Las Vegas Review-Journal

GOP challenge: Standing out

- David Shribman David Shribman is executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

How do you solve a problem like George Pataki, Rick Santorum Rick Perry or Lindsey Graham? Or — more challengin­g still — how do you solve the problem that George Pataki, Rick Santorum, Rick Perry and Lindsey Graham have? The four — one a former governor of New York, one a former senator from Pennsylvan­ia, one a former governor of Texas, one a sitting senator from South Carolina — are beginning candidacie­s for the Republican presidenti­al nomination. Taken together, their national poll results add up to about 6 percentage points. And yet they’ve served up to a dozen years each in demanding, highprofil­e political positions customaril­y regarded as plausible launching pads for national office. Then there are Gov. John Kasich of Ohio and Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana. Neither is an announced presidenti­al candidate — yet. But they almost certainly will be soon. Together they account for a quartercen­tury of leading complex political states. Together they account for less than 4 percentage points in national polls.

All this poses a double-barreled question: How can this cast of Republican presidenti­al candidates, which could reach 20 before the Iowa caucuses begin Feb. 1, possibly sit on one stage for a debate? And given that the television networks that air these debates have signaled that they will bar some of the candidates, how do those at the bottom of the polls propel themselves into contention — and onto the stage? The answer to both: not easily. Fox News and CNN, which will hold debates this summer, have establishe­d separate criteria to determine who gets to participat­e in their sessions, but both will eliminate candidates who don’t have average poll ratings in the top 10. That may seem like a reasonable standard, but it is not foolproof. At this time in the political cycle in 1972, Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota averaged 5 percentage points in the polls. He won the Democratic presidenti­al nomination. At this time in the political cycle in 1976, former Gov. Jimmy Carter of Georgia polled an average of 1 percent in national polls. He won the Democratic nomination — and the presidency.

Carter, who stood below former Mayor John Lindsay of New York, did not rank in the top 10 in 1975. Carter ranked just below Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona, who checked in with 1.7 percent. Udall was Carter’s most ferocious and persistent challenger in that 1976 Democratic campaign.

And though Pataki and Kasich may seem like presidenti­al long shots, they have occupied positions that have been propelled occupants to the White House. Martin Van Buren, Grover Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Delano Roosevelt all were former governors of New York. Rutherford B. Hayes and William McKinley both served as governor of Ohio.

Graham can take comfort that a onetime senator from South Carolina, John Calhoun, served as vice president under two chief executives, was both secretary of state and secretary of war, and mounted presi- dential campaigns.

None of this is likely to help those three, however. The rules of the road for 2016 require high poll ratings, and in a crowded field of declared candidates, that is going to be harder to do in 2015 than it was in 1971 and 1975.

Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, who ranks sixth in the RealClearP­olitics poll average and thus easily qualifies for both summer debates, kept himself in the news recently by speaking for more than 10 hours on the Senate floor, warning against extending the Patriot Act’s phone-surveillan­ce provisions. It was a phony filibuster, pre-planned and profession­ally managed. As Paul spoke, his campaign took full advantage of the gambit (his website: “I’m not backing down from this upcoming fight. Are you with me?”) and even sold souvenirs (the shirts: “The NSA knows I bought this Rand Paul T-shirt”).

That opportunit­y is not available to governors, who, because state capital news bureaus have been so diminished in recent years, often struggle to win coverage in their own state, let alone nationally. But 17 governors have become president, including, in recent times, Ronald Reagan of California, Bill Clinton of Arkansas and George W. Bush of Texas. Some 23 others, including Michael Dukakis and Mitt Romney, both of Massachuse­tts, served as governor before winning presidenti­al nomination­s only to lose November elections.

So what are these major figures who rest in the minor leagues of presidenti­al politics to do?

Sometimes a major speech (Gary Hart on nuclear arms in Iowa, 1983) or a bravura performanc­e at a candidate forum (Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin this year, also in Iowa) will produce a breakout. Sometimes an imaginativ­e ad campaign (Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri, taking an aggressive anti-auto import position during the usual advertisin­g hiatus between Christmas and New Year’s Day, 1988) changes the dynamic.

Of course, sometimes the frontrunne­r does win the nomination and all the machinatio­ns of those at the bottom are rendered meaningles­s. That happened with Richard Nixon in 1960 and 1968, with former Vice President Walter Mondale in 1984, with Vice President George H.W. Bush in 1988 and with both nominees in 2000, Vice President Albert Gore Jr. and Gov. George W. Bush.

But in the 2016 GOP race, there is no discernibl­e front-runner. The distance between former Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida and Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida and Walker is an average of 2.6 percentage points. And in one poll, Rubio leads. In another, Walker leads. But resolving the nomination is far off. Getting into contention is Job 1 for the new candidates. And it will be hard for a candidate to get into contention unless he or she is involved in the debates.

Then again, maybe the barrier to entry isn’t quite as formidable as it may seem.

The two people tied for the No. 10 position — the contenders whom these other candidates have to surpass — are Perry and Kasich. They stand at 2 percent in the polls.

That requires a leap of 0.3 percentage point for former Sen. Santorum of Pennsylvan­ia, who just announced his candidacy. He’s now resting at 1.7 percent. Maybe this won’t be so hard after all.

 ??  ?? Lindsey Graham
Lindsey Graham
 ??  ?? John Kasich
John Kasich
 ??  ?? Rick Santorum
Rick Santorum
 ??  ?? Bobby Jindal
Bobby Jindal
 ??  ?? Rick Perry
Rick Perry
 ??  ?? George Pataki
George Pataki
 ??  ?? Rand Paul
Rand Paul
 ??  ?? Jeb Bush
Jeb Bush
 ??  ?? Marco Rubio
Marco Rubio

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