The day after: narrative through the lens of strategy

original essay March 5, 2008

see the comments for updates

Back on February 7, Catherine Dodge and Alex Tanzi of Bloomberg News broke a story on an Obama campaign spreadsheet, “inadvertently” released by the campaign, with their projections (or maybe predictions) of delegates. Ben Smith on Politico has a nice screenshot, and even better a link to the version of the spreadsheet that Catherine and Alex shared. Barack Obama said he hadn’t seen it; his press secretary Bill Burton had a great quote: “This ‘newsy’ spreadsheet is basically an electronic piece of scratch paper with a dozen scenarios blown a little out of proportion.”

As far as I can tell, the press, media, and pundits covering the election responded with a collective “oh okay” and went back to talking about more important topics like their own prognostications, their importance to the electoral process, their responsibilities, their inadequacies, and the threats to mainstream media from blogs and social networks.

From both a strategy and a narrative perspective, this is fascinating on several levels. So building off my past “narrative as strategy” experience with Ad Astra, I’m going to wrap up my month of being a full-time political activist and blogger with some thoughts on these subjects.

Impressively, the Obama campaign’s projections in early February for delegates from yesterday’s voting likely to be within 1% of the actual results, which I bet is a lot more accurate than any professional polling firm or pundit was at the time. Until yesterday, though, they were off-target in most of the other primaries and caucuses. Interestingly, they were always off in the same direction: consistently underestimating their actual performance.

Saying it another way, the Obama campaign’s results between Super Tuesday (when they first said they thought they would have a pledged delegate lead at the convention) and yesterday consistently exceeded their own projections: +3 (three more delegates than expected) delegates in Louisiana, +4 in Maine, +6 in Hawaii and Wisconsin, and so on — including the jackpots of +14 in Virginia and + 15 in Maryland. If I did the math right, it’s +60 overall, for a swing of 120 pledged delegates from Clinton to Obama. From a strategy perspective, this is substantially exceeding expectations, and making success far more likely.

Yesterday, with the aid of a timely leak from the conservative Canadian government that has already provoked questions in their Parliament; equally-timely help from Limbaugh along with an appearance on right-wing talk radio by Bill Clinton, a proposed lynching by O’Reilly, and a Drudge misinformation campaign that manages to be simultaneously racist, anti-Somali, anti-African, anti-Muslim, anti-Democratic party, and anti-Obama; an attack on Obama’s qualifications by McCain coincidentally enough on the same issue as the Clinton campaign’s Rovian “fear over hope” 3 a.m./red phone campaign video (certain to be recycled by Republicans in November no matter who is nominated); some brilliant political theater “live from New York”; and a press and media justifiably ashamed of its sexism and misogyny playing lapdog for a few days while engaging in narcissistic self-analysis about how horrible they are for not doing a better job of covering newsworthy events …

With aid of what they describe as “the kitchen sink,” the Clinton campaign came out tactically slightly ahead: somewhere between four and ten delegates out of the 370 in play. Kudos to them. Even so, yesterday’s results are almost exactly what the Obama campaign had projected a month ago, a likely +3 or +4 over projections in Texas balanced by a likely -2 or -3 in Ohio. The Obama campaign continues to have a huge cushion: 120 pledged delegates over their early-February projections. With less time for a Clinton turnaround, Obama’s strategic advantage has grown … guess they were prepared for the kitchen sink, or something like it.

The common wisdom on the day after the March 4 voting seems to be along the lines of “the kitchen sink worked!”, portraying the Clinton campaign’s comeback in having (somewhat) blunting the Obama campaign’s momentum — Chris Bowers goes so far as to say “Obama has to win Pennsylvania!“. Looking through a strategy lens, that’s not how I see it at all.

What I see is the Clinton campaign having thrown everything they had into a last-ditch effort, barely managing to get a small tactical victory out of it while their overall situation worsens dramatically. In the process, they repeated their disastrous strategic mistakes from South Carolina of going negative and aligning with racists:

  • despite having vowed not to split a party they have been leaders of, and the magic moment in the presidential debate where she described herself as “proud” to be in a presidential race with Barack Obama, they still appear to have collaborated with the Bush-backed Republican candidate in an attack on Obama’s fitness to be commander in chief.
  • The Clinton campaign’s potential role in the Obama-in-Somali-garb photo will call more attention to earlier “Obama is a Muslim” email from Clinton staffers, the series of racially charged attacks documented on the Clinton attacks Obama wiki and elsewhere, and the Clinton campaign’s earlier “playing along” with Drudge. At the same time, the “denounce and reject” standard she proposed in the debate will get continued attention thanks to McCain and Lieberman’s welcoming of virulently anti-Catholic anti-LGBT anti-New Orleans anti-Palestinian (and anti-so-much-more) John Hagee’s support. How many volunteers, staffers, supporters will the Clinton campaign “denounce”? How many contributions will they reject?

