Sunday, February 12, 2012

Culture War Or....?


A number of the blogs I look at and comment on are commenting on the Santorum and his new numbers with in the context of the Republican presidential primary contest.  For a pretty good discussion of this, please check out Mudrake's blog and the current threadPerhaps not surprisingly, Public Policy Polling just released a survey that has Rick Santorum opening up a wide lead over Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich in their newest national poll. He's at 38% to 23% for Romney and 17% for Gingrich.

As the poll indicates, a big part of the reason that Santorum is doing so well is his high level of popularity as 64% of voters see him favourably to only 22% who have a negative view of him. 

But the other, and maybe more important, reason is that Republicans are significantly souring on both Romney and Gingrich. Romney's favorability is barely above water at 44/43, representing a 23 point net decline from [the PPP] December national poll when he was +24 (55/31). Gingrich has fallen even further. A 44% plurality of GOP voters now hold a negative opinion of him to only 42% with a positive one. That's a 34 point drop from 2 months ago when he was at +32 (60/28). 
Santorum is now completely dominating with several key segments of the electorate, especially the most right leaning parts of the party. With those describing themselves as 'very conservative,' he's now winning a majority of voters at 53% to 20% for Gingrich and 15% for Romney. Santorum gets a majority with Tea Party voters as well at 51% to 24% for Gingrich and 12% for Romney. And with Evangelicals he falls just short of a majority with 45% to 21% for Gingrich and 18% for Romney.
One other rather devastating detail found in the poll for Romney is what would happen if Gingrich were to drop out, which is that 58% of Newt's supporters say they would move to Santorum, while only 22% would go to Romney and 17% to Paul. 

I realize that we've seen this all before. All of the GOP contenders have had their day and once at the top they almost immediately start falling back down. 

I get all that, or maybe this is just the strangest contest we've ever seen and Santorum, being the last candidate standing in this apparently never ending contest of "Not-Mitt," will win the nomination for no other reason. 

On the other hand, it's a little surprising that Republican voters took so long to get around to Santorum at a time when conservative bona fides are the order of the day.  Many of us wondered if the Tea Party movement would have enough influence to do for the presidential nomination process what they did for Sharon Angle in Nevada and Christine O'Donnell in Delaware in 2010, which is to pick with their hearts and not with their heads - to pick based on some perverse notion of ideological purity over any chance of winning an election.  

We all assumed that Mitt Romney, with the money of the conservative establishment behind him, would be able to beat back the wacky right, but maybe we were wrong. 

So, while it is true that Rick Santorum's radical social conservatism will make him unattractive to swing voters in the general election and ensure an Obama victory, it might be precisely what is required to win the GOP nomination this time around, as some of the polling data above would suggest. 

Romney and Gingrich are opportunists. Santorum is a true believer, and that is the difference. Much as Mitt and Newt have tried to fake sincerity, it has not been possible. Santorum is the real deal, and I don't mean that in a good way. Because this real deal is desparately trying to consolidate the entire gamut of the far right. Santorum is actively courting the white nationalist and racist elements in a way that Gingrich or Romney would be unable to do with out wasting their precious media time spinning. Santorum just doesn't care. There seems to be a real sociopathic element to him which he cannot be aware of. But like a moth to a flame, Little Rickie is flirting with fascist demagogery  and can't seem stiop himself.

It seems clear that very few pundits, professional or amateur, know what's going to happen with the Republican nomination, having all gotten it wrong so frequently, but there is one thing we do know: when someone as radical as Rick Santorum is doing this well so relatively late, the GOP is in trouble and the intelligent few in their ranks, the ones who really understand politics, know it.  

Main point here is that if the GOP makes the 2012 election about the economy they have a shot. If they make it a culture war, they're done. The Obama campaign could not have built a better candidate from scratch than Rick Santorum to help them frame the general election as a culture war.

Keep in mind, as well, that even if Romney wins the nomination, he will have had to go step for step with Santorum on the culture war front for longer than it will do him any good. Because, Little Rickie is on a path to self destruction and it should be very fascinating to watch. His tragic performance is the very least he owes us.....


3 comments:

Engineer of Knowledge said...

Hello Microdot,
Loved your postings on Muddy’s site and came straight over after I had read them.

I like your thoughts that Rick Santorum’s radical social comment to obtain the Republican Presidential nomination will be so unpalatable to the swing independent voters this November.

But I still see Romney coming out with the lead in the long run. This could also be a good thing because the primaries he has won, the Republican voters are not even showing up to vote. There is no one person the Republicans want to get behind or even put forth the effort to even come out and vote. This may play into the November election.

microdot said...

well my bottom line here says the same thing and factoring the Santorum factor, Romney becomes all the more unelectable, even to the racist and radical right he is tryinjg to court...what does this translate to?
One thing, it sure doesn't motivate those Romney is trying to seduce to the polls in November.

Ol'Buzzard said...

Santorum carries loads of religious dogma with him to the campaign - his election would move the U.S toward theocracy - and that is scary as hell.
the Ol'Buzzard