Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Another one bites the dust

- RAMESH PONNURU Ramesh Ponnuru is a columnist for Bloomberg View.

Scott Walker, the governor of Wisconsin, suggested in March that he might be the front-runner for the Republican presidenti­al nomination. Monday, he dropped out— months before any primary votes will be cast. The quick move from front-runner to left-behind status should remind us of a few things about the Republican race, and about politics generally.

—There is such a thing as peaking too soon.

Walker had a great spring. After a successful speech at a gathering of conservati­ves in Iowa, he took the lead in polls there and even in New Hampshire. It was too quick a rise. It meant that Walker got the scrutiny that comes with being in the top tier of candidates without having developed the staff, the familiarit­y with issues and the ease with national politics that such scrutiny demands.

—There’s no middle lane in the Republican primaries.

When he was at the top of the polls, Walker was doing well among both conservati­ve and moderate Republican­s. This was taken to be a sign of strength, but it was actually a weakness: It meant that he was likely to disappoint one or more of the groups who thought they liked him. —Charisma matters. Even Republican­s well-disposed to like Walker wondered if he could “fill the stage” when he ran for president. Instead, he disappeare­d on the stage. He was a nonentity during the two presidenti­al debates in which he participat­ed. He tried to overcome the rap that he’s boring by stressing how tough he is. The title of his book was Unintimida­ted, and he tried to make a selling point out of how he faced down some hecklers on the campaign trail. This didn’t make him look interestin­g or exciting; it made him look like someone who knew he needed to come across that way.

—Republican candidates remain out of step with their voters on immigratio­n.

Walker stirred controvers­y by suggesting that legal immigratio­n levels should be reduced. Commentato­rs described this statement as part of a shift by Walker, and his party, to the far right. But it’s not just a fringe that wants lower immigratio­n levels: Gallup finds that 39 percent of voters favor it and 84 percent of Republican­s are dissatisfi­ed with current levels. With Walker’s departure from the race, only two Republican candidates speak for these voters on this issue: Donald Trump and Rick Santorum.

Some of Walker’s fans are blaming Trump for knocking him out of the race (or blaming the voters who left a successful governor for a blowhard). But Walker’s decline in the national polls began before Trump’s rise. Walker was unprepared for a presidenti­al race, and sooner or later that would have been exposed—Trump or no Trump.

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