As for the press and media, well, props to Saturday Night Live (Al Franken for Senate!); well done indeed, and this is going to keep the spotlight trained the coverage of all the candidates. Has the press really been harder on Hillary? Or, have they been ignoring what appear to be Clinton’s repeated exaggerations of her “experience” and (as Obama put on the table today) the more general issue of judgment and fitness for commander in chief? Will attention to the sexism in the mainstream media’s coverage continue and be followed by attention to the racism and anti-Muslim biases? Will Hillary’s attempt to distance herself from Bill’s NAFTA policy be followed by scrutiny on this and other issues (Iraq sanctions, welfare “reform”, warrantless searches, HIPPA, etc.) to see what she advocated at the time — and what, if anything, she did to persuade the administration of her views? We shall see; I think at least some of these cards the Clinton campaign will played for short-term tactical advantage that will come back to bit them.

Speaking of which: are they truly blind to the huge costs (to their claims of “electability” and to the Democratic party) of focusing attention on whether or not Bill Clinton is there in bed with her when the phone rings at 3 a.m.? He’s a huge drag on her popularity, and a reminder of the past in a time when she’s trying to embrace the rhetoric of change. And I’m as tired of hearing about Monica as everybody else, but it’s folly to ignore the persistent stories that Bill’s partying on the campaign trail this year: whether or not it’s true, the Coulters, Roves, Drudges, Limbaughs, and other “fair and balanced” right-wingers will make hay with this video (and at some level, who can blame them), and so will a million comedians of all political stripes trying to outdo SNL. Where’s the judgment in handing a loaded weapon to opponents who will enjoy profit from and enjoy using it against you, and are very good at what they do? For that matter, since these names are all familiar ones, where’s the learning from all this “experience”?

From a strategy perspective, the Clinton campaign in desperation threw everything they could into March 4. (You can only align with Drudge, Limbaugh, O’Reilly and McCain so many times before voters and superdelegates start to ask whether this is good for the party — and there aren’t a lot of other friendly foreign governments they can call on these days.) At the cost of substantially damaging their campaign as well as their individual reputations, they managed to claw their way to an inconsequential and Pyrrhic “victory”. Mathematically, they’re now very close to elimination. Not a good result for the Clintons at all.

And in terms of the narrative, go back to the spreadsheet. The projections going forward leave plenty of room for overperforming in some states (such as Mississippi, North Carolina, Oregon, Montana) — and the projections already factor in potential losses in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky, and Puerto Rico, so (as we strategists like to say) “the downside is capped.” The likely do-over primary in Florida and caucuses in Michigan (not included in the spreadsheet) offer Clinton a chance to pick up a handful more delegates, but nowhere near enough to outweigh the 120-vote cushion so far. When the convention comes around, Obama is going to have a substantial lead with pledged delegates; superdelegates who decide to reflect the will of the voters will follow that. Superdelegates who instead base their vote on electability (see above), party unity, or future party growth (do they really want to alienate the 30-and-under generation to pick the candidate who’s favored by the same 65-and-up crowd as McCain?) will come on board as well.

So, while it’s not over and anything can happen, once all the hard work is done and the votes are counted, I predict that March 4 will be seen as the day that the voters in Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island, and Vermont — and the grassroots volunteers for Obama all around the country and the world — virtually assured Barack Obama’s nomination as Democratic party’s candidate for President of the United States of America.


Comments

33 responses to “The day after: narrative through the lens of strategy”

  1. Kos’ comment in his midday thread points out that the predictable is already happening:

    This “vetting” of the Clintons, now that they’ve opened that door, isn’t going well for them. So they’re overreacting.

    And as somebody asked in a Facebook thread, why is the Clinton campaign going out of their way to remind people about Ken Starr and the generally-unpleasant mid-90s investigations? Is this the kind of “experience” they think is an advantage — or the kind of “change” they think the voters want? It’s the same dynamic as the self-inflicted “3 a.m.” aspect of their red phone ad; they’re either unaware of or ignoring the costs.

