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The wimps and the bully boys

The wimps and the bully boys

by digby

These excerpts from Dan Balz’s new book about the 2012 campaign make you want to take a shower:

Here is Jim Messina, Barack Obama’s campaign manager, explaining to Dan Balz how he intends to run the 2012 campaign:

“My favorite political philosopher is Mike Tyson,” Messina says. “Mike Tyson once said everyone has a plan until you punch them in the face. Then they don’t have a plan anymore. [The Republicans] may have a plan to beat my guy. My job is to punch them in the face.”

Here is Tagg Romney, Mitt Romney’s son, telling Balz that his father was not quite fired up and ready to go less than three weeks before he announced his candidacy. “He was hoping for an exit,” Tagg says. “I think he wanted to have an excuse not to run.” During the Christmas holiday of 2010, the Romney family had gathered in Hawaii and voted on whether Romney should run. Ten of the 12 family members voted no. Mitt Romney was among the no votes.

Here is Chris Christie, governor of New Jersey, still undecided about his own candidacy. He orders those Republicans who had decided to run not to troll for support or money in his state. It was like something out of “The Sopranos.” Jersey was his territory. “Governor Romney didn’t like that too much,” Christie tells Balz.

Nancy Reagan sends a handwritten note inviting Christie to give a speech at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in California. Christie shows up, he is seated on the stage and Nancy Reagan leans over to him and points out the podium from which he will speak. “That was one of Ronnie’s podiums from the White House,” she says. Christie tells Balz: “I sat there for a second, and I just turned to her and I said, ‘You’re bad, you know that?’ She had this big smile on her face.”

Here is Ron Kaufman, one of Romney’s top advisers, on election night after Romney’s defeat, sitting in a nearly empty staff room after Romney has made a gracious concession call to Obama and a concession speech. Romney walks into the staff room. “This is scary,” Romney says. “This is a bad thing for the country.”

Romney sounds like a a petulant little boy and everyone else sounds like a thug. (Well, Nancy Reagan just sounds like her old self.) This is the best our nation can do?

According to Roger Simon, who gathered those excerpts, Balz sees the 2012 campaign as a unique low point in which both sides scrambled to be as dirty as possible. But do you know why he thinks they did it? Because they decided that independent voter didn’t matter and they needed to get out their own vote. To the Village, American politics are only considered to be “uplifting” when a politician tells his most ardent voters to go to hell. (Whatever. I assume the anecdotes are true even if Balz’s analysis is typical village bilge.)

Still, it would appear that Chris Christie is a man of his time. And they’re going to love him. When he tells his own voters to go to hell, he’ll do it in a way that makes them feel like they’ve been dissed by a real man. And regardless of Balz’s rather courtly disdain for the crudeness of the 2012 players, that’s what both the Republican Party and the Villagers crave more than anything.

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