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Friday, June 08, 2007
Charles Krauthammer :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Endless Campaign
by Charles Krauthammer
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WASHINGTON -- In Britain, Canada and other civilized places, national elections are often called, run and concluded within six weeks. In America, election campaigns go on forever. It used to be one year, now it's two. No one planned this, but like other evolutionary artifacts (the Founders applied intelligent design to the general makeup of the U.S. government but never foresaw formal political parties, let alone the endless campaign), this crazy improvisation embodies a certain wisdom.

First, it tests a certain kind of competence. Managing a national campaign in a country of continental dimensions requires exceptional organizational skills. A fairly narrow competence, to be sure, but of major importance in a country where the president must run the behemoth that is the federal government.

The second function of the endless campaign is to build party consensus and democratic legitimacy, both of which contribute substantially to the astonishing stability and longevity of the American system. The presidential primary season is essentially a prolonged intra-party dialogue. It re-creates the Madisonian idea of factions and interests competing against each other, applied not to the legislature or the executive, but to the electoral process that produces both.

The job of the parties is to create a kind of pre-legislative consensus through the competition and conversation of the various factions -- ethnic, ideological, economic, geographic. The purpose of the endless presidential primary is to force the dialogue and, for all its haphazard meanderings and maddening trivialities, it does.

Unscripted, of course, and much of it goes nowhere. But not always. Perhaps Barack Obama's suggestion during a television interview that we should be moving away from preferences based on race to preferences based on class will be ignored. But perhaps it will be taken up by an opponent or the media and provoke a historic debate within the Democratic Party on affirmative action and a transition to a new national consensus.

Similarly, Rudy Giuliani wrestles with the abortion issue (and, in the eyes of many, loses). He will be asked the question repeatedly. He will have to answer repeatedly. Should he prevail as the Republican nominee, it will perhaps represent a historic shift in the very self-definition of American conservatism.

Perhaps. Nothing is guaranteed. But we do have the striking example of welfare reform, the most significant social advance of our time. Its political origin was the first presidential campaign of Bill Clinton, who distinguished himself from the field as a New Democrat by pledging to end welfare as we know it -- thus giving him the legitimacy within the Democratic Party to carry out so radical a reform. When serendipity presented him with the Republican Congress committed to the same objective, the reform got done.

The final function of the endless campaign, and perhaps the most psychologically important, is to satisfy the American instinct for egalitarianism. We have turned the presidential campaign into a pleasingly degrading ordeal -- pleasing, that is, to the electorate. The modern presidential campaign is meant to be physically exhausting and spiritually humbling almost to the point of humiliation. Candidates spend two years and more on bended knee begging for money, votes and a handshake in a diner.

Why do we inflict such cruel and unusual punishment? Because our winner is not just chief magistrate but king. True, the kingship is temporary, but its glories and perks are beyond compare -- the pomp and pampering of a head of state, married to the real political power of controlling the most important state on the planet.

The bargain we offer the candidate is this: We will make you Lord, circling celestially above us on Air Force One, but because we are flinty Jeffersonian yeomen, we insist that you flatter us first with a very extended show of camaraderie and commonality with the Iowa farmer, the New Hampshire alderman and the South Carolina good ol' boy. Aboriginal tribes have slightly different rituals for those who pretend to kingship, but the idea is the same: ordeal before dominion.

As a columnist whose job it is to chart every jot and tittle of these campaigns, every teapot tempest that history will remember for not one second, I curse election years. Now I have to curse the year before as well. But for all its bizarre meanderings, the endless campaign serves critical purposes.

The first two -- testing the candidates' managerial and consensus-building skills -- are undeniably useful. But like most Americans, I find it is the third -- the gratuitous humiliation of our would-be kings -- that makes it all worthwhile.

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About The Author

Charles Krauthammer is a 1987 Pulitzer Prize winner, 1984 National Magazine Award winner, and a columnist for The Washington Post since 1985.