  2. Setrak has a diary entry on MyDD looking at the spreadsheet’s projections for the popular vote, and is similarly impressed with its accuracy for Texas. The same pattern of the Obama campaign substantially outperforming projections in the interim shows up: here as well: +10 in Wisconsin and Vermont, +17 in Maryland, +27 Virginia, +47 (!) in Hawaii … Clinton barely outperformed in two states (+3 in Rhode Island and Ohio). Overall, like the delegates, the Obama campaign’s doing a lot better than they thought they would in February — when they were first openly confident that they would win in a tough fight.

    jon

  3. David Kurtz on TPM today excerpted a quote from Hillary in terms of crossing the threshold of fitness for commander in chief (“I believe that I’ve done that. Certainly, Sen. McCain has done that and you’ll have to ask Sen. Obama with respect to his candidacy”) and titled it crossing the line?.

  4. and Nico Pitney’s article in the Huffington Post illustrates how attention on McCain and Hagee assures that the “reject” standard is here to stay — emphasis mine:

    Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the most prominent Catholic serving in the U.S. government, called on Sen. John McCain to reject the endorsement of Texas televangelist John Hagee, who has labeled the Catholic church “the great whore,” a “false cult system,” and linked it to Hitler’s Nazi movement.

    “That behavior is outside the circle of civilized debate in our democracy,” Pelosi said during a Thursday conference call. “I certainly think John McCain should reject his endorsement and I’m sure it won’t be long before he does….”

  5. I’m thinking about the implications of this in light of the Rush Limbaugh sponsored “crossover” initiative for the March 24th registration deadline in Pennsylvania. The Obama campaign may well factored this in (it was always pretty plausible that one candidate would have things more-or-less sewed up by this point); then again, like NAFTA-gate, it could be a wild card.

    In early February, the spreadsheet’s projections were for Obama to lose the popular vote 47-52 and the delegates 75-83. My quick analysis: on the one hand Limbaugh-following Republicans (especially McCain supporters) give Clinton an advantage; on the other hand, Obama will appeal to a lot of Huckabee and Romney supporters. Ron Paul supporters may well probably vote Republican and try to win the primary; if they cross over, the civil liberties and anti-war types vote for Obama, and everybody else votes for Mike Gravel. In terms of the electoral vote, it probably helps Clinton overall but nowhere near as much as people are assuming.

    And this really highlights the electability question for voters in all the caucuses in unpledged delegates mind: just why is it that Republicans want Hillary Clinton as the nominee so badly?

    It also puts the Clinton campaign an a very awkward corner given her recent praise of McCain’s fitness over Obama’s. If it looks like she and McCain are teaming up on Obama … wow, it is really hard to argue that is for the good of the party, and if she somehow gets the nomination it virtually assures that they party will split. So in a lot of ways it is worse for her. I suspect Rush, Matt, Ann, Karl, George W., John and all their friends have come to the same conclusion.

  6. From Todd Beeton’s What commander in chief threshold? on MyDD:

    “Certainly Senator McCain has done that?” Really? How? By promising to continue the neo-con bully Bush doctrine for 4 more years? By escalating and perpetuating a tragic war?

    Tom Hartmann this morning on Air America predicted that Clinton’s latest attacks on Obama as unfit to be commander in chief crossed a point of no return rendering an Obama/Clinton or Clinton/Obama ticket impossible. I’m beginning to think he’s right.

    And Greg Sergeant reports on TPM:

    On an Obama campaign conference call just now, Obama advisers previewed a two-prong attack that they will be making with increasing intensity in the days ahead, tying Hillary more tightly to John McCain while simultaneously broadening their efforts to undercut Hillary’s claim to foreign policy seasoning.

    In the meantime Ron Paul appears to be dropping out of the race. Too bad, the libertarians might have actually won one. Oh well.

    jon

  7. Jonathan Chaidt, Go Already on The New Republic, who after describing why the kamikaze strategy probably won’t work continues:

    Clinton’s path to the nomination, then, involves the following steps: kneecap an eloquent, inspiring, reform-minded young leader who happens to be the first serious African American presidential candidate (meanwhile cementing her own reputation for Nixonian ruthlessness) and then win a contested convention by persuading party elites to override the results at the polls….

