I tend to think it’s pretty obvious that prolonging the Democratic nomination fight is an awful development, which is why I find it odd when I find items arguing the opposite. In the Wall Street Journal today, for example, Gerald Seib argues, “Toughness and resilience are important attributes, and that is what a long campaign instills in a candidate…. [T]here is an intangible benefit to fighting through all the primaries: Like two-a-day practices at a football training camp, the process develops a kind of toughness that is beneficial.”
Sure, this argument had merit when we heard it after the New Hampshire primary, nearly four months ago. But after 16 months of campaigning, does anyone seriously question the “resilience” of either Democratic candidate? Aren’t Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, after 16 months of campaigning, “tough” enough?
Indeed, if the underlying premise of Seib’s argument is true, why aren’t there more questions about John McCain’s “toughness and resilience”? After all, he won the Republican nomination over a month ago, and barely had to break a sweat doing so. Those selfish Republican voters apparently denied their nominee the “intangible benefits” associated with “fighting through all the primaries.”
I can’t imagine why McCain doesn’t seem especially bothered by this.
In fact, it’s worth noting that McCain actually appears quite pleased with recent developments.
Republican John McCain’s presidential campaign is content to let Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton fight on.
The prospect for an even longer Democratic battle resulted from Clinton’s defeat of Obama in Pennsylvania on Tuesday, meaning the contest is likely to last at least another two weeks until May 6, when North Carolina and Indiana vote.
As top McCain adviser Mark Salter said, Democrats should “take their time — don’t rush.”
Bill Kristol added some words for advice for the Clinton campaign this morning: “Fight on!”
I’m going to assume this isn’t some kind of reverse-psychological ploy. McCain and his allies really do want to see the Democratic race continue.
The Reuters report added:
Republican strategists believe McCain has benefited from having won his party’s nomination in March, giving him time to raise much-needed cash and lay the groundwork for his general election campaign, even though the Democratic battle has dominated U.S. headlines.
The Clinton-Obama battle has meant the Democrats have not yet trained all their fire on McCain, a 71-year-old Arizona senator who is seeking to keep the White House in Republican control for a third straight term, a task made even more difficult with the U.S. economy ailing.
“During this period the Democrat interest groups have not been able to focus on McCain,” said Republican strategist Scott Reed. “They’re still focused on struggling with their internal fight.”
McCain himself sounded unsure as to whether the long Democratic fight has helped or hurt him, but in talking to reporters on Tuesday, he made clear he has been watching the show closely.
“In fact I saw one of the cable shows last night — I don’t know why I watch! — that said that this is really good for the Democratic Party, that they are registering more voters, that it’s getting more interest, that they’re raising more money. I don’t have a view on that. But I know that there are very different opinions on it,” he said.
This really isn’t complicated. If you’re a consultant/strategist at the RNC right now, are you worried that a prolonged Democratic process is going to help Dems with voter registration and battle testing, or are you doing the Happy Dance that the Clinton/Obama fight is going to continue for the foreseeable future?
It seems pretty obvious to me.