It's becoming difficult to write about the presidential horse
race, because I think we've reached the point where the daily back
and forth among the candidates and their surrogates means very
little, and the campaign has been largely been overtaken by events
-- specifically, economic events. The passage of the bailout
package is better for McCain than if it didn't pass, but either way
the financial crisis will not resolve itself in the next 31 days.
Meanwhile, between now and Nov. 4, every few days we'll be treated
to another sobering economic report, such as the bad job numbers that came out
today. And at the end of this month, less than a week before
Election Day, the Bureau of Economic Analysis will be releasing the
advance estimate for third quarter GDP, which could very well show
an economic contraction, and thus dominate the news cycle the
weekend before the election.
So far, John McCain's reaction to the recent economic news has
been to strike a populist tone in hopes that it will shield him
from the perception that he's out of touch, and make up for the
fact that economic issues are not his strong suit. It hasn't been
working, as he's still sinking in polls. As much as I'd like to say
that he'd be fine if only he confidently made the case for economic
conservatism, from a political perspective, it probably wouldn't
make a difference. The problem is, though Barack Obama doesn't
engender much confidence on the economy, he's the Democrat in a
year in which most voters blame Republicans for our troubles. I
could be wrong, and obviously there's always the caveat in politics
that anything can happen, but it's getting more and more difficult
to see how McCain can pull this thing off with so much of the race
now out of his control.
topics:
John McCain, Barack Obama, Business, Conservatism