    Clinton’s kamikaze mission is likely to be unusually damaging. Not only is the opportunity cost–to wrap up the nomination, and spend John McCain into the ground for four months–uniquely high, but the venue could not be less convenient. Pennsylvania is a swing state that Democrats will almost certainly need to win in November, and Clinton will spend seven weeks and millions of dollars there making the case that Obama is unfit to set foot in the White House. You couldn’t create a more damaging scenario if you tried.

  8. An interesting poll on Daily Kos: do you think the Democrats will win the Presidency this year?1198 vote yes, 193 no, 93 “only if Hillary Clinton is the nominee” …

    and 1948 (a thin majority), “only if Barack Obama is the nominee”

    update, March 13: current results: 5700 “Dems will win in either case”, 433 “only with Hillary as the nominee” … 7400 “only with Barack”. Looks like the Kossacks have a clear opinion on electability.

    jon

  9. Samantha Power’s swift resignation after an intemperate comment continues to set the bar high for accountability. I agree with David Corn’s view in In “Monster”-Gate, Clintonites Get Away with a Slur, While Respected Obama Aide Falls:

    Non-News Flash: Aides to presidential candidates routinely refer to the competition in harsh terms, particularly when they talk to reporters off the record. More than once, a top Clinton person has told me that s/he believes Obama is a self-righteous fraud–or worse. It was, of course, always off the record. But if I had reported any of these remarks, I could have gotten the pop The Scotsman has received for disclosing Power’s comment.

    And now, thanks to the Clinton campaign’s actions, it’s legitimate for him, and every other reporter, to go public with this: and any Clinton campaign spokespeople who are implicated will be expected to resign equally-swiftly. Once there’s a nominee, the same standards will presumably apply to McCain.

    In other news, Mark Penn continues to call for more “vetting”, and as Peter Eisler reports in USA Today:

    Federal archivists at the Clinton Presidential Library are blocking the release of hundreds of pages of White House papers on pardons that the former president approved, including clemency for fugitive commodities trader Marc Rich.

    The archivists’ decision, based on guidance provided by Bill Clinton that restricts the disclosure of advice he received from aides, prevents public scrutiny of documents that would shed light on how he decided which pardons to approve from among hundreds of requests.

  10. DHinMI on Kos, approving of Power’s resignation after her “dumb” comment:

    Calling one of our candidates a monster, or comparing one of our candidates to Ken Starr, or implying that one of our candidates is less suited to be president than John McCain is beyond the line anyone officially associated with one of the Democratic campaigns should cross.

    McCain repudiated Hagee’s anti-Catholic statements, although not Hagee’s support, instead criticizing Pelosi for her “attack” in holding him to the same standards as Obama.

    And McCain’s foreign policy advisor thanked Clinton for her support: “Please keep running those 3:00 A.M. ads about who you want to answer the phone, because we like those.”

  11. Ari Berman’s Clinton does McCain’s bidding on The Nation’s Campaign Matters asks

    Who would Hillary Clinton rather be president, Barack Obama or John McCain? The answer should be obvious. But these days Clinton keeps saying that McCain is ready to be commander-in-chief, and Obama is not.

    and then adds

    Perhaps this latest line of attack shouldn’t be surprising. Just a few years ago, Clinton and McCain’s position on the war in Iraq was nearly indistinguishable.

    See comment above about the Obama two-prong strategy of “tying Hillary more tightly to John McCain while simultaneously broadening their efforts to undercut Hillary’s claim to foreign policy seasoning”.

  12. Some additional cushion: the certified results from California give Obama four more delegates than previous estimates.

    Anyhow, this puts it up to +64 over projections (an even bigger cushion) and totally wipes out Hillary’s tiny delegate gain on March 4.

    PS: as expected, the “double bubble trouble” voter disenfranchisment had no effect; when those votes were counted, they narrowly favored Clinton. The swing to Obama was probably the provisional ballots from around the state.

    update on March 8: looks like Obama’s 167 delegates are actually six more than most estimates, including CNN and the Obama spreadsheet, both of which had projected 161. Four days after the results were released, the CNN page still hasn’t been updated … as I said in a discussion of this on Facebook, it’s almost like they want to give the impression that Clinton’s doing better than she actually is.

  13. From Obama in Casper, Wyoming:

    If it was up to me, we would never have been in this war. It was because of George Bush, with an assist from Hillary Clinton and John McCain, that we’re in it

  14. Mike Dorning and Christi Parsons Clinton’s experience claim under scrutiny in The Chicago Tribune continues the “vetting” and the subtitle says it all: Hillary Clinton may have influenced foreign policy, but evidence is scant she played pivotal role.

