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Dead
Catsup Bounce
by Lisa Fabrizio
Maybe
it was the 'shove it' incident or the NASA bunny suit gaffe preceding
the recent Democratic national convention. Maybe it was the four-day
bait-and-switch show itself. Or it just might be candidate John
F. Kerry himself.
Whatever
the cause, Democrats are faced with an embarrassing fact: Kerry,
who began the week two to four points ahead of President Bush in
the polls, received little or none of the projected post-convention
bounce and even lost ground according to a USA
Today/CNN/Gallup Poll.
To
find a precedent for a disaster of this magnitude, one must go back
over 30 years to 1972 when George McGovern lost three points after
his convention and went on to a crushing electoral defeat by another
Republican war-time incumbent.
Polls
and the American electorate being what they are, these numbers are
not etched in stone and will probably change. Still, Kerry backers
in the media are already at work with fingers poised in the proverbial
dike to staunch what could be a tidal wave of bad news.
One
attempt was USA Today's reportage
of their own poll. Trying to spin a silver lining out of it all,
they resorted to quoting a competing Newsweek poll -- the equivalent
of Macy's telling Gimbels -- that showed a four-point convention
gain for the Dems while noting that was the smallest in that poll's
history.
Another
came moments after Wolf Blitzer announced the Gallup numbers on
Late Edition Sunday afternoon. In an interview with pundit Bill
Schneider, the host asked if the reason for Kerry's poor showing
was "because the country basically had already made up their
mind," before the convention. Schneider's reply?
Looks
like they had a point. What we see showing is before the convention
the Democrats were hugely enthusiastic about voting... they already
had their bounce. But what really changed is that the Republicans,
the Bush voters went way up in enthusiasm gaining eight points so
it looks like, yes, the convention rallied voters but it rallied
Republicans more than Democrats.
The
Democrats' failure to ratchet up enthusiasm for their party
during its showcase event cannot be so easily dismissed by saying
people have already made their choice. The truth is, that apart
from the slick production and even slicker performances by the speakers,
there was much reason for confusion emanating from Beantown.
After
months of throwing red meat to their left-leaning base, they suddenly
made a whiplash turn to the center of the political spectrum. The
delegates themselves, the great majority of whom opposed many official
party planks -- including support for the Iraq War -- nonetheless
amazingly approved all of them.
Omitted
from mention in the platform itself were Democratic staples such
as partial-birth abortion, gay marriage, capital punishment and
the Kyoto Treaty. Such is the desperation to beat Bush that even
hardcore lefties coalesced around this vision of the one (or is
it two?) Americas so embraced by their ticket. This may explain
the confusion that seems to be reflected in the poor poll numbers
so far. Voters don't seem to recognize this new flag-waving
version of the party and the time to re-re-introduce their candidate
is running out.
Not
a great place to be considering that the Bushies have barely fired
a shot in a week and that the Kerry campaign must ration their August
ad spending due to budgetary constraints. The GOP meanwhile, is
sitting on a huge pile of cash and plans to launch a ton of ads
in the weeks leading up to their own confab in the Big Apple next
month.
Of
course there is a chance that the Republicans will similarly stumble
at their convention by totally reversing or ignoring their long-held
positions, shafting their base or having the President dress up
like a Teletubby. But don't count on it.
Lisa
Fabrizio is a freelance columnist from Stamford, Connecticut.
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