Daily Kos

Website: http://babbleyawn.blogspot.com/
Email: shannon_jaronik@yahoo.com

Some day... some day, I will have a bio.

Keep 'em their heels and push the meme....

Fri Oct 15, 2004 at 10:31:44 AM PDT

...that the Bush campaign is in total disarray.

We all know that - other than the obvious voter suppression and Supreme Court - what cost Al Gore a CLEAR win in 2000 was that his campaign was dogged by silly "process stories" that coalesced into a defining (to the media and general public) narrative of disorganization, missed opportunities, and other such distortions.

Al Gore invented the internet.

The Gore people are fretting over "earth tones".

The Gore campaign can't stay on message.

Gore sighed during the debates.

All the pap and pulp that, once it's afield, means surrogates and supporters have to waste valuable time answering questions about the campaign rather than sticking to the campaign's message and/or line of attack.

This year - it's our turn to throw up some flak -- more below the fold-

Poll

Which process story is the best to push?

0%0 votes
30%4 votes
15%2 votes
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38%5 votes
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| 13 votes | Vote | Results

We get to kiss our sister!

Fri Oct 08, 2004 at 10:47:55 PM PDT

...say the lusty, immoral, Republicans.

Well, OK -- not really.  But I've got my eye on you Limbaugh.

Once the spin wears away, the meme the Republicans will try to push is that is that this was an even debate, that the president made up for his showing up unprepared, tired, drunk, scared to be out of Karl Rove's warm snuggly bubble.... whatever...  from debate 1 with a much better performance in debate 2.

The dam was about to burst, and they needed some bubblegum in the hopes of staving off the flood for just 3 more weeks.

The times, they are a-changin'

Wed Oct 06, 2004 at 08:21:30 AM PDT

So this is what it feels like to have a campaign equal to task of taking on the Reic....errr Right wing, eh?

I  think we saw three majors themes rise from the ashes of the Edwards-Cheney clash:

  1. So effortlessly it was overlooked; but Edwards clearly put any "not up to the job" whispers to rest.  Even the post-debate pundits that scored the debate for Cheney admitted as much.

  2. "Fantasy world" is a phrase that should come out of Kerry and Edwards (and surrogates) mouths  and applied to the Bush/Cheney ticket every hour on the hour.  This dog WILL hunt.

  3. We've now got 3 debate performances to compare to Bush's implosion -- and his stammering, grimacing, performance art now looks all the worse.

More below the fold....

Is the backfire backfiring?

Thu Sep 16, 2004 at 06:27:46 PM PDT

I have to admit - the TANG-gate story never really resonated with me.  Kevin Drum can sometimes be a little too....sissy... for my taste, but I think he's right.

Most voters won't care, the ones that do generally knew the truth, memo or no memo.  Sure- it'd be great to see Bush squirm, but hey, if they can get away with Iraq to the extent they have....

Then, we all got to learn a LOT more about fonts, typewriters, and the like than we ever thought possible.  At first glance - it might be disappointing to see the story turn into another tired SCLM bedtime story freepers tell their children.

Now... I'm not so sure.

Too Much?

Tue Aug 24, 2004 at 07:19:57 PM PDT

I've been tossing around this sort of "down to their level" missive for a while... still undecided if it's too much, or worth submitting somewhere (other than to the chorus, of course!) as a longer letter-to-ed/local voice of the people type op-ed page submission.

Thoughts?

* * * *

What happened?

Tue Jan 20, 2004 at 11:38:27 AM PDT

To be sure - history, the bank account, and endorsements provide some measure of hope and cheer to downtrodden Deaniacs today...

But there is no possible way to spin the Iowa results as any better than a big disappointment - and dangerously close to a disaster.

One man's analysis

The message was right -- MSNBC entry polling showed 75% against the war in Iraq.  Both Kerry and Edwards took swipes at "special interests" and echoed, rhetorically at least, the theme of "taking back America" in recent days - and last night's speeches were filled with such references.  These were Dean born themes, but whether because the message got lost (Trippi's take on MSNBC) or pitch/delivery of the message (the talking head take... and one I buy more than Trippi) was off - it begs some important questions.  For instance - can Dean carry the "outsider" banner?  No doubt that showing the special interests the door resonates - but per Arnie in California and Edwards/Kerry, it looks like people prefer a candidate who will politely show those interests the door, rather than threaten to toss them out on their collective asses.  
The message may be good - but Dean may not be right man to carry it at this stage. That doesn't mean Dean isn't the right candidate, period... only that DFA needs to figure out if the candidate can be molded to better fit the message, or if the message needs to change - fundamentally or otherwise - to better suit the candidate.  You can't convince America it should be angry - whether it should or not - if doesn't want to be.

Turnout was up.  Take this for what it's worth considering the source: but it should be noted that the resurgence of Democrats and the spark of hope in beating Bush seems to have coincided with Dean's meteoric rise.  Unfortunately for Dean, being the spark didn't translate into caucus support.... rather, it seemed to invigorate Kerry and Edwards who flew the "electability" standard high.  I could be convinced that Dean was anecdotal to the re-birth of the Dems, not responsible for it -- but someone would need to convince me.  If this sounds like frustration fueled whining... you're probably not far off the mark.  I won't mince words - it feels like we put together a great party, but the girls went home with the cute guys.

Staying above the fray works For much of late fall and early winter, nursing a slight -- and early -- lead, Dean tried to project precisely this... staying out of debate battles as best as possible, despite constant attacks, foregoing negative ads.  His lead solidified, or at least seemed to.

Then, as Iowa gets closer -- I think Dean, Trippi and company made the mistake of buying into the dreaded "CW", which is ironic since the campaign was built around defying it.
They bought the CW that they were in a position to wrap up the nomination early -- and tried to hit a grand slam in Iowa, even though no one was on base. Heck -- logic alone should have dictated that no one is ever on base for the lead-off hitters first plate appearance.

They fell into a head-to-head death match with Gephardt, and won that battle... but in a classic pyrrhic style.
Perhaps connected to the Gep wars, they bought the CW that organization is everything in Iowa.  While Tom Schaller's excellent posts indicate otherwise -- I still maintain that it was plain and simple "standard" campaigning that won the day for Edwards and Kerry, not organizational strength.  Dean largely ignored the undecideds, focusing instead on a death match with Gephardt.  Whereas Gephardt's negative attacks on Dean could have provided an opening for Dean with a clever exploitation strategy, Dean instead chose to line up his troops and meet in the open field.  Like I said earlier, he won the engagement... but then got outflanked by Edwards and Kerry in the process.

I'm not going so far as to say Dean "lost" Iowa, as opposed to Kerry and Edwards "winning" it - Edwards in particular has been running on the same message and employing the same strategy for months.

What happens now?

We'll see....


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