    Josh Marshall comments on TPM in Bringing it on herself: “I refer back to my point from yesterday — she doesn’t need to be a seasoned foreign policy hand. But she’s setting herself up for a fall when she claims to be.”

  15. And ct in a thread on Jack and Jill Politics about Susan Power’s resignation:

    I’m listening to Air America radio right now. Randy Rhodes has just come out today and is now advocating her listeners to do everything they can for Barack Obama to win (especially in Pennsylvania). She also pointed out that the Muslim e-mail smear came from Hillary’s Iowa campaign chair. Randy’s decision to do this was because of the NAFTA-gate smear, endorsing McCain over Obama and comparing him to Ken Starr.

    By the way, here’s something of Power’s interview that hasn’t gotten as much press as the off-the-record part:

    Ms Power said of the Clinton campaign: “Here, it looks like desperation. I hope it looks like desperation there, too.”

    Looks that way to me.

  16. From an interview with ABC’s Sunlen Miller, Obama on whether he could see himself on the same ticket as Clinton:

    You won’t see me as a vice presidential candidate — you know, I’m running for president. We have won twice as many states as Senator Clinton, and have a higher popular vote, and I think we can maintain our delegate count — but you know, what I’m really focused on right now, because all that stuff is premature, is winning this nomination and changing the country.

    Sounds like confidence to me.

    Discussions on Kos, the One Million Strong for Barack Facebook group, and no doubt elsewhere. Thanks to Colin for the tip!

  17. On YouTube: McCain’s ad with Hillary. Great editing! It really does look like a an ad for McCain/Clinton ticket … I wonder if this’ll go viral?

  18. Rosa Brooks’ It’s your call, Hillary In the LA Times:

    Hillary? Hillary?

    What? It’s 3 a.m.? Yes, I know that. Look, I’m sorry if I woke you up. But you said you were fine with 3 a.m. calls.

    I’m calling because we have a serious crisis on our hands. And I thought of you immediately, because you’re right, you’re the only person who might be able to defuse the situation.

    We’ve got a problem with John McCain, Hillary. Remember him? I know, you’ve been so busy lately trying to destroy Barack Obama that McCain probably slipped your mind. That’s why I had to call….

    This week, right-wing radio host Rush Limbaugh urged Republicans to vote for you instead of McCain in Texas and Ohio — because “Obama needs to be bloodied up. Look, half the country already hates Hillary. But nobody hates Obama yet. Hillary is going to be the one to have to bloody him up politically.”

    You were right all along, Hillary: There is a vast right-wing conspiracy. The thing is, you’ve just become their not-so-secret weapon….

    Great essay. LA and Chicago going toe-to-toe with New York! Film at 11!

  19. From Kos’ More Insults from Camp Clinton:

    Really, why don’t Clinton and McCain get a room already? They’re all using the same arguments.

    Even if those arguments are so darn stupid.

    Here’s on his excellent map showing the actual and projected winners of the various states: “Obama states in Blue, Clinton states in Red (because she and her campaign have fallen in love with right-wing McCain frames)”:

    Kos counted Texas for Clinton because (with the aid of legal Limbaugh crossovers) she won the popular vote; Obama however dominated in the caucuses and so won the total delegate count, 98-95 …

    +6 over the February predictions.

  20. There’s an interesting thread started on Feb 8 in the One Million Strong for Barack group on Facebook, How many Political Cards Hillary has played and whats more to come? I went back and looked at it today seeing how accurate it was; here’s an excerpt from was my summary:

    This is a really interesting thread to read a month later. Of the Clinton kitchen sink that got her a tie for March 4, Sandeep flagged the “representing Obama as Muslim” card, others brought up “experience” and “ready to lead on day 1”, and the “victim card” (which thanks to SNL turned the press into a poodle for a few days)

    We missed a few … I don’t think anybody else predicted these either, so on the whole, I bet the analysis in this thread was as good as just about any other analyses out there — in the press or blogosphere.

    Very impressive!

    In other words, the 22 group members who posted in the thread seem to predicted things at least as well as the pundits out there — and probably better than most.

    It’s great example of a wisdom of crowds effect: diverse groups doing a better job than experts. Scott Page’s The Difference is a very readable discussion of the vital role that diversity plays in a situation like this; Adam has a good short summary on Emergent Chaos.

