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Saturday, November 21, 2009

GOP Plans To Use McDonnell's Winning Strategies For 2010 Sweep...It Just Might Work


















GOP to Geithner: Step down. Congressional Republicans issued a blistering review of the Obama administration's economic policies Thursday and suggested Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner should lose his job. NBC's Kelly O'Donnell reports.






GOP eyes McDonnell's Strategy


After four years of grappling with how to appeal to voters, a group of top Republicans believe they’ve found a winning formula for 2010. Call it the McDonnell Strategy.

The shorthand: run on economic policy, downplay divisive cultural issues, present an upbeat tone, target independent voters and focus on Democratic-controlled Washington—all without attacking President Barack Obama personally.

It’s an approach that elected Bob McDonnell to the Virginia governorship earlier this month.

While Republicans posted two hard-fought gubernatorial victories on Nov. 3, McDonnell’s path to victory is the one that most encourages the GOP, a remarkable case of a social conservative who made his name in politics as an abortion opponent yet managed to reverse a Democratic trend in Virginia and shellack his opponent by nearly 18 percent while largely steering clear of cultural issues.

As rejuvenated GOP governors gathered at a resort outside Austin for their annual strategy session there was little doubt who they wanted to spotlight. McDonnell was shown off at nearly every public event, paraded before the reporters, consultants and lobbyists here as the example of how Republicans can find swing state success in the Obama era.

New Jersey Gov.-elect Chris Christie was also offered as a reminder of the party’s twin triumphs this month, but it was McDonnell who was in demand. Swarmed by new friends, some of them with business interests in Virginia, the commonwealth’s next governor was usually the last official to leave the mix of cook-outs and plenary sessions that marked the Republican Governors Association (RGA) conference.

“McDonnell’s stock was very high already and he found a way to get it even higher,” said Nick Ayers, the RGA’s executive director.

That was in part because Ayers’ boss—and a man who is seen among the establishment Republicans here as something close to the GOP’s de facto national leader–made sure to hold up McDonnell as a model.

Mississippi Gov. and RGA Chairman Haley Barbour laid political hands on his new colleague.

“I thought McDonnell was a master in talking about the things families were talking about around the kitchen table,” Barbour told reporters. “And he never got off on personalities. He never got away from talking about the important issues and how he would address them – and that’s what winning candidates do.”

And, Barbour noted, McDonnell ran with a smile.

“Winning candidates don’t go chasing down rabbit trails and they’re not shrill and they’re not accusatory,” said the Mississippian and former Republican National Committee chairman.

With the struggling economy on the minds of voters, McDonnell focused his message on fiscal issues from the campaign’s outset, touting a bumper sticker-friendly slogan: “Bob’s for Jobs.”

When his rival, Democrat Creigh Deeds, seized upon McDonnell’s graduate school thesis—a document that appeared hostile to working women and gays—the Republican kept to his economic arguments.

In an interview, McDonnell recounted his strategy.

“I never shied away when I got attacked on pro-life—I said, ‘Yeah I’m pro-life, I’ve governed myself that way for 18 years [in the political arena] and I’m going to be a pro-life governor,” he said. “Now let’s talk about jobs and the economy. So it was more a matter of focus, not a matter at all of backtracking on things that we believed in.”

The key, McDonnell said, was locking up the Old Dominion’s many centrist voters, who tend to be fiscally right of center but wary of social extremism.

“If I did a decent job reminding the base about 18 years in the vineyards working hard for the conservative cause, they’d be with me,” he said. “But if I was going to win I had to capture a strong majority of those independent voters.”

To inoculate himself against charges that he was out of the cultural mainstream, McDonnell noted that he went up on TV with positive images portraying himself as a guy-next-door suburban Dad and military veteran.

And while he relentlessly tied his opponent to national Democratic policies on spending, energy, and organized labor, the former state legislator and state attorney general was cautious when it came to Obama, who is still personally popular among many voters.

“What I ran against was just ‘Washington’s policies,’” McDonnell explained, holding up his forefingers to make the quotation sign. “And everybody knew what that meant. I thought the president wasn’t going to be a personal target and I think that served us very well.”

While not advocating retreat from the party’s culturally conservative platform, the consensus view among the establishment Republicans here is that McDonnell’s method of not highlighting such issues as abortion and gay rights offered path to victory. Those topics were virtually ignored here.

“What most people want to know about candidates and officeholders is this: ‘Will you keep my taxes reasonable, hopefully decreasing; can you help me get my kid to a school so he or she can get a decent education?’” said Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, a potential 2012 presidential candidate.

Said McDonnell: “The message of fiscal conservatism was the heart and soul of my campaign.”

But other Republicans with less sterling credentials among the party’s Christian conservative base than McDonnell could have a more difficult time downplaying the issues that animate so many GOP activists.

Nor is it certain that other candidates will enjoy the sort of yawning disparity in energy as hungry and out-of-power Republicans did in Virginia this year.

McDonnell conceded he had better terrain to run on, describing an “enthusiasm gap [that] was 180 degrees different from last year when Republicans were on the short end.”

But he took partial credit for tamping down enthusiasm for his Democratic rival—and in doing so suggested a tactic for how his party could split the opposition in similarly purple states next year.

“We put our opponent in such a box on state issues like taxes and federal issues like [the Employee Free Choice Act] and cap-and-trade that he was kind of out carved out in no man’s land,” McDonnell boasted. “So I think we actually created to some degree the lack of enthusiasm for the other side because he was never really appealing to his base.”

The way McDonnell won, and where he did it, has boosted the spirits of many in his party, and he said that he’ll stump for Republican candidates out-of-state next year.

He downplayed any talk of national ambitions.

“I’m laser-focused on Virginia,” said McDonnell, adding: “No trips to Iowa.”




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Sources: Politico,MSNBC, CNN, Google Maps

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