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Abortion's the wrong issue
on Giuliani.

He's a gun-grabber.

Grill him on that, particularly with HR 1022 rattling around the House.

Agree with BrianR
Mr. Giulliani is Mr. Statist par Excellence. Take the Peoples' guns, and the People will whimper for the government's protection, elevating the politician's power.

Mr. Giulliani is certainly a Republican, and most certainly not a conservative.

And History Repeats Itself (Again(
As President Bush is really Lyndon B. Johnson, Jr., won't the accession of Guilliani be akin to a Nixon, Jr. presidency?

Guilianianism
Guiliani is most certainly a Republican (he has an "R" after his name), but there the resemblance ends.

Rudy G. thinks that confiscating guns from law-abiding citizens will diminish crime. Actually, he knows better because he has access to the same data we have. He simply ignores it.

People like Guiliani will ignore most of our freedoms if he's crowned president. There are too many other candidates out there that are a LOT closer to true Republicanism than Guiliani. He'll never get to the Oval Office unless he takes the White house tour.

I won't vote for Rudy because of his
anti-gun stance.
I want someone who will stand up for the 2nd Amendment and also work to see that my carry permit is recognized in all 50 states. Actually we shouldn't even need THAT, but I'll cede the issue to the states to decide who gets one.
I spent too many years in uniform to become a criminal when I cross the Potomac River bridge.

Without the 2nd amendment, the Constitution itself could become moot.

What did he actually do?
All Rudy's got is 9-11. But what did he actually do that day? He ran around in front of the cameras and talked. I don't get it.
I don't like the way he uses women; he's trashed two wives so far and has NO CLASS. When will he get sick of #3? Why would I want a President who is unable to manage his personal life?
Maybe he's got the New York aura, another thing I don't understand. I do not know a single Republican who can stand the sound of his name and am shocked he's even in the polls.
I will never vote for him; if he's anointed as the Rep'n nominee, I'll switch parties (Lib'n).

Another no on Giuliani
I'll never vote for Giuliani. I happen to enjoy personal liberties, and I refuse to accept anyone who would not only support infanticide, but call for infanticide to be federally funded. Murderers do not deserve to be in office.

Given that he's pissed off the NRA and other gun lobbyists, as well as the evangelicals and social conservatives, that does a pretty good job alienating 2 segments of the party, representing probably about 25% each. If your nominee makes the blood of half your party boil, what's he doing running?

Fred Thompson, all the way.

The polls on who has that best chance...
...of winning the White House in 2012 will be out the day after the election of 2008 because the news media has discovered that polls sell papers and increase TV viewers.Nothing personal,just business.

Ron Paul 08?
GOP Ron Paul - Five Million Dollar Man?

The number of people giving Ron Paul money most be staggering to be raising this much money. Most campaigns raise the majority of money from a small percentage of big money donors. How do you think Ron Paul will do in New Hampshire? Do you think he could break into the top tier candidates via votes? Will the GOP embrace Ron Paul if he does well?

FMN-Congressman Ron Paul’s donations have moved up - not by hundreds of thousands - but by millions as a result of his debate performances and groundswell of support on the Internet and in New Hampshire, observers close to the campaign say.

The move is especially impressive since as of March 31, 2007, he had perhaps $500,000 on hand (see candidate estimates below).

FMNN had previously reported – after the GOP presidential debate in South Carolina - that candidate Ron Paul’s (R-Tex) donations, large and small, had nearly doubled.

At this rate, say observers, Ron Paul could have something like $10 million in his coffers inside of several months, and the total could keep growing – so long as he continues to hit on themes that Americans support – how to return the country to a true, small government, constitutional republic and how to end the war

in Iraq. Read the rest of this entry »

http://controlcongress.com/uncategorized/gop-ron-paul-five-million-dollar-man


Rudi's persecution
of the "Junk Bond" people and Wall Street in general came up empty and is a prime example of prosecutorial terror. His performance on September 11 was marred by the ever-lasting presence of Bernie Kerick who was never off-camera.

