Political Hotsheet
By

Scott Conroy /

CBS News/ August 8, 2012, 7:12 AM

No end in sight for campaigns' negative focus

Obama vs. Romney on the economy

This article originally appeared on RealClearPolitics.

(CBS News) It's going to get worse before it gets better -- if it gets better.

Both presidential candidates and their allies have for months bombarded the airwaves with an escalating series of charges and countercharges, and as any swing state voter with a television set can attest, the onslaught has only picked up during the so-called summer doldrums.

On Tuesday, the pro-Obama super PAC Priorities USA upped the ante. It unveiled a 60-second TV spot featuring a former steelworker who lost his job -- and the health insurance that came with it -- after Bain Capital purchased and then shut down the Kansas City plant where he worked.

Joe Soptic, who had appeared in a previous Obama ad, adds that his wife later became ill. Though he does not know when she first felt sick, Soptic speculates that she did not speak up about it because she knew that they could not afford to pay for treatment. She later died of cancer.

"I do not think Mitt Romney realizes what he's done to anyone," Soptic says at the ad's conclusion. "And furthermore, I do not think Mitt Romney is concerned."

With the Democratic and Republican conventions less than a month away, some observers had hoped the two campaigns might take a more positive approach before the final two-month slog to Election Day.

But by and large there has been little indication that either side is willing to take a break from the mudslinging that has dominated the 2012 presidential race.

The new Priorities USA ad marked a deadly serious turn in the unrelentingly negative style of campaigning seen so far, but the two candidates demonstrated within hours of each other that neither one is above the kind of name calling that's more befitting a schoolyard than an election to decide who the next president will be.

Obama threw the first stone on Monday, telling the crowd at a Connecticut fundraiser that Romney's tax plan would reward the wealthy at the expense of the middle class.

"That's Robin Hood in reverse," Obama said. "That's Romney Hood."

Not to be outdone, Romney let fly with his own zinger during an interview with Fox News on Tuesday.

"We've been watching the president say a lot of things about me and about my policies, and they're just not right," Romney said. "And if I were to coin a term, it would be 'Obamaloney.' "

Handwringing over such negativity is a quadrennial exercise, but the contrast between the 2008 and 2012 editions of Obama is getting difficult for even his admirers to ignore.

He rose to national prominence on a platform of ending "the smallness of our politics," and his message of "hope and change" has been replaced by an all-out effort to tear down his opponent.

On the other side of the coin, prominent Romney allies have wondered aloud about whether the presumptive GOP nominee has missed an opportunity to provide a more positive message and delve more deeply into the policy prescriptions he would offer as president, rather than focusing almost entirely on depicting Obama's presidency as an across-the-board failure.

"I don't think you can beat an incumbent president, even if the economy is slow, if 27 percent of the voters think you as the challenger don't have a clear plan about improving the economy," said the Weekly Standard's Bill Kristol, citing a poll released last month. "A lot of people who hope Mitt Romney wins the presidency in November, which I certainly do, would like to see him stand up and say, 'I have a plan,' and I am going to aggressively address these problems and fix the economy.' They seem to be playing prevent defense."

But Kristol and other likeminded conservatives are likely to be disappointed.

Though a senior Romney adviser told RCP that the campaign intended to use the convention in Tampa as a "methodical introduction of Mitt Romney to the nation," the candidate's strategists intend to stick to the script that has guided the former Massachusetts governor from Day One: making the election a referendum on President Obama.

With no sign of a change in Obama's strategy either, and with outside spending groups on both sides almost certain to press the boundaries even further, the 2012 presidential campaign is poised to take an even uglier turn in its last three months.

More from RealClearPolitics:

With Friends Like Reid, Does Obama Need Enemies?
GOP Convention Speaker List Fuels VP Speculation

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • Scott Conroy On Twitter »

    Scott Conroy is a National Political Reporter for RealClearPolitics and a contributor for CBS News.

