McCain reboots and gives rise to the Rovians

After effectively securing the Republican nomination in early February, and officially crossing the delegate threshold in early March, John McCain had plenty of time to shape a general election game-plan, decide on a message, and put a campaign infrastructure in place while Democrats continued the longest nominating fight in American history.

In that time, McCain pulled together a cadre of high-priced DC lobbyists to get his campaign on track. That is, until yesterday afternoon, when we learned that Steve Schmidt has replaced Rick Davis as McCain’s campaign manager. What was not immediately apparent, however, was that McCain has effectively rebooted his entire campaign operation, abandoned the structure it worked months to create, and given rise to Karl Rove’s acolytes.

Senator John McCain’s presidential campaign has gone through its second shake-up in a year. Responding to Republican concerns that his candidacy was faltering, Mr. McCain put a veteran of President Bush’s 2004 campaign in charge of day-to-day operations, and stepped away from a plan to have the campaign run by 11 regional managers, Mr. McCain’s aides said Wednesday.

The elevation of Steve Schmidt — who worked closely with Karl Rove — at Mr. McCain’s headquarters represented a sharp diminishment of the responsibilities of Rick Davis, who has been Mr. McCain’s campaign manager since the last shake-up nearly a year ago.

The shift was approved by Mr. McCain after several of his aides, including Mr. Schmidt, went to him about 10 days ago and warned him that he was in danger of losing the presidential election unless he revamped his campaign operation, two officials close to the campaign said.

And now, to stave off that defeat, McCain has embraced Karl Rove’s operation. We already know that the man the president affectionately calls “Turd Blossom” has been advising the McCain campaign behind the scenes, but now the connections will be solidified. Rove’s top acolyte is now in charge of McCain’s operation, and two more top Rove aides — Nicolle Wallace and Greg Jenkins — will help direct the campaign.

It creates an odd dynamic — McCain is assuring voters he doesn’t represent a third Bush term, but he’s running on Bush’s policy agenda, and has Bush’s political operation running his campaign.

On an even more practical level, lobbyist Rick Davis, who was managing McCain’s team up until yesterday morning, had created an unusual structure in which there were 11 regional campaign managers, who were largely autonomous, as part of a system that had never been tried before. It had taken Davis months to put the system in place, but the 11 mini-managers were in place for the general election.

Schmidt is scrapping Davis’ system altogether, and starting the campaign structure over from scratch.

In abandoning Mr. Davis’s idea to have the campaign largely run by 11 regional campaign managers, Mr. Schmidt told associates that he feared that system was unworkable and would lead to gridlock in the campaign. He is also about to hire a political director, a post that had gone unfilled under Mr. Davis. […]

“Voters don’t care about the organizational chart of our campaign,” said Jill Hazelbaker, the campaign spokesman.

That’s true, they probably don’t, especially a couple of days before the 4th of July.

But the McCain campaign’s reboot does answer a few questions. First, there have been many times in recent months in which campaign observers on both sides of the aisle have asked, “Are McCain and his team really this inept?” The answer, apparently, is yes.

And second, did McCain and his team really squander a four-month head-start? Yes, they sure did.

There’s another point to contend with here that’s being largely—if not entirely—overlooked: Schmidt has been a part of Team Cheney’s “sanctum sanctorum.” That alone concerns me more than anything Rove could do—and this looks an awful lot like another clue that “all roads lead to Rome the Naval Observatory.”

  • the McCain campaign’s reboot

    Interesting phrase since McCain doesn’t use one of those newfangled computers. He might have to have one of his staff explain the term to him

  • A couple of thoughts come to mind:

    First, that McCain’s presidency will be a lot like Reagan’s second term — where an old man with fading mental faculties is lead by the hand through day-to-day activities by a team of “handlers”.

    And secondly, if we needed a further demonstration of McCain’s complete lack of personal integrity after seeing him renounce all the positions that had made him a Republican maverick, seeing him embrace Karl Rove is the final, incontavertible proof.

    Rove coordinated an horrific smear campaign against McCain in 2000. A true warrior, a man with personal hounour, could not stand to be in the same room with such a man. McCain accepting Rove’s guidance is like McCain shaking hands with with his wife’s rapist.

