It is always possible that the views of pundits including many
conservative commentators and activists don't mesh with the
public's perception. It is even possible that GOP primary voters
think not much is wrong with George Bush and a candidate with many
of the same attributes would be just fine. ( Interestingly, Romney
seems to be banking on the conclusion that it is not enough to be a
well rounded conservative--you have to be very different than the
current establishment including President Bush. Now perhaps he's
wrong too but does anyone think the research laden and marketing
guru Romney would have rolled out an entire communication plan and
message without some extensive polling? ) Goodness knows pundits
have been wrong before. But certain national polls (coincidentally
ones that have the least transparent methodology) don't really tell
us much at this point. Over time and if echoed by other polls, yes.
(By the way the only significant state poll average that has moved
much lately has been a narrowing of Romney's lead in NH which is
not the result of Thompson who does poorly there.) But a highly
negative reaction from the chattering (typing?) class does have
real affects on a candidate's prospects even if regular voters
ignore all of us. That type of reaction does affect what other
candidates or prospective candidates (Gingrich) do and does impact
fundraising which is another indication of support outside the
beltway. October will be a telling month.