PRIOR TO ELECTION DAY, I had been planning a triumphal column
explaining how Mitt Romney’s victory vindicated the Taranto
Principle, but events intervened. Here instead is a circumspect
column explaining how Barack Obama’s victory vindicated the Taranto
Principle.
The Taranto Principle, named after yours truly by
Spectator editor R. Emmett Tyrrell, posits that the
liberal media’s uncritical coverage often disserves liberal
politicians by making them complacent, thus encouraging bad or
foolish behavior. The classic example is from 2004, when
journalists failed to question John Kerry’s self-presentation as a
war hero. Along came the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, and Kerry
was undone by a scandal for which an adversarial press would have
left him prepared. (See “Kerry’s Quagmire,” TAS,
July/August 2005.)
As I observed in last month’s column, this year Barack Obama had
the support of the liberal media like no politician in living
memory. Reporters regularly churned out “fact checks” calling Mitt
Romney, and especially Paul Ryan, a liar. After the 9/11 attack in
Benghazi, they acted as if the story was Romney’s supposedly
premature comment about a separate incident in Egypt. They echoed
the Obama campaign’s attack lines, on subjects from Bain Capital to
the “war on women.” They made every grim economic report sound as
rosy as possible, or if that failed, emphasized that the bad news
was “unexpected.” The Taranto Principle would lead one to expect
that all this would doom his reelection. Instead, if anything,
fawning media helped him.
There was one notable exception: the president’s disastrous
performance in the first debate, October 3. As Jeffrey Lord wrote
on the Spectator’s website:
Barack Obama has been so totally coddled by the liberal media
that he looked absolutely shell-shocked in this debate. Stunned,
unhappy, angry, sour—and at some points genuinely incoherent.
Romney has had nowhere near that kind of treatment. He had
serious opponents in the primaries—all of whom in their own way
forced him to confront his ideas in a serious fashion.
Conservatives were on his heels. The Obama media never let up. The
man went through the political equivalent of boot camp.
Tonight, the Taranto Principle kicked in. Big time.
Outside the liberal bubble—forced to be alone on a stage with a
very serious, very prepared candidate—Barack Obama was in trouble.
Big Trouble.
But not trouble enough to end his presidency, in part perhaps
because of the panic it provoked among his most ardent media
followers. “I don’t know what he was doing out there,” wailed Chris
Matthews during MSNBC’s post-debate commentary. “He had his head
down, he was enduring the debate rather than fighting it.” A few
days later, a distraught Andrew Sullivan wrote a Daily Beast blog
post titled “Did Obama Just Throw the Entire Election Away?” I
didn’t care for his performances in the later debates either, but
no one can deny he was awake and alert.
Yet this year the Taranto Principle came back to bite the right.
This time it was we who turned out to be in a media bubble. It
isn’t clear that the Romney campaign suffered by following the
advice of the conservative media, but post-election reports suggest
they had a sunny view of the race, similar to the predictions and
analyses conservative journalists were offering—which turned out to
be quite wrong.
Still on the homepage of the Spectator’s website as I
write this are the headlines from Election Day, including “Mitt’s
Margin of Victory” and “Romney Will Win Pennsylvania.” From the day
before: “Welcome, President Mitt Romney.” Tyrrell’s column of
November 1 was titled “Au Revoir, Mr. President.” He
confidently declared: “Next week President Obama goes into
retirement. I hope he will consider Hawaii.” On November 2, Michael
Barone of the Washington Examiner went state by state and
came up with a 315–223 Electoral College victory for Romney (he did
allow that Obama would probably carry Michigan and Nevada). Others
made similar predications, including several of my colleagues at
the Journal.
I wasn’t among them, only because I am not so foolhardy as to
prognosticate directly in public about an event that is about to
occur. But I thought Romney would win too, and you’d have known it
if you read between the lines of my daily WSJ.com columns. The day
before Election Day, I wrote about how the left was preparing to
blame an Obama loss on racism (although in my own defense, they
were). I had written of my suspicions of state polls showing a
2008-like Democratic turnout advantage. I had made fun of New
York Times number cruncher Nate Silver, who called Obama a
prohibitive favorite based on such polls, which of course turned
out to be on the money.
NONE OF WHICH IS TO SAY the Taranto Principle no longer applies
on the left. The day after the election, for instance,
Politico’s Ben White wrote that in the president’s
dealings with Congress, he “clearly has a something of a whip hand
now”:
Obama is likely to take his arguments to the public first and
attempt to forge coalitions with Republicans beyond the House and
Senate leadership. He may find willing partners. The risks to the
GOP of continuing to aggressively oppose the president’s approach
are now significantly higher. NBC’s David Gregory put it this way
after Obama’s acceptance speech: “This is a president with some
muscle.”
But the House remains Republican, with a minimum of 233 GOP
seats as of this writing, down only a handful from 240 before the
election. All the big swing states have House delegations with
Republican majorities, some of them quite large (Ohio 12–4,
Pennsylvania 13–5). If Obama couldn’t produce more than modest
Democratic gains in 2012, it’s hard to see how he can do so in
2014, especially since the weakest incumbents of both parties were
weeded out this year.