Rudi will push to take your guns away and then -- who knows what else.

He plays well in sound bites, but his real message is big government and big government control of more and more of our daily lives. He is a Rockefeller Republican writ large.

Surely we can do better.

The problem I have with the so-called endless campaign is that the primary, internal discussion period is going to be too short relative to the final one-on-one election campaign period. The two parties will have decided on their candidates by around late February or mid-March, which leaves a l-o-n-g time to go till the election, a result of each state trying to be "The Leader of the Pack."

A much better system would be to invert the process. Have a small number of primaries each month, starting in February, with the smallest states leading off and the biggest states at the end of the process. Make the early contests largely symbolic, without real import, but still important for momentum-building and hard-fought enough to get the messages out and winnow the field a bit. Then, in May and June, have the big states up for grabs, but space them out so we can see the candidates in different large states after seeing them in small states.

As it is right now, the whole thing may be over before Groundhog Day, but it won't be official until the conventions. What a waste and a bore.

Barry

Primaries
Historically, the smallest states (or at least smaller states)have led the way, as in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.

The issue that always arose is that too often candidates of interest got washed out or damaged in small states before the large states - and those voters had little option left once the election was held.

Bush's first campaign worked in precisedly this manner. He was, after a fact, anointed by the national party apparatus controlled by his father, and the nomination was over before it began because the money he assembled steam rolled everyone else in those small states - which a surplus of money can do in a small state. Small states, in turn, may not have remotely the diversity of a large state. Iowa is primarily an agriculture state - and having been raised on a farm, that's not necessarily a bad thing, but it is not at all representative of much of the Republican base - for example.

Having lived in some large states - I, quite frankly, never saw much use in voting in primaries because they were over long before I had a chance to pull the lever.

2000 was a classic example of this. I was not enamored with Bush, as I was suspicious of his conservative credentials and thin resume. But the conservative candidates that I knew to be conservative were gone before I could express an opinion.

Hence I voted for Bush in the fall - but I never really felt that I'd had any choice in the matter.

And, as I was afraid, he was not a conservative in most things I cared about, yet I've had to live with him as if he were a Republican - when in fact I always thought that he used the Republican party as a convenience,not because of any real commitment.

He was not my choice - but I had no choice.

Horse Racing and Grifting
Every Candidate spouted Welfare Reform for a generation. Like betting on every horse in one race you become ‘a winner’. Your rendition of Clinton’s reform success is no different. Charley, you got the sequence wrong. Clinton, scraping for entrees for his library stole that one. “The Contract with America” a Republican check off list provided the backbone cure and many more social successes that strengthened America. Bring back another contract for all to see and the government will again do something right in spite of the lunatic celebrities stroking the fawning media.
Jordan Alexander Orosz, The Old Sailor, San Diego Ca.

Endless politicians
I enjoys Charles' writing, but here he misses the point. We don't inflict "gratuitous humiliation", pain and suffering on our would-be "kings".

They inflict it on us!

The whole point of endless campaigning is so that by the the time election day finally comes, the public will be so burned out they fall into the same routine- voting for whoever promises the most goodies. And it's all about the children...

sp-sorry
"I enjoy". I really do.

10Million?
That wouldn't last 10 days as a nominee.

PatriotRage
Looking at it objectively, the candidates do have to listen to a lot of uninformed idiots screeching about the "guvmint" not doing all it can to save the planet, or the whales, or the children, or why is there too much or too little guvmint, and what has the guvmint done to stop rogue asteroids, etc. ad nauseum.

Sure, we get to listen to 5 minutes of political rhetoric to get one word or phrase from any given candidate so that we can make an intelligent choice. That's our cross to bear. That, and the whole term of office if we make the wrong choice.

