Political Hotsheet
By

John Dickerson /

CBS News/ September 11, 2012, 10:10 PM

Mitt Romney Panic Syndrome

mitt romney

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney addresses the crowd at the 134th National Guard Association Convention at the Reno-Sparks Convention Center, September 11, 2012, in Reno, Nevada.

/ David Calvert/Getty Images


This post originally appeared on Slate.

Mitt Romney is enjoying at least the fourth public loss of confidence by conservative elites since winning the nomination. The first came in June when Rupert Murdoch and others complained that he was not taking the fight to Barack Obama. Then in July, he was faulted for thinking he could skate to victory by running only as the anti-Obama. Then in early August, GOP veteran voices again counseled against the passive campaign and urged Romney to be bold by picking a vice president with some substance. Now the fever arrives again from a variety of conservative quarters that he is not giving voters a reason to vote for him.

If you were a medicine man, you might notice that the fever comes on hardest at the start of every month. Perhaps it is triggered by soft monthly jobs reports. The view may be that given the persistently glum economic news, even an area rug could beat the incumbent. Romney should be doing better, so: panic. As George Will put it recently: "If the Republican Party cannot win in this environment, it has to get out of politics and find another business." Whatever the reason behind the outbreaks, campaign wizards at Romney's Boston headquarters should start mixing the October poultice now.

Complete coverage: Election 2012

At the heart of the critique are two points: Romney is not taking the fight to Obama and he's being too vague about what he would do as president. The first seems wrong. Romney's welfare ads are tough. The "you didn't build that" criticism has been persistent and hard. Paul Ryan has traded away his reputation as a policy wonk and become an attack dog. That's an expensive trade. Romney is not slow on the attack. When the Democratic platform omitted any mention of God, Romney accused Obama of taking Him off the dollar bill. Perhaps what people like Donald Trump want is for Romney to make personal attacks the way the Obama team does. That's possibly dangerous. More voters have an unfavorable view of Romney than favorable, so Romney is probably wise to not go as far as the Donald would like. (Life rule: It's generally a good idea to stop short of what Donald Trump thinks you should do.)

There is more merit to the knock on Romney's vagueness. If Romney doesn't get more specific, they may not find him appealing enough to leave Obama. That would be bad for Romney and Republicans, of course, but there may also be a way in which Romney's lack of specificity is bad for everyone. If Romney doesn't get more specific, whichever party wins will have no mandate for governing. If Romney wins, his lack of specificity will mean he has no mandate. If Obama wins, Republicans will conclude that the president didn't prevail in a contest of ideas; he simply defeated a bad politician, which will make them no more likely to cooperate with him.

When Mitt Romney picked Paul Ryan he put the doubters into remission. For a moment, they thought he was going to get specific and run on the ideas that Ryan championed. Romney and his aides sold the decision this way, too. But this was not to be. As George W. Bush's speechwriter Michael Gerson writes, "Romney's message is untouched by his running mate's revolutionary fiscal realism. Romney chose Ryan, not Ryanism."

Romney's advisers and the candidate himself have long believed that actual specifics are deadly. All they do is give your opponent an opportunity to attack you. Why do that when you're still out-polling by double digits among independent voters and down by just a point or two in the polls overall? That is a reasonable view. Obama has a similar view about specifics. He's been forced to be more specific as president than as a candidate, of course, but ask him for his long-term plan for Medicare and you are likely to never get that invitation to play basketball that you've been waiting for.

The "you're so vague" complaint may be an attempt to put a label on a longstanding and harder to categorize challenge that has clung to the Romney candidacy: He can't close the deal. In the primaries, he had a hard time knocking much weaker rivals like Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich out of the race. Now he's having a harder time of it against Obama, a weak president whose campaign is not terribly inspiring.

Still, Romney might win. But if he does, what will he have won? A mandate for his policies? Almost certainly not. Polls show that people don't trust that Romney is on their side or that his policies will improve their lives. They're not likely to give him much leeway to enact his plan to alter their lives through sweeping spending cuts, overhaul of the country's health care system, and reconfiguration of entitlements like Medicare and Social Security. "Winning the next election without having really prepared the country and rallied the country to do some big things would be a huge lost opportunity," said Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels months ago. After Wisconsin Democrats failed to oust GOP Gov. Scott Walker in a recall vote, Walker publicly advised Romney to become more specific about what he would do as president. So far Romney and Ryan have only been specific in naming Obama's flaws. When Ryan says he welcomes the fight over Medicare, he really only means that he welcomes the opportunity to criticize his opponent.

Political scientists are skeptical about the power of an election mandate to convince the country to go in a direction it isn't inclined to go. Just because you won an election doesn't mean people are sold on all of your ideas. But Republicans don't see it that way. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said at the convention that a leader changes the polls, he doesn't let the polls change him. If that's that case, a candidate has to convince people about the plans he intends to enact. Voters can't just intuit these things.

