Political Hotsheet
By

John Dickerson /

CBS News/ September 7, 2011, 9:58 AM

Romney's Rick Perry problem


This post originally appeared on Slate.

Romney unveils plan for economy

In Nevada, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney unveiled his plan to fix the economy - a mix of tax and spending cuts.

Mitt Romney brought a Kindle Single to a knife fight. Yesterday he unveiled a 59-point plan for reviving the economy. It runs 160 pages, and is available for immediate download on Amazon. It was an attempted show of force. On the issue voters care about, he is the man with the plan because he comes from the business world.

Rick Perry has an economic plan that fits on the fingers of one hand. With his other hand he's throwing punches. This weekend Perry said Romney didn't create many jobs as governor. He defined Romney's private-sector experience as creating jobs overseas. A few weeks ago, Perry reflected on their life experiences and concluded that he came from the real world: "I didn't work at Bain capital. I didn't work on Wall Street." Three attacks--on competence, class, and country of origin. The best rebuttal Romney could offer: Unlike Perry, he's not a career politician.

If Romney were a career politician, perhaps he'd still be the front runner. Until now, Romney has benefitted in this campaign from restraint. He has ignored other candidates and stayed focused on Obama. His opponents have floundered. Romney's initial strategy was to let Perry suffer this same fate. That hasn't happened, though Perry's first debates are still ahead of him. Instead, Perry has launched pungent attacks on Romney's core selling point: that his business experience makes him the most qualified to be president. Now Romney either has to get aggressive or lose his best weapon.

This isn't just about scoring cheap political points (though, alas, that is what campaigns are about). It's about winning the argument at the heart of the GOP primary. The competition in the GOP race is about which man has the better set of skills for improving the economy. So far Romney has acted as if it is self-evident that his private-sector background makes him the better candidate. It hasn't worked. What's he going to do about it? There's been a lot of talk about leadership in Washington recently. How Romney responds now will tell us something about his leadership style. Will he take action in defense of his central campaign claim? Will he rebut Perry and make a stronger case for the skills he has, or will he let events and others shape the field? Will he lead, or lead from behind?

Today Romney's economic plan won the Kinko's primary. His handout was glossier and bigger than Perry's will ever be. That isn't going to help him win the GOP primary. Nor will the substance of his plan. There is nothing particularly novel in all of those pages. It's standard Republican fare--lower marginal tax rates, less regulation, stronger trade, and less spending. Rick Perry would disagree with little of it. That's why his spokesman, Mark Miner, aimed his spitballs elsewhere: "As Governor of Massachusetts, Mitt Romney failed to create a pro-jobs environment and failed to institute many of the reforms he now claims to support."

The debate in the Republican Party is over which man can actually do the things they promise. Romney starts with a disadvantage. The numbers are against him. As governor he created jobs, but not as many jobs as Perry has in Texas or John Huntsman did while he was governor of Utah. In a Web ad released yesterday, Huntsman pointed out that Massachusetts was 47th in job creation while Utah under Huntsman was first. Huntsman doesn't threaten Romney the way Perry does, but his attack on the same front adds weight to the case that Romney couldn't translate his success in business into governing.

Romney can explain that his situation in Massachusetts has to be seen in context. He faced tough conditions--a Democratic legislature that was against him--and he can argue that without his perseverance taxes would have been increased and the job market would have been worse. But to Republican voters, this just sounds like excuse-making--the same excuse-making they bash President Obama for.

Romney is never going to win a button-pushing war with Perry. Perry talks about Wall Street and foreign jobs to appeal to voters' gut feelings. When Romney talks about "career politicians," he's trying to do the same thing but he doesn't have the knack for that kind of attack. Voters don't seem to mind Perry's experience as governor. To the extent that people associate politicians with changing their views to fit the moment, that's Romney's problem more than Perry's.

Romney does have a sharper case to make about his good attributes, but he doesn't make it very strongly. Romney's best argument is that he has a turnaround talent at a time when that's what's needed. According to a new NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, 81 percent of people think the country is headed in the wrong direction, the highest that number has been during Obama's presidency. Romney turned around companies while at Bain Capital, turned around the Utah Olympics, and redirected liberal policies in Massachusetts. He doesn't just merely have business skill: He has skill at taking on complex systems, diagnosing their problems, and getting as much as he can out of them.

This message may be too nuanced for political debate, but Romney can make it better. He talks about having led in the private sector but voters have to infer too much about what that means. To compete against Perry's gut-level arguments, Romney has to be explicit about exactly what a "career politician lacks," or, if that's too combative, he has to make the clear case about why his specific turnaround talents match the moment. It's a bit of an egghead argument, but it's close to what presidents do: making complex arguments in combative situations. If he can pull that off in the primary, Romney will have made a strong case that he is prepared for the job.

More from Slate

9/11 conspiracy theorists responded to refutations by alleging more cover-ups
Huntsman's got to persuade all of New Hampshire's independents to vote for him. How's that going?
How Obama can fight back against a disastrous economy and a swaggering Republican Party.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
11 Comments Add a Comment
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hhandyman says:
in 2012 rip GOP and revamp the congress with middle of the road folk fire the exteremist of both parties
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sharkboy234 says:
Knock obama off the primary elections knock off mitt romney rick perry herman cain will win the primary he can do anything.
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endrepubs says:
Romney has a Romney problem too. He has done nothing but tout how much of a job creator he is and he has real world experience creating jobs..........Well the record shows that his Company Bain & Co. was good at taking over companies and cutting jobs. That was the Romney approach. He has real world experience slashing payrolls, not adding to them.
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lawyertom1 says:
Hey, Mitt. Shovel the guano just like Rick. Learn to extoll stupidity and ignorance, just like Rick. Advocate succeeding from the Union, just like Rick. Take lots of under the table money....wait, you already got that figured out. Ah, next. Make up facts about your history of accomplishments...wait, you already got that figured out also. Anyway, piece of cake.
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sergiocass says:
Rommney is definitely the better candidate of the two. Perry is a nut job. Let's put someone in the White House who has actually held a real job, not just a government hand-out job like Obama. Had I known more about BO, I wouldn't have voted for him. He guy is a nice guy, but let's face it, he's clueless as to how to get us out of this hole he's partially put us in. I'm liking Romney more and more, this time around
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Anotheryahoo says:
Perry is given 1st place in all of this, hasnt debated anyone, just missed the TeaParty debate. I dont see how he is number #1. Ron Paul is the man.
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newerdeal says:
I wish Trump had not dropped out so soon ! :)

He would have been great at the debates !
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Jhihmoac says:
...and Rick Perry's probably got a similar Mitt Romney problem...Best of luck in the primaries, gentlemen...
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jimbom121 says:
If Romney knows so much about jobs and the privaet sector, why did he bring in Bush's economic team?
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msimamaji says:
Mitt brags about his experience in the private sector, so it's worth examining that record.

Mitt worked for Bain Capital, which bought up companies, looted workers'pension funds to provide bonuses and bailouts for CEO's, and then shut the companies down as unprofitable. Mitt was the original Bankster, job-killing Wall Street thug, robbing the workers to provide bailouts for the rich.

For real, do you want to trust your 401, social security and medicare to this guy? I think not.
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