“It’s two things,” said Curt Smith, a former speechwriter for President George H.W. Bush and now a lecturer at the University of Rochester. “One, even Democrats who will support Obama will do so with the scales having fallen their eyes. You can do away with ‘the change you want to believe in.’ And two, it’s the same with Repubicans, who are not mesmerized with the ‘Charisma Kid’ Mitt Romney and would support Mother Goose if the Republicans nominated her. Each side, in their hearts, wishes someone else were running.”
(Mr. Smith also noted that his own pick for 2016 was Marco Rubio.)
And if it is hard to generate the excitement this time, part of the reason is that there may still be a political hangover from 2008. That election featured the first serious Black candidate; the first serious female candidate, an ex-senator’s love-child and an Alaskan fashion plate-cum-frontierswoman. That’s not even bringing up Joe the Plumber, Jeremiah Wright, The Weather Underground, an unwed teenage mother, an ex-prisoner of war, a former Law and Order star, and Rudy Giuliani.
Back then, Barack Obama was the biggest ticket in town, drawing as many as 100,000 people to rallies late in the campaign. This time around, the president was unable to fill an 18,000-seat arena to kick off his run.
It is not just pundits however who are looking past 2012. On the GOP side at least, a host of pols made the same calculation—that this year’s climate wasn’t right—and thus decided to take a pass in favor of a go in 2016. What this meant, beyond making life easier for incumbents (and duller for the rest of us) was that 2016 actually could turn into a replay of 2008 in terms of the level of excitement and interest. Add to the fact that a lot of the top tier Republicans who decided against a run this time around did so because they had been newly elected as part of the Tea Party wave in 2009-2010, and 2016 really does seem likely to live up to Mencken’s exacting standards.
Consider just those who turned down pleas to run in 2012. Chris Christie is every videographer’s favorite. Bobby Jindal and Nikki Haley, two young, Asian-American southern governors, are favorites of a party frequently decried for being older and whiter than the rest of the nation. Marco Rubio has been called “our Obama” by conservatives ever since he was in the Florida legislature. And there are also senators like New Hampshire’s Kelly Ayotte, Rand Paul of Kentucky. Rounding out the list are those who dipped a toe in 2012 only to wait until the water was warmer: Paul Ryan, Eric Cantor, Mitch Daniels and Rob Portman. That’s a lot of names.
The Democratic side looks comparatively leaner, but by 2016 the bench will have had eight years to grow. If Vice-President Joe Biden runs, he would clear the field, but otherwise voters may be treated to an epic Empire State battle between an icon and a popular governor, while a host of Southern state and heartland pols wait in the wings—Mr. O’Malley, Tim Kaine and Mark Warner of Virginia, Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Brian Schweitzer of Montana.
And with the field getting crowded, would-be contenders have realized that they need to start laying the groundwork or risk being left behind.
“With the great exception of Secretary Clinton and Governor Cuomo, you do have people on that list who are talking about running, who have appeared at fundraisers and on the cocktail circuit, and who are saying, ‘Yea, I want to put a team together,’” said Tracy Sefl, a veteran if the 2004 presidential campaign and a top Democratic political consultant in Washington D.C. “We—consumers of the news, and creators of the news—are not a patient people.”
(Asked her own pick for 2016, Ms. Sefl responded, “I have always thought governors bring important qualities to bear on national office. I love Governor Cuomo and I love Governor O’Malley.”)
But even if 2016 didn’t give the media something to look forward to in the dreary days of this campaign, they (we) would probably go ahead and do it anyway. For years, we have been warned against a time when the political press will be entirely consumed with process over policy, and at last, that day seems to have arrived. The 24-hour cable networks, the proliferation of web outlets and the traditional press pool have created a maw of content demand, one that outpaces the current campaign’s ability to fill it.
“It’s idle speculation designed to fill a huge vacuum that never would have made it into print or on the air in the days before blogs and cable news stations,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican pollster. “Anything anyone can come up with to fill a little air time gets on the air. If you are looking for a reason, that’s it.”
Be that as it may, we can’t wait for the 2020 campaign between Chelsea Clinton, Malia Obama, Tareq Salahi and Todd Palin. Runners, to your marks!
dfreedlander@observer.com
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