34 Comments Add a Comment
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Maerzie says:
President Obama's last campaign kept it much cleaner, which helped his election, and he should go back to that more adult, intelligent kind of campaigning. Mitt Romney, on the other hand, has no pluses to tell us, so he HAS to attack and have a negative campaign. His ONLY "attribute" was supposedly his "great business acumen?", which was dashed when we all found out how he mercilessly trashed people and business for his own profit, even sending our OWN American jobs to sweatshop countries. Romney is more an American TRAITOR, than any "great" anything. Even a fifth grader can see a profit in inhumane activities, but MOST have more conscience! Methinks Mitt Romney is so obsessed with being the Mormon's "White Horse" fantasy (look it up!) that he has lost all grasp of humanity and good sense, IF he EVER had any? Romney is behaving more like a "Black Bull", with frequent and multiple lies, and no sense or principles at all! Certainly not like any "hero"!
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0bama2O12 says:
Campaigns turn negative when challengers like Romney can't campaign on their record.
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hhandyman says:
I am beginning to believe that both candidates need to go to the Olympic boxing ring and take 5 rounds and see whose standing at the end and perhaps that would settle the negative ads.

Then hod a non-Que card Debate before they get a shower after the match. between the two non military men they would have fought for the country for the first time each and see who is worthy of title Commander in Chief of the armed forces.
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Thinkbeforeyouwrite says:
I do not like the way political campaigns are run. It is funny though that the same pundits that deride how negative they are now will say in November to the losing party "you should have hit back."
I have seen it before. No one gets much credit for playing fair in the end except for their own sense of integrity. They get to go home saying "We weren't the mean guys". That's the way it is.
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Martha12345 says:
Are Schieffer's considered neg. Obama ads ?
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Jaylah54200 says:
We know Obama's plan. Romney hasn't stated his (on anything) yet. Because he hasn't got one.

He's going to create jobs, but he can't tell us how he's going to do that.

He's doing to repeal RomneyCare, but can't tell us what he's going to replace it with.

NoPlan Romney.

And what is he still hiding?
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model67a replies:
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Yes we know Obama's plan. His plan is to ruin the United States!!
Maerzie replies:
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We know absolutely NOTHING about Romney excepth his highschool head-shaving of a guy he obviously envied. He may have even hatched out of an egg. We don't even know if he ever paid a CENT of taxes the past ten years, while WE paid his whole share of out country's bills! We also know nothing of any plans. Is he going to tradsh us and our country like he trashed the business and workers, to make millions to send to his "White Horse" campaign??
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Dontbeslow says:
It's very puzzling how anyone could possibly think obama is good for this country. And to criticize Romney, who has an obvious advantage in acumen & economic experience, clearly demonstrates a shallow understanding of history, let alone basic economics.
We're in the longest recession & slowest GDP growth in American history & some have the audacity to cast derogatory epithets toward those with a successful history.
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saber72 says:
Good! It's about time the Dems fought back and didn't allow themselves to be swiftboated by the usual GOP tactics. Slimebag Romney has run his campaign like this from the beginning of the primaries. He set the tone from the beginning. Can't let the GOP campaign just throw sucker punches.
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ugot2bkiddgme replies:
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Come out from under that rock saber your delusional and light deprived.
Thinkbeforeyouwrite replies:
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For over 16 presidential campaigns, I have seen lots of "sucker punches". In the end, no one gets credit for being the nice guy and he may go home the loser. If one side goes dirty, the other side almost has to. It's sad but that's the way it is.
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JoeBGud13 says:
Neither Candidate is acting very Presidental at this point. Sure would be nice to be able to at least choose between Two ADULTs, for the Office of President of the United States!

Perhaps they will realize what fools they appear to be and act responsibiliy before this (election) is over!
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nomorelibs says:
Come on people. Did anyone really believe the negative ads would stop? Consider yourself completely clueless if you were in that group.
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