    I simply cannot understand someone needing to be president this badly.

  • I hope Rove’s acolytes are just as incompetent as Rove. For all the media fawning over his supposed brilliance, he’s terrible as a strategist.

    Rove barely got Bush elected in 2000, making dumbass blunders like having him campaign in California in the last weeks, and then re-elected in another squeaker. The margin in 2004 was the lowest re-elect for any president since Wilson, and given the fact that we were at war — and the country has never thrown out an incumbent during a war — and his opponent was incompetent, that’s just pathetic. Rove predicted the GOP would maintain control of both the House and Senate in 2006, too.

    This is terrific news. For the Democrats.

  • I agree with TCG
    Perhaps this should be referred to as hitching a new horse to the wagon.
    Or in the case of a Rovian Republican political operative – a new ass. You see, horses are too noble, and you can’t call them donkeys.

  • in the immortal words of gomer pyle, “surprise, surprise, surprise!”

  • I’m seeing this as a move McCain was forced to make by the Republican establishment. They saw him flailing and desperate (the lime-green speech was so bungled as to constitute political malpractice) and told him to fire the people he’d hired and put in a professional team. There’s too much money riding on a GOP presidency to allow McCain to goof it up this badly.

    Putting in the Rove team means we’ll have an exceptionally dirty campaign. This was pretty much a given anyway, but having Rove’s people in charge underlines it with a bright red Sharpie.

    I really think McCain was the best presidential candidate the GOP had running this cycle, but even so he’s really weak. Left on his own he created a joke of a campaign that he had to be rescued from at the last minute. When he loses they’ll be hard up for someone even halfway credible to nominate in ’12. I’m cautiously optimistic that we could be seeing the beginning of the end of the GOP as a national party.

  • Boy, I tell you, talk about character. McCain employing the same man who engineered his character assassination in 2000 speaks volumes about his desperation. Why does this man want to be president? Just so he can say he’s president?

    I certainly don’t want a man in the Oval Office who is there simply because of his ego.

  • Question on the floor: Can the Rovians “blossom” THIS particular “turd”?

  • Some among us will do anything to ascend to that ever-elusive “ruling class” so puissantly imagined by those same among us as the end to whatever means they must employ. Oh how I lament for the souls of such political creatures. -Kevo

  • Ohioan said:
    Question on the floor: Can the Rovians “blossom” THIS particular “turd”?

    They won’t have to. All they need to do is do what they do best — make enough Americans believe that Obama is too “foreign”, too “liberal, too “black”, too “elitist”, too “dangerous” and too “unpatriotic” to be trusted. Americans will naturally turn to the grandfatherly, straight-talking war hero. If they can’t get quite enough Americans to fall for their B.S., Diebold fill pick up the slack.

    This does give the Obama campaign an opening, however. The corporate-controlled media has kinniptions every time Obama dares to criticize their candidate. And low-information Americans follow the lead of the press-titutes.

    But nobody likes Karl Rove. He’s fair game. So Obama can, with great sadness, express disappointment about the kind of people that have been forced upon John McCain and warn Americans what another administration influence by Karl Rove’s evil minions would look like.

  • on the plus side, now mccain’s got people who have experience scoring electoral victories by accusing politicians of having non-caucasian children, so he’s got that going for him…

    what? Obama IS black? damn. maybe they can accuse him of having white children. yeah, that’s the ticket…

  • Well, McCain’s political capitulation is complete. He’s now in the embrace of the very people who characterized him as a mentally unstable dolt who fathered illegitimate black children.

    And I agree with JimBob. I think that this change was forced upon him by the party elders. Will it be enough? I’m not so sure. You can anticipate that the responses to issues will be quicker, harder and dirtier, but the basic problem of a lacklustre candidate still remains. Whether Turd Blossom can polish this particular turd to a shiny new gleam remains to be seen.

    Remember also than effective political operator then doesn’t mean effective political operator now. Otherwise Bill Clinton would have been a stunning asset to his wife’s campaign and we’d be gearing up for Clinton presidency number 3 as we speak.

    If I remember correctly, Rove’s last input into the Bush presidency was to suggest the fly-over of New Orleans, with Bush peering dumbly down at people stranded on their rooftops. Hardly the judgement of a man with his finger firmly on the political pulse.