If Obama wins, Romney's lack of specifics will rob Obama of the leverage he might gain from truly vanquishing the GOP's ideas. Republicans will conclude that Romney lost because he was a bad candidate and didn't sell conservative principles. There will be no reason to back down in future fights with the president because the ideas undergirding their beliefs won't have been discredited by a Romney loss--only Romney will have been discredited. Tea Party activists will draw this conclusion as well. The ideas didn't lose; the candidate did, in part because he didn't stand up loud and proud for conservative ideas. Any Republican politicians who compromise with the president or backs down on conservative principles will have a target on their back in the next election cycle. Anyone who shrinks from a fight will be considered no better than Mitt Romney.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
271 Comments Add a Comment
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carolo43 says:
Where did Romney get the notion he could insult London, China, Russia (twice) and now the leaders of Palenstine? To say nothing about insulting half the population in the United States? And stick his nose into the Libya problem pretending he had a clue what was going on.

He needs to get out of politics forever and sit around and read and do crossword puzzles.
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Rhondarhn says:
Every time Romney opens his mouth, he inserts both feet. You want this guy with his hand on the nuclear button?

Romney will start WW III. He is a draft dodger and none of his sons will enlist in any military.

Yet he wants to send YOUR son off to yet another useless and expensive war.
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Rhondarhn says:
Obama got Osama Bin Laden, which the GOP could never do.

Obama got us out of the useless and expensive war in Iraq that the GOP started.

Romney was called "Mitt the Twit" by our closest ally.

Now tell me who has the better foreign policy.
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Rhondarhn says:
Romneny hides his money in the Caymans so he doesn't have to pay taxes like real Americans do.

Romneny's foreign policy consists of foreign tax shelters.
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leedleleedle says:
Well here is another thing to consider: At least The Presidents wife talks to the people, not at the people.
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petoz2 says:
hahahaha you guys jurnalists? I don't care that romney criticized obama are you telling me he can't because its too soon? How about Obama on whose watch this happend he didn't even stop fundraising for his campaign. How can you accuse Romney of being political during these times when obama is out campaigning? What about his indecisive comments about Egypt being an ally or not? He is being tough saying they are not really our ally but not our enemy. Than he backtracks says they are not a nato ally technically but they are considered an allie? We don't want to anger these muslims we must consider them as allies even as they work against us. Of course give them money because if we stop they might become more radical. We are not respected, and there is only one person at fault bush!!!!!!!
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LastGirl2009 says:
Making statements before all the facts are in is not a good way to handle foreign policy.
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TimeToEvolve says:
The Republicons in Congress have been able to keep America down to try to make Obama look bad. Look at what happened to the middle class since the Bush Cheney Crime Family while the Top 1% and giant corporations have seen their income and wealth skyrocket.

Now they want to install Robbed Me to keep the Republicon merry-go-round going. Whatever you have to say about the failures of Obama it pales in comparison to what will happen under Bush Cheney II (Robbed Me Ryan).
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LastGirl2009 replies:
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I agree. Author Michael Lewis has spent 6 months with Obama and he said something I suspected. He basically said the House and Senate Republicans are opposing Obama's plans simply because he presented them even if it were originally a Republican plan. It sounds like they are trying to sabotage his presidency so they can claim he is a failure. I believe the specific people who are part and party to this behavior will be exposed.
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LLCisyouandme says:
When Romney loses, it will be because average Americans have seen the entire GOP handbook, lived it, suffered under it, and know that it offers no opportunities for going forward. We have a testbed for all of his economic strategies, eight years during which #43 spent like a sailor, started two wars, and had the benefit of historically low interest rates, the GOP's vaunted lack of regulation (as exemplified by their lack of enforcement,) and all that supposed job-creating wealth going to the 1%, all of which, by their reasoning or by well-accepted economic principles should have left our economy rampaging forward, flushed with successful businesses and high employment. Instead these same eight years gave us *TWO* recessions, a net loss in jobs, a middle class bleeding net worth while running as hard as they can, banking and real estate in free-fall, with those of us who rely on banking (the rest of the economy) clinging to them despite ourselves, and brought us to the precipice of what would have been, without an intervention that directly subverts GOP ideology, the greatest economic collapse ever, not just for the US but for the world. Romney, while he may not like to admit it, is running on "more of that."
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nolapearl says:
Romney will lose because he would make a terrible president and at least 50% of the people (at least this week) give Obama a favorable rating. Hopefully enough house and Senate seats are up to give Dems more people in Congress.
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MaritimeRider replies:
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Doesn't that mean 50% of voters favor Mitt Romney.
LLCisyouandme replies:
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Rider. No. It means they think of President Obama in favorable terms. It is not "as compared with" Romney, or with anyone. Your reasoning makes as much sense as "5% of the population likes anchovies on pizza (and since Romney doesn't) then 95% of the population likes Romney."

The sad fact is that I don't even think your reading comprehension skills are so poor that you can't understand this, but that your need for positive strokes for your unsubstantiable beliefs is so overwhelming, or that your vision is so perversely skewed, that true comprehension is actually beyond your ken.
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