Rove & Bush: Bet ‘Em High & Sleep In The Streets?

By Daniel DiRito | Related entries in Elections, General Politics

I’ve never been a gambler and I’ve never actually understood the mentality. Years ago, I told a friend that we live in a country driven by “chain letter economics” and I’m convinced my perception is truer today than it was at the time it first crossed my mind. The basic gist of my theory is that we Americans are always focused upon being first and winning and we often make choices consistent with that premise…which of course means we are employing the kind of thinking that underlies the premise of a chain letter…and therefore makes it a fully flawed equation.

In other words, if everyone believes they can sit atop the pyramid as the victor, who are the individuals that make up the rest of the pyramid? The bottom line is that for every winner (by that I am defining a winner in terms of a sports champion like Tiger Woods or a business success like Bill Gates or being elected president) there has to be countless losers.

The same equation applies to politics. That brings me to Karl Rove…and that has to include George Bush, if simply by association…though I’m inclined to believe that their alignment is fully deliberate and that it is predicated upon the notion that anything short of absolute victory is insufficient. A good friend of mine has an alternate description for the same mindset I’ve described. He called it “Bet ‘em high and sleep in the streets”. In the end, both theories suggest that people often take risks that have a low likelihood of succeeding or being sustained…even if one has been lucky enough to occasionally beat the odds.

Ron Brownstein has an article in the Los Angeles Times that points to the possibility that the Rove/Bush strategy for success may have some of these very same characteristics. In the build-up to this midterm election, I’ve written extensively about Karl Rove because I am truly fascinated by strategy…particularly when it is heavily reliant on an understanding of human psychology…something I believe Karl Rove views as a primary consideration. You can read some of my prior observations here, here, here, and here. Some excerpts from the Brownstein article follow.

The great risk in President Bush’s political strategy has always been that it leaves him very little margin for error.

From the outset of his presidency, Bush has accepted division as the price of mobilization.

In Congress and across the country, that ideologically polarizing agenda has helped Bush unify and excite Republicans. But it has come at the cost of antagonizing Democrats and straining his relations with independent voters.

This strategy has rested on the calculation that if Bush generates enough constituent turn-out on Election Day from Republicans and conservative-leaning independents, he can survive unease among moderate independents and intense opposition from Democrats.

I’ve previously suggested that Karl Rove’s approach to political strategy is counterintuitive and it isn’t difficult to understand if you simply look at how he goes about creating a voting coalition. Conventional wisdom would suggest that one would want to have broad appeal and be able to pick off voters from the middle and even occasionally from the opposition Party. That’s not the case in Karl Rove’s world. His goal is to actually focus on defining the enemy and drawing the distinctions in order to build a coalition with clear and rigid views…and it has worked remarkably well…at least to this point in time. As Brownstein aptly states, this leaves little room for error…and it also comports with my own theory. If one can pull it off, the rewards are great…but if your calculations are off in the slightest, it can spell disaster.

On balance, that equation worked for Bush in his first term. Bolstered by his post-9/11 glow, Bush inspired an enormous Republican turnout that spurred GOP congressional gains in 2002. In 2004, another Republican surge powered gains in Congress and Bush’s reelection over Democrat John F. Kerry. For Karl Rove and other top GOP strategists, those victories were evidence that Bush was building a narrow but stable electoral majority.

Bush’s margin of victory over Kerry, measured as a share of the popular vote, was the smallest ever for a reelected president. Even in the usual post-election honeymoon period, Bush’s approval rating never exceeded 55% in Gallup surveys, below the high point for every other reelected president since World War II. Bush’s support fell back beneath 50% even before his second inauguration.

All of this meant that even on Bush’s best days, nearly half the country opposed him and his direction. That didn’t leave him with much of a cushion for bad days, which have come in bunches during his second term.

It takes little analysis to see the limitations of this type of strategy. If you alienate any of your constituents, as the GOP may have done with the Mark Foley scandal, the potential to add a replacement constituency is virtually nonexistent and should you actually decide to attempt as much (which would mean altering your message), you may well anger even more members of the constituency you’re already losing. You also run the risk of alienating an altogether different constituent group. Frankly, the Bush administration has attempted several of these midstream adjustments and it appears that voters may no longer be willing to overlook these indiscretions. Further, after six years of confrontational rhetoric, one would expect to find very few converts as the polarizing sentiment has only heightened with the passage of time.

To read the full article at Thought Theater…link here:

www.thoughttheater.com


This entry was posted on Sunday, October 22nd, 2006 and is filed under Elections, General Politics. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 Responses to “Rove & Bush: Bet ‘Em High & Sleep In The Streets?”

  1. Pug Says:

    The current theme that Democrats want to “surrender to the terrorists” or “wave the white flag of surrender to the terrorists”, as promoted yesterday by Bush himself in his Stephanopolous interview and Bill Frist on CNN, should go a long way toward bringing the country together to solve the problems in Iraq, right?

    The problem with offensive rhetoric like that is that while it may fire up the base it also fires up the other side. When you frame the argument in those terms, you can expect the other side to be spitting nails before long.

  2. JustAnotherIdjut Says:

    Do you really think repbulicans are jumping ship over Foley? I think the press and the Dems just want people to think that. My wife is an
    evangelical, and a republican. Nobody at her (large) church is talking about turning democrat. Foley is just viewed as a bad apple.

  3. BenG Says:

    Mr. DiRito, thanks for a great post. The responses are equally as eye opening: Says Mr. Church-goer “…my wife is an evangelical & a republican. Nobody at her church is talking about turning democrat. Foley is just viewed as a bad apple.” Wow, that says it in a nut shell, I emphasize the word NUT ! This is exactly what you’re reffering to… concern about political strategy and psychology of voters while our democracy is dying a painful death. It’s not the shame that Foley has put upon those Honorable Walls on top of the Hill that matters to each of us as citizens of this country we hold so high and mighty, it’s how we so easily shrug off what we profess is so important – our morality – just to keep our good ‘ole boys on top. You get what you pay for, I suppose.

  4. JustAnotherIdjut Says:

    BenG

    W could come out and say “I drink puppy smoothies with Glen Reynolds every Saturday night”, and evangelicals wouldn’t leave the party.
    Because they KNOW where the democrats stand in relation to evangelical values. They also know that there are plenty of Repulicans who don’t share those values, but the party overall does. As far as they are concerned, they have nowhere to go. But they know they have a responability to vote.

    BTW: I am not the church-goer in the house. She’s an evangelical, and I’m an athiest. She doesn’t know it, though, so don’t tell her ;)

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