  • Like trying to sell a 10 mpg Hummer in a 50 mpg Prius market. Repackaging is the name of the game for McCain’s sales force.

  • McCain’s campaign is listless, floundering, and has been since he announced his candidacy. Obama’s campaign, but for a few irrelevant backfires, like the Wright non controversy, has been humming along like a well oiled machine. The public mood and sentiment are distinctly in Obama’s favor. The issues all favor Obama. The money favors Obama by a whopping margin.

    But the polls have them uncomfortably close. How do we explain this paradox? And what happens if the McCain campaign ever digs itself out of the ditch and begins to sputter, if not putter, along? What happens if McCain suddenly becomes enthusiastic in his speeches and meetings, acts as if he’s awake and wants to win? What happens if the Republicans decide this throw-away candidate can actually defeat Obama, and start funding his campaign with real money?

    There’s just something wrong here, and I don’t like it. The Democratic candidate at this time, with so much momentum in his favor, ought to be more than 20 points ahead. Everything is going wrong for the Republicans. Their ideology has imploded. Why isn’t Obama doing much, much better? Has there ever been a time in history when one party screwed things up so royally as this? Maybe the great depression, but there was no pointless, resource sapping war then that everybody hated (sort of).

    It just doesn’t make sense to me.

  • One could argue that Bush was for Rove a harder candidate to sell than McSame will be, but the media were so slanted against Gore and Kerry that Rovian tactics despite a pathetic candidate worked anyway. McSame has all the not inconsiderable problems of his age, a different dynamic in the country, and one would hope at least a slightly less credulous media, to overcome. Rove is not the campaign superman his press releases have made him out to be, but he can drag a campaign to depths never before seen. We should be surprised at nothing that happens from now on. Portraying Obama as a gay Muslim communist pederast is just Rove’s warmup act.

    The Rethug corporate establishment is frightened with good reason. But they have far less to fear than they may realize. Nader is right. Except on social issues there’s not that much difference between the two so-called parties.

  • Steve said:

    “There’s another point to contend with here that’s being largely—if not entirely—overlooked: Schmidt has been a part of Team Cheney’s “sanctum sanctorum”.”

    If Obama’s going to win this thing, he might as well win with all the cards on the table and everyone knowing what game is really being played. Shruby is as superfluous as McBush would be should he win. This is about continuing the hard core corporatist/fascist game plan of Cheney, Addington, Yoo, Rove, Mukasey and the gang of four on the S.C. McBush is a not very subtle new model of the Trojan Horse that nitwit, befuddled Shruby has been since day one.

    Team ShrubCo is so busted on so many fronts and this is a nice, revealing move that indicates how wedded to their game plan they are regardless of, and because of, their endless f’ups, (or f’overs, they’ve done quite well for themselves). This is clarity. Those corporate/lobbyist assholes were a vague, interchangeable and incompetent smokescreen. Now it’s Schmidt to Rove to Cheney with McBush being dragged along by his sagging ear. This may help Obama and his supporters focus their efforts.

  • hark said:
    There’s just something wrong here, and I don’t like it. The Democratic candidate at this time, with so much momentum in his favor, ought to be more than 20 points ahead. Everything is going wrong for the Republicans. Their ideology has imploded. Why isn’t Obama doing much, much better? Has there ever been a time in history when one party screwed things up so royally as this? Maybe the great depression, but there was no pointless, resource sapping war then that everybody hated (sort of).

    At first, watching Obama move toward the middle (and past it) on FISA. on capital punishment, on faith-based initiatives and on other issues, I began to worry that he was taking advise from the same idiotic consultants that cost the last two Democratic candidates the presidency.

    Now I’m beginning to wonder wether Obama is really the candidate that we progressives believed he was.

    This is an historic opportunity to transform American “conventional wisdom” from a conservative philosophy to liberal ideals. There is abundant evidence that conservative policies like “supply-side economics”, a “democracy by force” foreign policy, de-regulation of international corporations and a “strict constructionist” judicial philosophy are all bad for the United States — provided Obama is willing to make that argument. Obama has the personality and the oratorical skills to make this election more than just a choice between parties and candidates. He can make it a campaign for the soul of American politics.

