There's
a clear pathway to the Republican nomination for Carly Fiorina after
last week's debate, this week's poll results and the departure of Scott
Walker from the Republican race. It begins with an irony.
Republican analysts chortled all this year over the "strength" of their
presidential field: eight present or former governors who had led almost
all the big states (Florida, New York, Ohio, New Jersey), five current
or former U.S. Senators, plus a couple of doctors and two business
tycoons (Donald Trump and Fiorina), who were high on no one's probable
list.
But the Republican electorate was having none of it. They
migrated, virtually stampeded, to the doctor with no political taint,
Ben Carson, plus the two tycoons, Trump and now Fiorina.
Carly Fiorina |
Begin with Fiorina's Primary strengths:
1. Gender. As long
as Trump maintains as part of his brand his boorish, insensitive and outdated
chauvinism, there is a space in the field for someone able to take him on.
Here, being a woman helps. And being a woman with the skill to know that all
she has to say is, "I think women all over this country heard very clearly
what Mr Trump said," -- priceless.
Trump is creating an otherwise absent
gender dynamic within the Republican electorate -- and only Fiorina can benefit
from it.
2. Timing. Fiorina
elbowed her way into the debates, but her early absence from the main stage
meant that she missed being expected to crush Trump -- and the men who failed
at that task are much like the rejected suitors of Atlanta
-- their candidacies sentenced to death. Now there is a good chance that the
media is tired of covering a baker's dozen of candidates, and is ready for an
old-fashioned smackdown from Trump's WWF days.
Scott Walker's departure with a
call for other candidates to join him "for the good of the party"
will help tee up such a media shift. With Trump at 24 percent in the latest
poll, Fiorina in second at 15 percent, and Ben Carson (14 percent) and Marco
Rubio (11 percent) close to her, Carly's not the only choice for that role. But
if she can open up even a little air between her and Rubio, she could easily be
anointed as the "not Trump" to beat in the race.
Carly Fiorina |
3. Potential Angels.
When Walker pulled out, he begged the other laggards to get out of the race to "stop
Trump." Donald is not conservative enough for Walker. But Walker's
appeal is unlikely to lure many of the significant candidates out of the race
-- which means that business Republicans, whose concerns about Trump are very
different than Walker's, are left looking for someplace to hide. John Kasich
might yet take off, but he hasn't; and Jeb Bush continues to languish.
While
the business elite may not like Carly, they are not terrified of her; she is
extreme (as they see it) only on issues they don't care that much about
(Planned Parenthood). Fiorina's has two big primary campaign weaknesses --
money and organization. And business Republicans looking for someone to replace
Jeb as their fire-wall against Trump might easily fix the first of her two
problems.
4. Message. Fiorina
is a compelling communicator -- particularly in this Republican field. She is a
refreshingly crisp contrast to Trump, without sounding like a sound bite
coached politician. The Guardian picked this as one of her key
attributes, going to Frank Luntz and Dan Schnur to validate their
view. Rose Kapoloczynski, former campaign manager for Senator Barbara Boxer
(who beat Fiorina in 2010) described her as: a terrific performer on the
political stage.
If Rubio doesn't take off soon, and
Trump holds on but can't put the nomination away, these assets might give
Fiorina the nomination. But look ahead to the November general election and the
picture is very different. It's different for two reasons: the electorate is
obviously much different, and so are the issues -- questions of economics,
family earnings, and inequality, which simply haven't featured in the
Republican primary very much, become absolutely essential, and Fiorina and her
Democratic opponent disagree so clearly on abortion and immigration that those
voters are locked in from day one. So November, 2016 is again going to be about
the economy.
General Election Weaknesses
Gender. In a general election campaign against Clinton, Fiorina's
likely to slip back into her harder edged style that came out when she ran
against Boxer in 2010. And her hyper-social conservatism on Planned Parenthood
is unlikely to play well with independent women, the big general election swing
group.
Timing. Fiorina has emerged very early, and with an opponent,
Trump, whom the Democrats don't need to define -- he has very much defined
himself, and rest of the Republicans will go after him. The Democrats can sit
and watch -- meanwhile defining Carly in terms that will be lethal in the
general election, leaving Fiorina fighting a two front war.
Message.
Fiorina talks compellingly. But she
also makes stuff up. The media has already lashed into her for creating out of
thin air a Planned Parenthood video about harvesting a foetal brain. She also
appears to have misrepresented the family tragedy involving the death of her 35
year old step-daughter, her objections to renewable energy (solar takes too
much water!), and the performance of Hewlett Packard while she was its CEO.
Carly also made some astonishing
statements about the California drought this spring. She said that
the drought had been created by environmentalists and liberal politicians
because they failed to build enough new dams and canals, and that with
"different policies" "all this could be avoided." Really?
California currently has 2700 named dams and
reservoirs.
In the
last twenty years there has been controversy about five new projects; none have been built,
largely because building them would cost 9 billion, and they would increase the
state's average water yield by only 1 percent. But of course, 2015 is not an
average year; the states reservoirs are filled at only 42 percent of the normal
level, so this year those five dams, if built, would be expected to increase
water deliveries by .4 percent. How much would that help?
Well, it turns out the state has issued
"rights" to 370 million acre feet of water a year, when
average rainfall delivers only 70 million acre feet to lakes, streams and
rivers. Against that deficit, the 160,000 acre feet that five new big dams
might yield hardly constitutes avoiding "all this."
Performance. Her resume leads with her leadership of Hewlett
Packard. The most politically salient piece of that tenure was
laying off 30,000 workers. That gave the Boxer campaign 30,000 potential lethal
surrogates against Fiorina, and they used them to crush her in a very
Republican year. Worse, Fiorina never got the enthusiastic support of the
California business community -- either because she did a terrible job running
HP, or because too many stories were circulating about her abusive behavior
while running the company.
Carl Pope wrote in from huffingtonpost
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