    The Obama campaign is benefiting hugely from its diversity and resulting wisdom of crowds; if you look at its supporters, you see rainbows in one dimension after another: race, age (including those too young to vote), religion, class, language, gender, geography (including internationally), …. It’s a huge advantage over the Clinton campaign and an even bigger one over McCain. This implies that the Obama campaign in generally will do better on their predictions and their performance. Sure enough, the February spreadsheet is an extraordinarily accurate “we’ll do at least this well” prediction, and the campaign has consistently outperformed.

    Have any of the analysts, reporters, or bloggers reporting the election picked up on this yet?

    PS: for more details on the “Clinton card” predictions, and for yet another reason why I’m so enthusiastic about the Facebook groups, please see the expanded version of this post “Wisdom of crowds” and the 2008 US election.

  21. Obama’s Monday-morning response, excerpted at length on TPM, emphasizes the themes of confidence, fitness, judgment (at 3 a.m.), and tying Clinton and McCain together:

    With all due respect, I’ve won twice as many states as Sen. Clinton. I’ve won more of the popular vote than Sen. Clinton. I have more delegates than Sen. Clinton. So, I don’t know how somebody who’s in second place is offering the vice presidency to the person who’s in first place. [Long applause.]…

    I’m running for president of the United States of America. I’m running to be commander-in-chief. And the reason I’m running to be commander-in-chief is because I believe that the most important thing when you answer that phone call at 3 in the morning is: What kind of judgment you have?

    So I don’t want anybody here thinking that somehow, “Maybe I can get both.” Don’t think that way. You have to make a choice in this election. Are you gonna go along with the past, or are you gonna go towards the future? Are you gonna do the same old thing, or are you gonna try something new?

  22. Watchin’ the memes: less than twelve hours after this morning’s bombshell, a Google query for “Spitzer reject denounce” returns 6910 hits. Davide Wegiel used it as a title in So… Will Clinton Reject or Denounce Him?in Reason magazine, there are already a couple of Yahoo! Answers threads up, and two of the the first comments in Ben Smith’s report on Clinton’s statement criticize Clinton for not doing so.

    In the thread in the One Million Strong for Barack Facebook group, Julie Swanstrom commented

    ‘Reject and denounce.’ I bet she cringes every time she hears those words repeated…

    Well said (and thanks for the permission to quote). And if not yet, she — and other Clinton and McCain supporters — will soon enough.

    Update on March 11: I wrote this before Geraldine Ferraro’s comments … I doubt Hillary’s any more fond of the words today.

    16,800 hits for “Spitzer reject denounce”; only 755 for Ferraro — so far.

    Update on March 14:

    13,900 hits for “Spitzer reject denounce”; 46,400 for Ferraro.

  23. Sam Boyd’s Have I gone crazy or has everybody else? roundup starts with

    The last couple of days have been pretty weird even for 2008. First, an election that everyone agreed could easily go to Clinton did, and this somehow convinced most major media figures to go from arguing she was finished to arguing she had as good a shot at the nomination as Obama.

    Second, Clinton suddenly began acting as if she had some vast heretofore unknown store of foreign policy experience (when she got into details they weren’t very convincing) and arguing Obama was unfit to be commander in chief.

    Third, she also said she’d be happy to have him as her VP, which confused people since she was simultaneously arguing he was unfit to be President.

    Finally, her campaign spokesman argued that he could gain the relevant experience by November which, in addition to just not making any sense, contradicted the entire criticism of him she’d been making for the last week (if he can “become” qualified as VP why can’t he become qualified as a top of the ticket candidate). As Bill Clinton said about this issue “that’s politics” or, in human speak, “the thing my wife has been saying for a week isn’t true.”

  24. […] Geraldine Ferraro’s attack perfectly illustrates several things I talked about last week in The day after.  Campaign strategist David Axelrod emphasizes the pattern: Axelrod said Ferraro’s comments […]

  25. Obama advisor Greg Craig’s Senator Clinton’s claim to be experienced in foreign policy: Just words? does some “vetting” on the topics the Clinton campaign asked people to focus on:

    When your entire campaign is based upon a claim of experience, it is important that you have evidence to support that claim. Hillary Clinton’s argument that she has passed “the Commander- in-Chief test” is simply not supported by her record.