    No one wants to admit it, but America is at a crossroads. We continue our policies of world domination and domestic rule by an aristocratic elite — a path which lead Spain from being the most powerful country in the world in 1500 to it’s current status as a European afterthought. Or we can embrace a progressive philosophy that governs Europe — and like American did with the European-sparked industrial revolution, use American innovation and vitality to make us the example that the rest of the world tries to emulate.

  • Great. If we thought it was going to be bad it’s about to get really worse. Turd Blossom brings nothing to a campaign but fear, smear, and hate. It’s like in Jason and the Argonants when the evil Sorcerer conjures-up those skeletons from their graves. McAce is bring in the hate machine to smear the daylights out of Obama and bring those “low information voters” back into line to keep this race close enough to steal. People misunderstand His Turdness. He isn’t about good policy choices, or strategies that will help people become better off or better citizens. He’s about twisting people’s minds and filling them with fear and loathing until they run away scared and vote against their own best self interests.

    Watch how gleeful the MSM pundits get now that they are going back to a place where they are more comfortable dwelling in: The GOP hate machine. They’ll revel in the morass of a campaign that will distract Obama from his goal of dealing with issues to one that he’ll be spending an inordinate amount of time defending himself. Wolf and the gang will now be able to focus more on what they are really good at; distraction from the facts. Remember: Kerry was a bonafide war hero that was slaughtered by these bastards in large part due to the unwillingness of the MSM to call Bush out on the crap His Turdness fabricated in that race.

    My guess is that His Turdness is coming in overtly late to the game because Hillary didn’t win the nomination. McAce probably felt he could win with out the malice such demons, who were also responsible for his own failed presidential try in 2000, bring to the table. Once he realized he wasn’t going to be able to beat Obama in a “fair” fight he sold what was left of his soul to the devil. Buckle up “my friends”, buckle-up…

  • What in God’s name would we do if, say, Honduras came charging across the Mexican border and attacked us?

    The bottom line is we’ve stretched our military to the breaking point in two tiny third-world countries and achieved absolutely nothing for it, speaking charitably, at mind-numbing cost in blood, treasure and squandered opportunity. And now our economy is in the tank.

    You’d think that might wake somebody up, but it doesn’t. You’d think that we’d learn that we can’t dominate and bully the world militarily, and ought to try something different, like engaging in activities which produce global peace, harmony and prosperity, not destruction and mayhem, but we don’t.

    We just can’t seem to get out of this war machine mindset in this country. And it’s taking us down.

  • Whoops, sorry, posted this on the wrong topic. Wow. How did I do that?

    I’ll retire for the day.

  • hark, if it makes you feel better, ronald reagan and jimmy carter were very close all the way until the last week in 1980, when there was a decisive shift to reagan.

    as for SteveT, what do you mean “we,” steve? i am among those who questioned obama’s actual political positions (even though i was a tepid supporter) when doing such a thing was regarded as treasonous talk around here.

    it’s been perfectly clear that obama is an instinctive centrist: if progressives liked his cerebral style and awesome delivery of set-piece speeches and ignored his politics, perhaps there’s a lesson there….

  • howard said:
    it’s been perfectly clear that obama is an instinctive centrist: if progressives liked his cerebral style and awesome delivery of set-piece speeches and ignored his politics, perhaps there’s a lesson there….

    I seem to have gotten caught up in the infectious enthusiasm Obama can generate when he give a speech — easy enough to do. And I’m sure the comparison with DLC founding member Hillary Clinton made Obama appear more liberal than he is.

    But even a centrist should jump at the chance to drive a stake through the heart of the fraud and stupidity that is supply-side eonomics.

  • But the polls have them uncomfortably close. How do we explain this paradox?

    Trying to predict an election outcome from months-out polling is like trying to determine how hard cement will become by poking it with your finger while it’s still wet.

    Much of the electorate hasn’t tuned in yet, especially including the low-information swing voters who decide elections. If you are looking for an idea of likely outcome, look at the fundamentals: the economy is tanking, there’s an extremely unpopular war, and the incumbent has been at historic lows in approval for the past year. When November comes, the electorate won’t be breaking for McCain.

