Everybody keeps making the comparison of Bob Barr to Ross Perot,
Jim, but it's important to remember the differences. Perot popped
up on the national radar screen much earlier in the cycle than Barr
did, and in a much higher-profile way.
Perot announced his candidacy on "Larry King Live" in February
1992, just about the time Pat Buchanan was eating Bush 41's lunch
in the New Hampshire primary. Perot was a successful businessman
whose basic pitch -- that the government was a fiscal disaster and
needed business-like efficiencies to fix it -- resonated with a lot
of the same people who had responded to Buchanan's populism.
In 1992, immediately after the Gulf War had made CNN a national
phenomenon, Perot's hour-long appearances on "LKL" had a huge
impact. And Perot had the huge advantage of running against one of
the most unpopular presidents in history, at a time when the
unemployment rate was about 8 percent. By May '92, Perot was
polling ahead of both Bush and Bill Clinton.
One thing that seems obvious this year is that voters are not
reacting to John McCain as if he were a Bush surrogate. Bush's
job approval rating is barely 30 percent and the
"right direction" poll numbers are well under 20 percent, and
yet
John McCain is at 44 percent in the latest Gallup daily
tracking poll, virtually tied with Barack Obama. If McCain's
numbers were to collapse -- so that the Republican became perceived
as a certain loser -- then you might see a big shift to Barr. But
so far that perception hasn't taken hold.
topics:
John McCain, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Business