Eddie Mahe Jr., a "veteran G.O.P. strategist," may get kicked out of the Spinmeister's Club for publicly advocating a heresy.
Mahe's heterodox notions are quoted in this Los Angeles Times story by Mark Z. Barabak and Janet Hook. The article is all about the Bush campaign -- its ads, its strategies, its struggle to find a politically effective message. The assumption underlying the whole piece -- and underlying most campaign coverage -- is that elections are won or lost on the basis of such strategies.
Mahe commits a kind of treason against his class by suggesting that reality -- actual events and conditions in the world -- could be just as important in an election, and that substance can matter almost as much as style.
"No jobs are being created. They did not find weapons of mass destruction" in Iraq, said Eddie Mahe Jr., a veteran GOP strategist. "That provided the constant stream of attacks a level of credibility and legitimacy they otherwise might not have."
The radical new theory here -- new for the world of political strategists and the journalists who cover them -- is that attacks on a candidate will be most effective if those attacks are based on something true.
Contrast Mahe's notion with the conventional wisdom as expressed by "one outside campaign advisor, who also requested anonymity," who said, "We've got a real vulnerability on the jobs issue if we can't get that discussion going in a different direction."
The conventional wisdom says that if a candidate is vulnerable on "the jobs issue," then you need to change the subject and make the election about something else -- a Mars mission, gay marriage, anything. The way to overcome this vulnerability is to take the discussion "in a different direction" and to come up with a winning phrase that can be used to sidestep the issue.
But if Mahe's crazy notion were true, then the best way to respond to a "vulnerability on the jobs issue" would not be with politicking, but with policy. The candidate should adopt policies that promote the creation of jobs.
His topsy-turvy insight is that Pres. Bush's vulnerability on the jobs issue is not the result of some devious Kerry campaign strategy, it's not the result of the Democrats' unity during their primaries, nor of their accelerated primary process. No, in Mahe's theory, Bush is vulnerable on the jobs issue because 2,000,000+ jobs have disappeared during his tenure and the president's only response has been to call for tax cuts that kick in years down the line.
Still, we probably shouldn't make too much of this. Mahe is one of about a dozen people quoted in the article, and none of the others mentions substance or policy as having any relevance to the president's fortunes in this election.









Obviously, this guy is way out of line making these scurrilous suggestions. That's encouraging.
Posted by: Mary | Mar 16, 2004 at 09:46 AM
My personal prediction is that the relative ineffectiveness of W's negative campaign (so soon! so nutty!) will force his hand on the issue of debating Kerry. As we know, incumbents traditionally shun debates, since they have the most to lose. Predictably, W's campaign demurred when Kerry challenged him to debate soon over the weekend. Their strategy, of course, is to simply let the $200 million wind machine beat down Kerry's numbers for a few months, and only debate well into the fall if they feel like it.
Surprise! The wind machine is blowing like thunder, but so far, nothing is working. Why? Because the B.S. detectors are starting to go off all over the place -- in the media, in the public -- and W ain't getting the free ride he's been so used to.
It's pretty sweet, actually.
Posted by: eSteve | Mar 16, 2004 at 11:24 AM
Mahe is clearly a memeber of the blame America first crowd. I could tell without reading the article. What he doesn't seem to realize is that preserving our way of life is the only thing that keeps the terrorists at bay. His chomskyite criticism only serves to embolden them. In short, he's a witch. Burn him! Burn him!
Posted by: Harry | Mar 17, 2004 at 12:31 AM
Harry, why parody these people when they're doing such a good job of it themselves?
Posted by: Nick Kiddle | Mar 17, 2004 at 08:55 AM
The real surprise is that Mahe would have such insite into the relationship between actual conditions and perceived conditions. His usual M.O. is to manipulate the perceived conditions regardless of their relationship to reality. He was paid $25,000 in 1992 to dig up dirt on Clinton that resulted in the "troopergate" story that resulted in Paula Jones that resulted in Monica that resulted in impeachment. Mahe must be shaking in his boots to realize at this point that Bush II's teflon coat is wearing thin.
Posted by: Ashley | Jun 15, 2004 at 12:28 PM