  • I think this is actually a sign of how far gone the Republican party really is – they couldn’t launch a new-fangled campaign, so they’re LITERALLY going to go back to what they’ve done for years.

    Removing my extreme distaste for the Republican party of the last few years, I think it’s a rock and a hard place.

    They’ve got something that sort of vaguely worked for awhile – a serious hard-core smear and propaganda technique with the idea of a ‘permanent campaign.’ And it worked for awhile.

    The problem is that it’s all they’ve got – as I’ve stated before, the Republican party became so completely about winning, it jettisoned any kind of principles. The problem about winning in politics is you’ve got to put your money where your mouth is – and they can’t. They’ve got a complete disaster of the last few years and petty and stupid behavior from the Clinton administration.

    They could try and change gears, but they don’t have any gears left, and this is not a party that’s prone to innovation. They’ve got nothing left.

    The ultimate summary for me was the democratic candidates early in the game – tough-as-nails female candidate Hillary, sophisticated multi-ethic candidate Obama, charming populist John Edwards, unapologetic liberal Kucinich . . . a lot of very dynamic and diverse people. The Republicans offered Old White Guys.

    They got nothing left.

  • “And second, did McCain and his team really squander a four-month head-start? Yes, they sure did.”

    Obama has already beaten the strongest candidate he’ll face this year. He’s a better candidate now than he was in December, and his campaign is better for having gone through the process.

    I’m not sure what McCain should/could have been doing in these past four months, but it surely was not spent planning for this stage of the campaign.

  • Wes Clark uttered an uncomfortable truth, in an inoffensive but easily distorted way. He was not on the payroll of the Obama campaign, and had ample credentials to speak with expertise on his subject.

    Team McCain moved quickly: within literally minutes, dozens – perhaps scores – of Republican officials, operatives, campaigners, surrogates and bought-and-paid-for talking heads were in front over every microphone, on every tv and radio show, hooked in to every beat reporter and political columnist claiming Clark had callously smeared McCain for being a POW and questioned what this tells us about how awful Obama really is.

    McCain reorganizes his entire campaign to put in place the team that brought us some of the dirtiest, most immoral campaigning and governance in history (after pledging to run a clean, issues oriented campaign). They are on his payroll, and we know the general public dislikes Karl Rove.

    Team Obama/DNC moved quickly: within minutes, dozens — perhaps scores — of Democratic officials, operatives, campaigners, surrogates and allies were in front over every microphone, on every tv and radio show, hooked in to every beat reporter and political columnist claiming. . . to do a great impersonation of crickets chirping, and making no effort to publicly tie McCain to Rove.

    aaaiiiigggghhhhhh!

  • It’s just a thought, but with Rove 2.0 at the helm of McCain campaign, we can expect the usual ‘local whispers’ kind of strategy that Rove used so successfully – against McCain – eight years ago. I mention this because there will either be leaflets or emails spreading the rumors.

    If anyone gets any new emails of a swiftboating bent, and knows tech-literate people, could they please forward them to the techies. It would be glorious if we were able to track back dirty tricks right into the McCain-Rovian HQ.

  • Has anyone told little Bridget McCain? The daughter who was accused of being the illegitimate black daughter but was actually adopted from a Bengali orphanage?
    Last I read, she found that accusation on Google and went to Mom saying, “Why does President Bush hate me?”

    She should be asking, “why does my daddy hang with folks that told lies about me?”

  • Keep in mind that Bush was not elected in ’04…Kerry conceded. And the proof has been buried by the RNC operatives under piles of corruption.

    McCain realizes that the only way he can win is by cheating, fixing, bribing, blackmailing and smearing. He has nothing else but affected outrage that his integrity could possibly be questioned giving his standard, “Oh Please”…(with the accompanying angry threatening grimace).

    So who else is good at gutter politics, cheating and whisper campaigns that is despicable enough and time tested to have no scruples what-so-ever?

  • btw-the press may be impressed with these Rovians but the public finds them degrading. Which means, everything coming from the McCain campaign from now on will be regarded with great suspicion…and will effectively make the press look like cheap propaganda enablers(which they are but now it will be attributed to being Rove’s dirty tricks gang).

    The only person who can defeat Obama is Obama and he’s punched himself a couple of times already…cheating will not work this time.

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