New York Times Editorial (Indirect) - Ron Paul Electability
Seriously--how badly are people brainwashed by MSM? Literally 30% or more of the people I am canvassing are saying that they love RP's platform, believe in him and his policies, and prefer him for President over all the others. They all say they would vote for RP if he could win. The irony, of course, is that if everyone who said that, voted for RP--he would win by a landslide.
Indirect Ron Paul NYTimes Editorial 'On Electability'
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New York Times
January 14, 2008, 6:43 pm
Anything but the ‘E’ Word
By Ron Klain
Monday’s New York Times poll, invokes the word I dread the most in any discussion of primary campaigns: “electability.”
Whether you are looking for the person you think would be the best president or the person with whom you agree on key issues; the person whose experience is best suited to the job or the person who is most likely to bring change to Washington, there are many good reasons to choose a particular candidate.
Character, personality, leadership skills, resume or accomplishments are also good things to consider. Almost any reason will do, just please don’t pick someone because you think that he or she is the most “electable” candidate that your party can nominate.
Why? Because choosing a candidate based on “electability” is almost always futile.
Electability is an elusive and amorphous quality. It requires getting inside the heads of other voters — particularly swing voters in a few states — who may be far away and very different from you. And even if you could do that, you would still need to project such conclusions into the future, to figure out what those “other voters” will be thinking 10 months from now, in November. Either one of these tasks is difficult; putting the two together is impossible.
And I say this without any suggestion that political experts can do this any better than individual voters. Voters are just as good at assessing electability as are the so-called experts, which is to say, both find it equally impossible. If any of us — pundits or voters — needed an exercise in “electability humility,” campaign 2008 has certainly provided it!
When you factor into the equation the incredible complexity that comes from intervening events, the yet-unknown facts that will come out in the months ahead, the vast breadth of the national electorate, the unpredictable acts that will be done by the candidates’ themselves, uncertainty over which states will be battlegrounds and just dumb luck, trying to pick a candidate based on who would be most likely to win is like trying to pick your lottery numbers based on “a system.”
For Democrats, 2004 is the classic example. Many Democrats rallied behind John Kerry in the early primaries because they thought he could win, and particularly because they thought that his service in Vietnam would place him beyond political assault on national security issues. But by mid-summer, attacks on that military service made him politically vulnerable, and Senator Kerry lost an election that many Democrats thought he should have won.
Did that mean that everyone who supported John Kerry made a mistake? No. But those who backed him in the primaries just because they thought he was the “most electable” — especially because they saw his military service as a political advantage — wound up sorely disappointed.
Aside from the dubious practical problems with picking candidates based on electability, there are other concerns too. When I was supporting Senator Joe Biden earlier this year, I often had people say to me,
“I think Joe Biden would be a great president, but I won’t vote for him, because he can’t win.”
In this way, electability becomes a tautology: voters won’t support a candidate who isn’t electable, and he isn’t electable because voters won’t vote for him.
More philosophically, an excessive focus on electability diminishes the franchise. Taking something as sacred as your presidential preference and turning it into an act of political prognostication cheapens your choice: being a voter is a more important job in our system than being a pundit or a consultant. Why should you cast your vote based on how you think others will vote (even if you could guess that accurately)? Why should their choice matter more than your own?
Yes, ultimately, presidential campaigns are about winning: a candidate who does not win cannot achieve policy changes or make the country a better place. And being mindful of
the consequences of our votes is important, as many people who voted for Ralph Nader in 2000 — only to put George Bush in the White House, instead of Al Gore — have painfully learned.
If you want to back a winner in 2008, focus on persuading your neighbor to come over to your choice, instead of guessing how he will vote.
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Take away lesson from rexsolomon:
If you meet anyone who says, "I want to vote for Ron Paul but I won't because he can't win" - tell him or her:
"That was EXACTLY the line of thinking that got us into this mess. That's exactly how George Bush came to power. Are you happy now? I'm asking you not to make the same mistake again!".