Charles K.'s point was that candidates have to kiss a lot more than babies in order to get elected and that's not necessarily a bad thing.

P.S.: Does any Republican think that we would have been better off with Kerry or Gore as prez? I doubt it.

Totally ignored the money factor
While I might quibble with some of this column, there is the 800 lb. gorilla that Mr. Krauthammer appears to have missed.

Money.

Imagine the difference in money that candidates would have to raise if political campaigns were say eight weeks long.

Am I naive in thinking that if you decreased the amount of money in campaigns by 80 percent that there would be less political influence that was sold?

Comments?

Magnificent writing as usual, but wrong
on Clinton and welfare "reform" (wr).

> [Clinton] pledg[ed] to end welfare as we know it ... When serendipity presented him with the Republican Congress committed to the same objective, the reform got done. <

Mr K is an extremely smart man and a student of history, and thus knows that the implication of this -- that Clinton wanted (genuine) wr all along -- is completely wrong.

Clinton's idea of wr was to make welfare **much more expensive than before**, although of course he never stated that part on the campaign trail.

In C's first two years, he was busy massively raising taxes and trying to secure a gov't takeover of medical care. Those actions, and his general dishonesty, coupled with Gingrich's vision and leadership, saw a Republican takeover of the House.

The Repubs pushed *genuine* welfare reform, which C vetoed *twice*. He wanted to add money for **many additional benefits** (child care, etc.) but *not* add any recipient requirements, i.e., add cost but do *nothing* to push people to work.

But the Repubs wouldn't budge -- ah, how one longs for the days when Repubs had spines! -- and Clinton signed the third bill they passed, just before an election, with a promise to the Dem base to "correct" it later, i.e., remove all the provisions that would actually make things better.

The Repubs' version worked so well, in fact, that Daniel P. Moynihan -- who, along with Ted Kennedy, predicted disaster if the R-backed planned passed -- refused to discuss the results vis-a-vis his predictions.

Debates on the Abortion Issue
All this endless debate over abortion rights. Yet not a single candidate or politician appears bothered by all the child molesters who roam free in every neighborhood, close to our precious living children. I am amazed that so many disinterested bystanders are suddenly concerned over the unborn. I wonder why these same people turn a blind eye to the predators that kill our beloved children every single day.

One national primary day
Thanks, CK! Lots of good thoughts to ponder!

I, too, felt left out when the primary was held in my state AFTER the candidate had been selected by the "big three"

Not only one day for all states, but also limit it to six weeks prior to the first convention. However, you know the main winners $$$-wise are the MSM - all that advertising $$$ would go down the drain, and they do NOT want that!

Now to my final suggestion, a new election day format. No exit polling results allowed prior to closing. Voting precincts will be open for 24 hours, beginning at the same time from the eastern time zone to Hawaii! Therefore, the end time would be the same and we wouldn't be subjected to the media trying to influence the remaining voters by their "exit polls"

Allowing a 24-hour "window" would offer a voting opportunity to many who work odd hours or who simply can't meet the hours as is the current policy.

Multi-Complex Two-Party System
Election day every four years may only have a handful of candidates, but because we evaluate so many, we need the time to pare the field to a manageable number. I think it all works quite well.

Cape Conservative
I like the idea of no exit polling.I get so sick of hearing the media use those two words.24 hour open polls:Surely,sometime in a 24 hour period,everyone would have a chance to get to the polls.I could walk to mine in 30 minutes and you could use county school buses to transport people who couldn't drive or walk to the polls.Even people that work those odds shifts would at one point,get to vote.I never listen to the exit polls before I vote anyway and I know who I'm gonna vote for before I leave the house but alot of people dont decide til they close the curtain and if they have heard any exit polling reports, it may cause them regret later.
24 hours, no exit polling.If you dont know who your voting for til you read who's running, its probably to late to make a good decision anyway and even if you do, its still dicey.
And, on Rudy? I like my guns and plan on keeping them.
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