Rove: For Romney, Even Means Ahead
After absorbing three months of negative ads
from President Obama, the GOP challenger is raising his game in time for
the nominating convention.
Wednesday's Gallup poll had President Barack Obama
and Mitt Romney essentially tied, with Mr. Obama at 47% and Mr. Romney
at 46%. That's good news for the challenger: Mr. Romney has absorbed a
punishing three-month Obama television barrage that drained the
incumbent's war chest. Historically, undecided voters tend to break late
for the challenger.
Mr. Romney and his campaign have also raised their game. After Mr.
Obama declared on July 13 that "If you've got a business, you didn't
build that," Mr. Romney went on offense, saying the following Tuesday in
Pennsylvania that the notion entrepreneurs didn't build their
businesses was "insulting." Wednesday in Ohio, Mr. Romney attacked Mr.
Obama for not having met with his Jobs Council for six months. Thursday
in Massachusetts, Mr. Romney belittled the White House's explanation
that the president had failed to do so because he "has a lot on his
plate." The following Tuesday in Nevada before the Veterans of Foreign
Wars, Mr. Romney criticized Mr. Obama over cuts in defense and veterans
care.
Democratic pollster Doug Schoen on whether
Mitt Romney's decision not to release his tax will hurt him in November.
Plus, are voters responding to President Obama's class warfare
rhetoric? Photo: Associated Press.
Each time, Mr. Romney's message was delivered
in the morning and dominated the day's coverage. That change appears
now to be standard procedure for Team Romney.
Last week Mr. Romney began laying out a
crisper, shorter economic agenda. His "Plan for a Stronger Middle
Class" is built around five priorities: promoting more domestic energy,
cultivating skills for economic success, making trade work for America,
cutting the deficit, and championing small business (including tax and
regulatory reform and the repeal of ObamaCare). It also compares the
candidates' records in office. Jobs, home values, and family income
rose—while budget deficits and unemployment declined—in Massachusetts
under Mr. Romney, whereas all these measures are in the wrong direction
under Mr. Obama.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.
Though it
will require more detail, persistent explanation and defense, this is a
better foundation on which to fight the election than last year's
unwieldy 59-point plan for economic jobs and growth.
Mr. Romney is also tougher. When Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
alleged that Mr. Romney went years without paying taxes, Mr. Romney
didn't ask for an apology. He responded to this smear by challenging Mr.
Reid "to put up or shut up."
Mr. Romney also began running more positive ads. The election will
not be won just by highlighting Mr. Obama's failures, a job better left
(mostly) to outside groups. Because it can put the candidate on camera,
the Romney campaign is better positioned to reassure voters that he has a
plan to create jobs, reduce spending, and make America more prosperous.
This is vital, since both sides have pushed up their opponent's
negative ratings to the high-40s.
Mr. Obama's numbers are driven by the bad economy, so there's little
he can do. And those who strongly disapprove of his handling of the
economy vastly outnumber those who strongly approve. Mr. Romney's task
is less difficult: Voters are asking if he is too rich to care about
ordinary people, has a real economic plan that makes sense, and is both
strong and presidential enough.
About Karl Rove
Karl Rove served as Senior Advisor to President
George W. Bush from 2000–2007 and Deputy Chief of Staff from 2004–2007.
At the White House he oversaw the Offices of Strategic Initiatives,
Political Affairs, Public Liaison, and Intergovernmental Affairs and was
Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy, coordinating the White House
policy-making process.
Before Karl became known as "The Architect" of
President Bush's 2000 and 2004 campaigns, he was president of Karl Rove +
Company, an Austin-based public affairs firm that worked for Republican
candidates, nonpartisan causes, and nonprofit groups. His clients
included over 75 Republican U.S. Senate, Congressional and gubernatorial
candidates in 24 states, as well as the Moderate Party of Sweden.
Karl writes a weekly op-ed for the Wall Street
Journal, is a Fox News Contributor and is the author of the book
"Courage and Consequence" (Threshold Editions).
That's why Team Romney appears focused on
making certain his first presidential decision—picking a running mate—is
done right and rolled out properly.
And then there is Mr. Romney's convention speech, which needs to be
powerful. More Americans will watch it than any other election event
except the debates. (In 2008, more than 38 million Americans watched the
two candidates' acceptance addresses.) This will be Mr. Romney's best
moment to provide insights into his character, share the values that
guide him, and lay out a growth agenda.
Among other things, Mr. Romney should talk about his father's modest
upbringing, his wife's illness, and his wealth. Americans know nothing
about the first, little about the second, and (courtesy of Team Obama)
much about the third. Mr. Romney can show more of his personal side,
which would reveal a man of enormous decency and good character.
Mr. Romney will be on strong ground defending free enterprise as a
system that rewards initiative, hard work and sacrifice—and in doing so
creates widespread prosperity that he will seek to extend to every
corner of the nation.
There's likely to be a modest, short-lived bump in Mr. Romney's polls
after his convention speech. Ignore that. In this close election, the
real benefit will be in the impression, information and values that
remain with swing voters who'll make up their minds late and decide the
election.
Mr. Rove is the former senior adviser and deputy chief of staff to President George W. Bush.
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