Monday, October 15, 2012

Andrew Sullivan: Obama Sitll Declining and Biden Didn't Help

Daily Beast writer Andrew Sullivan’s name has become something of a byword for liberalism in the media over the past few years. From his unseemly obsession with the parentage of Sarah Palin’s son Trig, to his article asking “Why are Obama’s critics so dumb” to any number of other embarrassments, Sullivan – or Sully, as he’s sometimes called – has been a seemingly irrepressible cheerleader for the incumbent.
That is, until the first presidential debate, after which Sullivan penned a panicky article titled “Did Obama just throw the entire election away?” The article was featured on the front page of the Drudge Report, and became a favorite reference point for triumphal conservatives. Still, given Sullivan’s exultant response to Vice President Joe Biden’s performance in last week’s debate, one might think he’d return to cheerleading afterward.
No such luck. Sullivan is still reading the data, and it still terrifies him. In a blog post from this evening, Sullivan posted the following graph and wrote:
Andrew Sullivan Still Panicking Over Obama Decline
I’ve been pilloried for being excitable about that epic first debate. But just look at that graph above (with heightened sensitivity) of the campaign poll of polls since February and tell me I was wrong.
As an Obama supporter, I remain committed, if deeply demoralized. The reason for that new ambivalence is not that the reasons for re-electing him have changed – we desperately need to raise revenues to tackle the debt, we cannot launch a new Judeo-Christian war against Islam in the Middle East without igniting an even more ferocious global religious conflict; it’s just wrong to cut off healthcare access for tens of millions, while ending homecare for countless seniors, while not even making a dent in the actual budget – because of give-aways to the extremely rich. And the way the Obama campaign had made those arguments clearly and consistently and built a brilliant campaign all the way to the first debate was quite something to behold. To be given a gift like the Romney 47 percent video is a rare event in national politics. To get it in the fall of an election should have made an Obama victory all but assured.
But Obama threw it all back in his supporters’ faces, reacting to their enthusiasm and record donations with a performance so execrable, so lazy, so feckless, and so vain it was almost a dare not to vote for him. What he has to do now is so nail these next two debates, so obliterate Romney in both, that he can claw his way back to victory. But if he manages just evenly-matched debates, let alone another Romney win, he’s a goner. Elections for president comes down to two individuals. You only get to see them up against each other in the flesh three times. The first time – always the most important – made Romney look like a president and Obama an ex-president. It will take a lot of intelligence, fire and argument to turn that around in the time remaining. And for the first time, after the sucker-punch of the first debate, I’m not entirely sure Obama has it in him.
In other words, Biden’s performance might have energized Democratic partisans, but if Sullivan’s article is any guide, those people aren’t enough to move the polls back enough for Obama to survive. Romney’s momentum might have been blunted, but not wrenched away, and Sullivan’s article gives Obama supporters yet one more reason to fear for their candidate’s future.
Of course, if Obama turns in a celebrated debate performance come Tuesday and Romney doesn’t manage to repeat his star turn from two weeks ago, all this might change. But given the meticulous amount of preparation both candidates are putting in this time, that kind of lopsided result looks difficult to achieve. 

2 comments:

Nicoenarg said...

Polls are usually bulls**t when it really comes down to it. However polls do reflect change in the mood of people when something significant happens.

The moment Biden started blinding me with his teeth, I realized the tactic and realized that this was going to come back and bite the Dems in the butt.

Did it? Well it depends on how you look at it.

Like you pointed out, [i]n other words, Biden’s performance might have energized Democratic partisans.

And I think that is all that debate did. Maybe not to the extend Obama would have liked but it did do some damage control and put out some fires in their own backyard.

Where I think it did damage was with the independents. The Dems could have won some independents over if Biden had acted sane for a change. He went crazy and people got confused.

Biden lied through this debate, and that is not what hurt the Dems, what hurt the Dems was a dog, out of control. If they trained this dog to APPEAR to fight a fair fight against Ryan, the Dems could have won some independents over.

They didn't. Biden had a lot of pressure on him and the Dems were panicking. And all Biden could think of at the time was to belittle the guy he was supposed to be debating. Classic maneuver from a side lacking on facts and substance. I still think they could have done better. Lucky for us they didn't.

However, tomorrow's debate might change everything if Obama barks like Biden and if Romney plays nice like Ryan.

Having watched Romney during the primaries, I don't think he will play nice. I think he will demand that he be heard, if Obama keeps interrupting, and I think he will sell what he wants to say effectively.

Where it does scare me is that the media's attention, and I think because of that the attention of most of the Americans will be on Obama. When Romney won the debate, most of the people questioned what was wrong with Obama, not what Romney did right.

I just hope people aren't just waiting for Obama to wake up so they can start supporting him again.

Nicoenarg said...

Should have read, "maybe not to the ENTENT..." not extend.