist RED China TREASON op rounds the chillingly
FINAL bend.

SURELY

SURELY
Comment: #2
Posted by: free bee
Sat Jun 11, 2011 11:21 PM
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