Get This Blog by Email
BlogAboutBlogOverclockedResearchInitiativesPhotos
« On Copycatting Flattery Gets Fred Everywhere »


McCain: The Wheels Come Off

by Patrick Ruffini :: July 10th, 2007 2:26 pm

As I’ve said before about McCain, he is a terrible candidate with a great staff. So I watched the departures this morning with shock rather than glee. The fact that Mark Salter, McCain’s 18 year chief-of-staff is departing shows just how badly things have gone off the rails in McCain-land.

Ultimately, I don’t see how things would have turned out differently had Nelson and Weaver not been at the helm these last six months. The premise of McCain as frontrunner was always seriously flawed, and to the extent Weaver architected that strategy in 2005-06, he bears some of the blame. But ultimately, that is an expectations problem. If everyone believes you’re the frontrunner, then you had better darned well perform like the frontrunner. With the base’s deep-seated animosity towards McCain (something that only emerged in 2000) and his lackluster track record in fundraising (people forget this is guy who never raised a dime out of cycle), the McCain frontrunner meme was always bound to take a fall. I may be surprised by how fast it’s happened, but I’m not surprised at the outcome.

So we are left with a rerun of McCain’s maverick strategy from 2000 — run by the same guy, Rick Davis, who was at the helm the first time. And that’s the best case scenario for them, with only a slim chance of success had it been the plan all along, and probably no chance of success now.

The last time we nominated someone because it was “his turn” and who engendered no love amongst the base was Bob Dole in 1996. That was the McCain 2008 campaign plan. But times change. Had we had a blogosphere in 1996, with the base’s dissatisfaction amplified many times over on the Internet, I doubt an uninspiring candidate like Dole could have been nominated. And at least Dole didn’t go out of his way to piss off conservatives.

Until today, John McCain had four highly capable aides who could have easily vied to be his Karl Rove. That was the problem. No one was really in charge. As a 24 year veteran of Congress, this shows how poor McCain’s management instincts really were, and demonstrates why Senators rarely get elected President. Marc Ambinder essentially confirms this in the tick-tock:

The sources said that Nelson’s position as campaign manager wasprecariously positioned from the start because McCain did not endorse acampaign structure that would have given Nelson absolute authority overmessaging, finance and strategy. Republicans directly familiar with thenegotiations to bring Nelson aboard said that McCain promised Nelsonthat no one but him would have the ultimate say in making and executingcampaign decisions. But McCain did not follow through on thosepromises, these Republicans said.

Even a perfect campaign couldn’t have nominated John McCain, but his reluctance to give one person ultimate responsibility for strategy certainly didn’t help.

Tagged:

Comments Comments (2) Comments Trackbacks (2) del.icio.us digg it subscribe

This was posted in: Uncategorized

Both comments and pings are currently closed.


  1. Outside The Beltway | OTB says:

    McCain Shakes Up Campaign Staff Again…

    John McCain has gotten rid of his top campaign staff in a dispute over the way they were handling his dwindling finances, Dan Balz reports.
    Campaign manager Terry Nelson and chief strategist John Weaver issued terse statements announcing their departur…

    # July 10th, 2007 at 3:36 pm

  2. Campaign Manager, Top Staffer Leave McCain Campaign » The American Mind says:

    […] UPDATE: Patrick Ruffini who knows more about the participants more than me sees this as the symptom of McCain’s poor management skills and a flawed front-runner strategy. […]

    # July 10th, 2007 at 3:46 pm

  1. Aaron says:

    A great staff yes, but way too bloated…from day one. I really can’t believe Salters out, thats got to hurt the most.

    # July 10th, 2007 at 7:09 pm

  2. CeCe says:

    Salter is not out. He is still advising McCain and will remain active in the campaign. McCain had no choice once Nelson and Weaver blew $22 million dollars.

    # July 10th, 2007 at 9:55 pm

Patrick Ruffini   Patrick Ruffini is an online political strategist, blogger, and wearer of many hats. More...


Ruffini Around the Web







 Subscribe in a reader

Add to Google

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Subscribe in Bloglines

Add to My AOL

Subscribe in Rojo




Tags
2008 actblue activism al gore announcements barack obama bill clinton blogosphere bush congress conservatism cpac debate democrats epolitics eric cantor facebook fred thompson fundraising grassroots hillary clinton iowa iraq jim ogonowski john edwards john mccain MA 5 marketing media mike huckabee mitt romney movement netroots new hampshire online politics overclocked polls rightroots ron paul ronald reagan rudy giuliani savethedebate south carolina strategy straw poll technology user generated content video web2.0 youtube

By Month

  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006



  •   


  • Blogroll

  • Join the email list
    Blogs
    Main
    Overclocked
    On the Side

    About
    Bio
    Portfolio
    2008 Wire
    MSM, Blogs
    GOP, Dems
    FAQ
    Initiatives
    ECorps
    Research
    Photo Gallery

    © 2007 Ruffini Strategies LLC

    Clicky Web Analytics