    The Clinton campaign’s response starts out

    Over the last few weeks, Sen. Obama has successfully undermined his credibility with a series of statements to reporters and voters that have been contradicted by the facts…. Still reeling from its losses in Ohio and Texas, the Obama campaign has come out swinging, taking aim at Senator Clinton’s considerable foreign policy experience with false claims and baseless attacks.

    Did they really think including the patently-false claim of “Obama lost Texas” would help their argument? For all I know, they may be bringing up some valid criticisms — there are a lot of different interpretations of her role in Northern Ireland — but after a start like this, it’s hard for them to get a lot of credibility …

  26. While Geraldine Ferraro claims “they’re attacking me because I’m wait”, McCain shows that he similarly doesn’t quite get how the rules have changed: As Matt reports on ThinkProgress:

    On Bill Bennett’s radio show this morning, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said he repudiates “any comments” by hard-line conservative Pastor John Hagee “that are anti-semetic or anti-Catholic, racist, any other.” “I repudiate the words that create that impression,” said McCain.

    But unlike his previous, half-hearted attempts to distance himself from Hagee, McCain also spoke up in the controversial pastor’s defense, saying that Hagee “said that his words were taken out of context”:

    I will say that he said that his words were taken out of context, he defends his position. I hope that maybe you’d give him a chance to respond. He says he has never been anti-Catholic, but I repudiate the words that create that impression.

    McCain then said he could look past Hagee’s bigoted comments because “when we were doing the No Surrender tour, he came and spoke on behalf of not surrendering in Iraq.”

  27. In the Ya’ll have to read this it’s hilarious 🙂 thread on Facebook, Jen Emelianova of what the hella (“putting the fun in dysfunctional, 24/7/365”) called it

    best campaign memo. ever.

    and i couldn’t agree more. The ROFL* markup of a Clinton “to interested parties” memo fits in with the Obama campaign’s strategy of highlighting similarities between the Clintons and McCain with lines like “”A candidacy past its prime.” These guys kill me.” and

    “And I’m sure Rush Limbaugh’s full-throated endorsement of Clinton didn’t make any difference. Right”

    before ending with a response to the Clinton campaign’s slide, “I guess we will have to suffer this horribly painful slide all the way to the nomination and then on to the White House. Thanks for the laughs guys. This was great.” If this really did come from the Obama campaign, looks like I was right about their confidence. And in any case, see the comment in my original essay about a million comedians trying to outdo SNL.

    The comments on the NPR blog are even better, with gems like Greg’s “The Clinton campaign will say anything to skew the results and make it seem like they hold the advantage. They can’t fool me though, I passed my 4th grade math class.” Patrick makes a particularly good observation:

    I think this is a great example of the generational divide between the two campaigns. This is the off the cuff, casual, twitter style commentary that is the main mode of communication in “Web 2.0” It seems like one of my friends could have written it!

    Speaking of Web 2.0, and of comedians … yeah, I know it’s in another thread as well, but it fits perfectly here too.

    * rolling on the floor laughing — waaay better than lol

  28. oh right, almost forgot. Wyoming results matched the February spreadsheet’s projections; Mississippi is currently being estimated at 19-14 while the spreadsheet has 20-13 — a rare -1.

    So there’s clearly been a phase shift: after out-performing throughout February, the Obama campaign is now back down to “only” matching predictions. One possible explanation for this is underestimating the likely Republican crossover; in Missisippi, it’s estimated as affecting as many as five delegates. The Jed Report’s Republicans are gaming our primary for Hillary Clinton has a great presentation on these trends — which, by the way, appear to have be illegal in Ohio, at least in some circumstances, Unsurprisingly, more and more people are talking about it: not good for Clinton.

    Looking forward: the “worst case” situation from the Obama perspective is to assume the negative trends continue: Limbaugh-inspired Republicans crossover in massive numbers in Pennsylvania, and whatever else the Clinton campaign’s doing to boost their support with white and older voters continues to work in a state where she has the support of the party establishment and she picks up a hard-fought 55-45% victory just like in Ohio along with a 15-delegate victory. This would be a -7 for the Obama campaign (the spreadsheet predicated an 8-delegate loss) but that still leaves them +55 or more depending on the final March 4 results — with even fewer delegates available for a Clinton comeback.

    The Obama campaign is a prohibitive favorite right now; and they must know it. Their strategy of simultaneously running against Clinton and McCain is ideal for this situation: keeps them from being overconfident in the primaries while positioning them, and the Democratic party, for a big win in the fall.

