Michael Patrick Leahy really, really doesn’t like RNC Chairman
Mike Duncan. His
post calling for Duncan to drop out of the Chairmanship race
has kicked up
some controversy, mainly over whether his namecheck of the
Top Conservatives On Twitter project is inappropriate, but it’s
worth noting that, quite apart from that tempest in a #TCOT
(thanks,
Jim), Leahy’s argument against Duncan is pretty silly.
Basically, citing the 2008 election results, Leahy concludes that
Duncan’s leadership has been “disastrously inept.”
I really wonder what Leahy thinks that a different RNC leader
would have done to change the election results. The rap on Duncan
is that he’s too low-key, doesn’t do enough media, and isn’t
embracing cutting edge technology. But it’s not as if he’s ceded
ground to his DNC counterpart on the media front; there was a
time when Howard Dean, because he’s so unpopular, was practically
in hiding. Does anyone really think that the GOP would have done
better at the polls if only they had a slicker leader to go on
the Sunday morning shows — or, even more preposterously, if they
had a bigger footprint on Twitter and Facebook? (The RNC’s
behind-the-scenes blogger outreach operation was and is very
good, by the way, and the RNC does have a Twitter feed even if
Duncan’s campaign for re-election as chairman doesn’t.)
The one big decision the party chairmen had to make this year was
how to set the rules for the primary schedule. Duncan
handled that issue a whole lot better than Dean did. It
didn’t particularly matter; the McCain campaign failed to
capitalize on the headstart they had while the Democrats got
locked in an endless primary season. Which underscores the point
that there’s only so much a party chairman can do to win
elections.
If you think the RNC could be doing a better job of embracing Web
2.0, fine. If you think the RNC needs a more visible chairman,
fine. (The idea that occasionally gets bandied about of splitting
the chairmanship into a National Chairman to manage the party
day-to-day and a General Chairman to be the party’s public face
makes a certain amount of sense to me.) But Leahy’s vehement
insistence that Duncan shares a large amount of the blame for the
GOP’s electoral fortunes — which were well on their way south
before he became chairman in 2007 — is really unfair.