It’s not the staff; it’s the candidate

About six months ago, John McCain was not only the presumptive favorite to win the Republican presidential nomination, he was the GOP candidate recruiting some of the top campaign talent available. McCain even picked up some of the same people who helped George W. Bush smear him in 2000, assuming it was more important to hire the best talent than hold a grudge.

By April, the campaign was struggling, so McCain shook up his team by eliminating some non-senior staff positions and cutting some consultants’ contracts. The campaign characterized the moves as “minor adjustments.”

Today’s moves are anything but minor.

Republican John McCain reorganized his campaign Monday, cutting staff in every department as he raised just $11.2 million in the last three months and reported an abysmal $2 million cash on hand for his presidential bid. […]

Some 50 staffers or more are being let go, and senior aides will be subject to pay cuts as the Arizona senator bows to six months of subpar fundraising, according to officials with knowledge of the details of the shake up.

As for the fundraising, consider this context: McCain’s total haul for the second quarter is nearly the same as the amount Obama raised online.

Regardless, if McCain thinks rearranging the deck chairs will solve his problems, I suspect he’s mistaken.

Today’s staffing announcement suggests McCain’s aides are responsible for the campaign’s difficulties. That’s silly. McCain’s popularity with the GOP base was always suspect, his support for Bush’s immigration policy made matters considerably worse, and his shameless pandering only reinforced the notion that this is an untrustworthy candidate (no matter where one is on the ideology spectrum).

It’s likely that McCain is firing at least 50 staffers to show the GOP establishment and major donors that he recognizes that there’s a problem with his campaign and that he’s taking steps to improve his chances. But just as April’s shake-up didn’t help McCain get back on track, July’s will probably have about as much success.

Indeed, if the announcement was about “sending a message,” it’s conveying the wrong message — McCain looks desperate and directionless today. And with a paltry $2 million cash on hand, he’s not even in a position to turn things around.

Late last week, a reporter asked McCain whether he’d consider ending his presidential campaign in light of his sagging poll numbers and weak fundraising. “That’s ridiculous,” McCain said. “Why in the world would I want to do that?”

Once those questions start, it’s often difficult to make them stop.

What the Press Corpse created, the Press Corpse can destroy.

And Fred Thompson needs to take very careful notes on the occurrence.

  • Well the good news is he is going to Iraq for the 4th to shop for red, white, and blue carpets.

    The bad news:

    He is not taking Joey Lieberman with him.

    Alas….

  • How come you can buy a Republican for way less than $2 million, but they can’t get elected with that amount? I don’t get it 🙂

    The problem is Das Base is not happy with McCain’s position on immigration. At all.

    But maybe he should take another casual stroll through Bagdad’s bustling markets, I hear it’s really great there so maybe they could chip in a few bucks. He could score some rugs for cheap and then sell ’em on ebay.

    Hey McCrazy… Take your buddy Lieberman with ya. And forget the flak jackets and helmets, it’s getting better every day over there. Just ask Joe.

  • Next the McCainiac will sacrifice staff members to the Great God DieBold and drink their blood.

    I think his campaign is going to make Krazy Kat Harris’ bid look like tea time at the Waldorf-Astoria.

  • Today’s staffing announcement suggests McCain’s aides are responsible for the campaign’s difficulties. — CB

    I don’t see it that way. To me, it looks like any other business decision — you don’t have enough money to pay the wages, you lay off some staff that you hope you can do without. It’s not only the amount of money raised that’s important; it’s the amount of money actually on hand. And that’s quite dismal, compared to his apparent rate of spending. If he’d raised 11mil but has only 2mil left, where did the 9 go?

    If McCainiac had any sense left, he’d give that 2mil to Amnesty International, abort the presidential project and stick to his Senate seat. Better the bird in hand…

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