    Those guys* are good.

    * in the gender-netural sense of the word

  29. Via Greg Sergeant on TPM

    On a call with some of his major California donors yesterday, Barack Obama acknowledged that Pennsylvania will be a steep uphill battle, and said that his aim is to get within 10 points of Hillary there, something that he said would be a “victory” for him, according to a donor on the call….

    Asked for comment on the conversation, Obama spokesperson Bill Burton didn’t deny that it had taken place, saying: “She has a big lead, she won Ohio by 10 points and she is the favorite — but we will fight as hard as we can for votes and delegates.”

    See my comments in the previous post about a 55-45% Clinton victory in PA — as in Ohio 🙂

  30. John McCormick’s Obama prepares for full assault on Clinton: Contender to take aim at Clinton’s ethics in the Chicago Tribune:

    PLAINFIELD, Ind. – Sen. Barack Obama is trying to air his dirty laundry — even some items that might appear just a little wrinkled — as he prepares a full assault on Sen. Hillary Clinton over ethics and transparency.

    Releasing tax information, earmarks, pharmaceutical contributions, her changing statements on Michigan and Florida … seems like a target-rich environment.

    Brilliant strategically, too: at exactly the same time the House Democrats are mounting a full-fledged attack on the administration’s ethics and transparency.

  31. Good speech. And as Ari Melber’s Obama’s speech makes YouTube history reports in The Nation.

    Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech is the most popular video in the world today, drawing an unusual 1.2 million full views in its first 24 hours on YouTube – double the views of the next most popular clips. YouTube only counts visitors who watch an entire video, so hundreds of thousands of additional visitors probably watched part of the 37-minute address….

    Update: In traditional media, big speeches are largely treated as a menu for ordering a few appetizing soundbites. That’s why Joe Klein understandably worries that:

    Most people will never hear the elegant complexity of Obama’s speech in full…though they certainly should. As others have already said, it was the best speech about race I’ve ever heard delivered by an American politician.

    Yet as this video goes viral, tapping many months of the campaign’s decentralized organizing, literally millions of people will see the speech in full. An Obama Campaign email urged supporters to send it to everyone they know, while MoveOn and ColorofChange called on their large membership base to circulate it as well.

    Matt Compton has some thoughtful commentary in Obama and the Decline of the Soundbite, and Ed Kilgore follows with The return of the coherent speech, both in The Democratic Strategist.

  32. From Todd Beeton’s The Consequences Of The Kitchen Sink on MyDD:

    It’s becoming increasingly evident that Hillary Clinton’s strategy to raise doubts about Barack Obama’s candidacy is backfiring. Yesterday, the latest NBC/WSJ poll showed that while Obama’s positive/negative rating has dropped a bit recently, from 51-28 earlier this month to 49-32, Clinton’s has absolutely plummeted from 45-43 to 37-48 today. Who would have thought that during a period that involved the Wright controversy that it would be Clinton’s approval that would be the one to dip.

    Gee. Who woulda thought?

    Meanwhile, Majority Blue — OpenLeft, the Swing State Project, and Daily Kos, a key chunk of the progressive blogosphere — endorsed Obama. Somewhere along the way Obama also picked up several more Iowa delegates too. Current polls show him leading by far more than the spreadsheet’s 53-45 prediction in North Carolina. An unnamed Clinton campaign adviser put her chances at 10% in a discussion with Politico, which seems in the ol’ ballpark to me.

  33. The Pennsylvania results were close to the spreadsheet. In North Carolina, Obama far outperformed the projections; in Indiana, he underperformed. West Virginia was major underperformance. In the discussions leading around these primaries, I saw several pundits referring to “the spreadsheet” and its numbers.

    At this point, three months after it was released, I don’t think the spreadsheet’s a particularly good predictor going forward. Still, it’s interesting to look at how reality has now started to diverge. One big effect is Operation Chaos; estimates in Indiana are that people who plan to vote for McCain in the fall gave Hillary a 4% edge, which exceeds her 1-2% victory margin. It really looks to me like the Obama campaign underestimated this back in February. If you remove the Operation Chaos effect, Obama probably would have outperformed in Texas, Ohio, and Pennsylvania as well — which is consistent with the idea that the projections in the spreadsheet were conservative [in the analytical sense of “giving plenty of room to exceed”].

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