By George Neumayr on 6.18.02 @ 12:02AM
There is something wrong when a Democrat can no longer denounce his conservative opponent as an extremist.
A few months back, the California Political Review
reported that an unnamed Sacramento Democratic consultant had
admitted to Gray Davis's anemic appeal within his own party. The
consultant said Democrat leaders underestimate "how much people
dislike Gray Davis." He noted that "no Democrat constituency group
-- African-Americans, labor, women, Hispanics, enviros --" was
giving Davis "an approval rating exceeding 50 percent."
"I don't see how he gets there," California Political
Review quoted the veteran political strategist saying about
Davis's re-election chances. Democratic consultants are no less
worried today, as several recent articles containing quotes from
unnamed Democratic consultants reveal.
"I think the campaign has given up on getting people to like
Gray," a "prominent Democratic strategist" told the Contra
Costa Times this week.
"Private polling appears to confirm the governor's misfortunes,"
reported the Contra Costa Times. "Sal Russo, the chief
strategist for (Bill) Simon, said three recently conducted private
polls indicate Simon is leading by anywhere from 1 percentage point
to 9 percentage points."
The Contra Costa Times reported that the Davis campaign
"disputed those numbers," saying "internal campaign polling shows
Davis with a single-digit lead." But this is hardly a reassuring
rebuttal for Davis supporters. Moreover, Davis's attack ad against
Simon last week was a tacit admission that his poll numbers are
poor.
Last week, San Francisco Chronicle columnists Philip
Matier and Andrew Ross quoted a Democratic consultant who said
"Simon could win this." The consultant said that the "real problem
is that Davis has turned off even fellow Democrats, who should be
his natural base."
All the polls, wrote Matier and Ross, show that "Davis is in a
world of trouble with voters." The columnists cite one poll which
"showed a whopping 50 percent giving Davis an 'unfavorable' job
performance rating." They then quote a Democrat who says "that's
usually considered terminal," and a Democratic consultant who
reports, "I've seen other polls that show an even lower performance
rating."
Simon, meanwhile, isn't cooperating with Davis's repeated
attempts to demonize him as a conservative extremist. On the issue
of offshore oil drilling, Simon has managed to beat past Davis on
the left. Simon noted that he is staunchly opposed to offshore oil
drilling, whereas Davis has permitted the number of drilling leases
to increase during his first term. Simon is also pushing a $1
billion park bond measure.
Transparent triangulation? Sure. But with Simon staking out such
positions on the left, Davis knows that he will look like a fool if
he continues to act as if he is running against Le Pen. So he has
shifted to Strategy B: discredit Simon personally. Hence his first
attack ad addressed not Simon's supposed conservatism, but his
business dealings.
The Davis people have been fishing around for some time. But the
best they could come up with is a Simon family S&L problem,
which even liberal media outlets found uncompelling. Sacramento
Bee political editor Amy Chance, for example, said the attack
ad "oversimplifies" the issue.
The ad reflected not so much Davis's worries about Simon's
mismanagement as his own. He has saddled Californians with a $24
billion deficit, yet somehow has to find a way to run on his
"record." This will require more finesse than his cloddish
personality permits him. A polished liar, with endearing human
qualities, could probably get away with it, especially against a
low-key opponent. But Davis is seen as a soulless dork without even
the compensating virtues of frugality and efficiency.
The Los Angeles Times ran an article last Saturday
saying that Simon "faces pressure to follow Davis' lead and go on
attack." But why bother? Simon may figure. If what Democratic
consultants are whispering to reporters is true, why waste punches
on an opponent who is defeating himself?
topics:
Business, Africa, Conservatism, Oil