According to Intrade Barack Obama is the odds-on favorite to
be re-elected to the presidency.
The conventional wisdom agrees.
Still, I am inclined to join William Kristol in casting
doubt on the conventional wisdom.
Stock market prognosticators often trade against the
conventional wisdom. They believe, based on very good evidence, that if a strong
consensus believes that the market will go up it increases the likelihood that it will go
down. And vice versa.
As you know, it’s called contrarian investing.
Kristol applies this thinking in a recent post:
Here’s
how Reuters recently summed up the race for the White House: “The 2012
presidential election is more than six months away, but here is what we know so
far: It is going to be close, it is going to be nasty, and the outcome could
turn on a series of unpredictable events.” The argument that followed was
balanced and intelligent, and nicely captured today’s conventional wisdom.
But the
conventional wisdom may well be wrong. We don’t in fact “know” that the
election will be close. Nor do we know that it will be nasty, or that it will
turn on unpredictable events. To the contrary, if I had to put money down now,
I’d bet that Mitt Romney will win an easy victory after a relatively
predictable, issue-focused, and not-too-nasty campaign. Indeed, I’d bet Romney
will win precisely if he
runs such a campaign. But if he allows the race to degenerate into name-calling
and gotcha gimmicks, he could lose. Democrats are better than Republicans at
the small and nasty stuff.
For my part I have suspected that the Obama camp is more worried than it lets on.
In 2008, the Democratic Party and the mainstream media
guilt-tripped America into voting for a man with no qualifications. To obscure
the question of Obama’s qualifications they launched a brutally effective attack
against the qualifications of Republican
Vice Presidential candidate, Sarah Palin.
It was a magic trick then. It’s a magic trick still. Only
now, everyone knows how it’s done.
After reading Peggy Noonan’s column this morning, I am even
more inclined to believe that Kristol is right.
Noonan paints a portrait of an Obama campaign in general
disarray, a candidate who has nothing to say, talking to audiences that have heard it all so many times
that they no longer grant it any credence.
It’s a campaign that is running on fumes. In Noonan’s words:
And
this president is always out there, talking. But—and forgive me, because what
I'm about to say is rude—has anyone noticed how boring he is? Plonking
platitude after plonking platitude. To see Mr. Obama on the stump is to see a
man at the podium who's constantly dribbling away the punch line. He looks
pleasant but lacks joy; he's cool but lacks vigor. A lot of what he says could
have been said by a president 12 or 20 years ago, little is anchored to the
moment. As he makes his points he often seems distracted, as if he's holding a
private conversation in his head, noticing crowd size, for instance, and
wishing the front row would start fainting again, like they used to.
Later she adds:
If you
have nothing to say, does it matter that you have endless venues in which to
say it?
If a candidate cannot run on a record of accomplishment,
Noonan continues, he can argue that he is a more familiar face. When given a choice between familiar and strange most people tend to choose the
familiar.
Familiar feels like a friend. Strange feels like a potential
foe.
Thus, Obama will suggest that people should not take a risk
with an unknown quantity when they have someone they know about.
That would be a normal way to think of things.
Unfortunately, Noonan continues, the more people get to know Obama the less
they like him. Increasingly he and his administration are being defined by their
incompetence.
In her words:
There
is a growing air of incompetence around Mr. Obama's White House. It was seen
again this week in Supreme Court arguments over the administration's challenge
to Arizona's attempted crackdown on illegal immigration. As Greg Stohr of
Bloomberg News wrote, the court seemed to be disagreeing with the
administration's understanding of federal power: "Solicitor General Donald
Verrilli . . . met resistance across ideological lines.
. . . Even Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the court's only Hispanic and an
Obama appointee, told Verrilli his argument is 'not selling very
well.' " This follows last month's embarrassing showing over the
constitutionality of parts of ObamaCare.
All of
this looks so bush league, so scattered. Add it to the General Services
Administration, to Solyndra, to the other scandals, and you get a growing sense
that no one's in charge, that the administration is paying attention to
politics but not day-to-day governance. The two most public cabinet members are
Eric Holder at Justice and Janet Napolitano at Homeland Security. He is overseeing
the administration's Supreme Court cases. She is in charge of being unmoved by
the daily stories of Transportation Security Administration incompetence and
even cruelty at our airports. Those incidents and stories continue, but if you
go to the Homeland Security website, there is no mention of them. It's as if
they don't even exist.
In 2008 many Americans overlooked the competence issue and
Obama’s achievement deficit because they thought that he was the smartest guy
in the room.
There was no real evidence to prove the point, but a
substantial number of people browbeat themselves into believing it.
Now, it is more and more difficult to hold fast to the belief that the executive
branch is in the hands of the best and the brightest.
One need but look to the administration’s two most recent
debacles at Supreme Court oral arguments.
To the general dismay of those who inhabit liberal precincts
the administration’s lawyer, Donald Verrilli seemed not up to the task. On two
issues that are vitally important for the administration, Obamacare and
immigration reform, two issues where, if you read the mainstream media, the
truth lies wholly with the Obama administration, Verrilli seemed to be dazed
and confused.
Unable to answer the questions posed by the justices,
Verrilli was outclassed by former Bush administration Solicitor
General, Paul Clement.
If you are more bush league than the Bush administration,
you have a problem.
Whatever the court decides, the oral arguments showed, to
those who follow such matters closely, that the Obama administration is being run by second-rate minds who got their
jobs for reasons that have little to do with their abilities.
Everyday citizens do not pay very close attention to these
things, but the media elites who threw their wholehearted support behind Obama certainly
do.
Four years ago they cheered a man who was just like them. If he starts giving people the impression that he is intellectually challenged they will be threatened by a loss of face and a loss of credibility as great thinkers.
At the least, they will curb their enthusiasm for Obama.
The conventional wisdom has it that the media will be Obama’s
most fervent cheerleader. Whether you agree with Peggy Noonan or rely on
contrarian thinking, it seems fairly clear that Obama is losing, if he has not
already lost, the media support that catapulted him into the White House last
time.
5 comments:
I certainly agree with Noonan's recent comments, but I am still put off over her ringing endorsement of the zerO during the last election. How could an experienced presidential speechwriter (and a very good one, at that)who served Reagan and Bush have fallen for this no-experience con-man whose past was a blank slate? Was "Hope and Change" the penultimate slogan that Peggy was striving for her entire life???
Hangtown Bob
So am I, Bob. I tried to address the problem last Friday in this post on American debauchery: http://stuartschneiderman.blogspot.com/2012/04/america-nation-debauched.html
Actually, I think that Noonan and the others need to explain how they allowed themselves to be so completely duped by BHO.
Agreeing with Kristol is certainly contrarian. The man's never been right in his life. Even when he's lying he's wrong.
Just what does it take before clowns like little billy are ignored?
Where is your evidence that he is losing media support?
I'm speculating about the loss of media support. I do not think that the media can get away with the kind of mindless adulation it heaped on him last time, nor with the kind of mindless attacks against Republicans.
I found the willingness to criticize the Obama Solicitor General in the mainstream media encouraging.
The first signs are perhaps Peggy Noonan and David Brooks, who thrilled to Obama last time. I doubt that they will repeat that performance, but if they do they will certainly be ridiculed.
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