Clark Stooksbury
says Robert Stacy McCain and I are being naive for praising
Mitt Romney’s performance at the NAACP confab. Stooksbury argues
that Romney’s intended audience was the Republican base, to whom he
did pander, rather than the predominantly liberal black audience he
was addressing.
Two points. First, I don’t think I’m setting the bar
particularly high here. I’m just asking Romney not to alter the
policy specifics of his basic stump speech to ingratiate himself to
a particular crowd. As a Massachusetts native who has watched
Romney evolve from “progressive” to “severely conservative” right
before my very eyes over the past decade, that’s not something to
be taken for granted. He stood his ground yesterday for whatever
reason and should receive positive reinforcement for doing so.
Second, in the television/Internet era all public speeches by
candidates have the base as part of the target audience. The speech
in its entirety wasn’t really some reverse Sister Souljah moment.
It was partially an attempt to establish common ground with the
NAACP and partly a restatement of the same basic pitch he would
make to any other group of voters. Maybe his line about the Chamber
of Commerce Obamacare survey was canned, maybe it wasn’t. But the
content and structure of the speech — including the fact he was
clearly ready to say something else immediately after the Obamacare
reference — was aimed at getting polite but unenthusiastic golf
claps rather than provoking boos.
On another NAACP-related note, the Daily Caller
reported yesterday that the group’s leadership (which backed
gay marriage after President Obama did) rebuked Romney’s stand on
traditional marriage while the crowd seemed to like it. One thing
to watch is how much of the increase in black support for gay
marriage since Obama’s position changed is actually reflected in
the way blacks vote on marriage-related ballot initiatives.
The limited exit poll data we have suggests that blacks were
already voting against same-sex marriage by larger margins than
national polls on the subject predicted. How much of the increase
in black support for gay marriage in national polls reflects
support for the president rather than an actual change in position?
Maryland and other states might give us a chance to find out in
November.