The Week

The GOP's dueling delusional campaign ads

New York – Slick ads attacking Jon Huntsman and Tim Pawlenty as reasonable moderates show just how divorced from reality today's Republican Party is

Does Monty Python produce attack ads?

Because this slickly produced ad attacking GOP presidential hopeful Jon Huntsman sure looks like a joke. 

The ad accuses Huntsman of (1) worrying about excessive partisanship; (2) wanting to put a price on carbon emissions; (3) describing health care as a “right”; (4) promising to “put people first”; (5) supporting John McCain for president; and (6) drawing political support from Democrats and independents.

No, seriously, that’s what it says. And in case you are wondering, yes, those points are all meant as derogatory accusations. If you’re not a Republican, you may have to watch two or three times to understand how any of this could be seen as bad. But notice the visual cues: For instance, a shot of The New York Times building as Huntsman’s voice talks about reaching out to Democrats and independents. (NYT = lamestream media = bad.)

What’s next? Black-and-white ads in which gravelly voiced narrators sneer, “What do we know about Congressman Jenkins? He says he was climbing the tree only to steal apples. But our video cameras clearly show him rescuing a frightened kitten!”

In a normal universe, being for cooperation, against pollution, for health care, for people, for your party’s presidential nominee, and winning lots of votes would be admirable positives, not critical deficiencies. But since 2008, the Republican Party seems to have stepped into some dimension outside space and time, in which the rules of political physics have all been inverted.

We do not have to accede to the Democratic partisans and the talk radio shock-jocks who jointly defame and misrepresent Republicans as angry, irrational, frightened extremists.
And how did other Republicans respond? Perhaps suspecting that the ad was produced by the Tim Pawlenty team, they hit back — hard.

Using the same intro footage and the same mock-campaign ad music, someone compiled video clips of Pawlenty (1) endorsing the climate work of the National Academy of Sciences; (2) promising to enroll all citizens of Minnesota in a health plan of some sort; (3) candidly acknowledging that his state faced large budget deficits as a result of the recession; and (4) promising to spend federal stimulus funds “quickly and effectively.”

Again, non-Republicans may blink and say, “Where’s the attack?” But notice the picture of Pawlenty in a tuxedo shaking hands with President Obama at a state dinner. Not only did Gov. Pawlenty once think that everyone should have health coverage — he has actually been present in the same room as the president without physically assaulting him! What a RINO!

Granted, there’s a lot of insider baseball in these ads. They are made by professionals for other professionals. These attacks are intended more as brushback pitches than as serious hardballs. Both Huntsman and Pawlenty remain deep in the second tier — Pawlenty with the support of 6% of Republicans (behind Herman Cain), according to Gallup, and Huntsman with the support of only 2% (behind Michele Bachmann). The audience for these ads is less the Republican primary voter, much more fellow campaign professionals.

And yet, perversely, it is precisely this insider quality that makes these ads so disturbing. They drop the veil on what Republican professionals inwardly believe their Republican audiences want to hear. It's not a very complimentary estimate, and I am convinced it is a wrong estimate.

As individuals, Republicans are responsible, reasonable people who raise families and care for their communities. Why do we refuse to think of ourselves that way in the aggregate? 

Republicans do not reject the authority of science. They do not deride health coverage for all. They do not relish conflict for its own sake. They do not think governors should refuse when offered federal dollars to avert immediate and catastrophic cuts in services. They do not think it is impossible to spend public money "quickly and effectively." They do not think it is a betrayal of principle to seek votes outside the hard Republican base.

Most important: Republicans have the power to debunk the unflattering self-appraisal presented in the dueling Pawlenty-Huntsman ads. We do not have to accede to the Democratic partisans and the talk radio shock-jocks who jointly defame and misrepresent Republicans as angry, irrational, frightened extremists. The things Pawlenty and Huntsman are saying in these ads are the things Republicans should expect their candidates to say — along with a pro-enterprise message on taxes, regulation, and government spending, of course. The ads' satire should be our party's candidate profile description. And I have no doubt that in good time, it will be so — if not in 2012, then certainly in 2016.

Editor's note: This article originally stated incorrectly that the Huntsman campaign had produced the anti-Pawlenty ad. It has since been revised. We regret the error.

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    52 Comments

    • 33 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 2 users disliked this comment
      saki Wed Jun 01, 2011 12:23 pm PDT Report Abuse
      What happened to Reagan’s 11th commandment? I am honestly beginning to feel a bit sorry for you guys…though not so sorry that I’m willing to take back all those nasty things I said about you. j/k
    • 18 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 1 users disliked this comment
      JT Wed Jun 01, 2011 05:57 pm PDT Report Abuse
      Why is it that every time I get sucked into reading the comments after one of these political stories that an old Gerry Rafferty song comes to mind.......
      "Clowns to the left of me
      Jokers to the right.........."
    • 66 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 11 users disliked this comment
      mjredder Wed Jun 01, 2011 11:34 am PDT Report Abuse
      "Republicans do not reject the authority of science. They do not deride health coverage for all. They do not relish conflict for its own sake. They do not think governors should refuse when offered federal dollars to avert immediate and catastrophic cuts in services. They do not think it is impossible to spend public money "quickly and effectively." They do not think it is a betrayal of principle to seek votes outside the hard Republican base."
      .
      Um, what country is this author from? In American, Republicans do all of these things, without shame. The GOP recently tied federal disaster support to spending reductions, saying that helping Americans hit by natural events matter less than budget cuts. People don't call Democrats the "Party of No", do they? Nope, that's the GOP, a party of narcissistic nihilists bent on making the system work only for their corporate sponsors.
    • 63 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 11 users disliked this comment
      rich Wed Jun 01, 2011 12:12 pm PDT Report Abuse
      This is what happen when you are forced to pander to idiots. The writer(s) are correct, most republicans are decent caring individuals but collectively and politically they have taken a kneejerk contrarian position to just about every decent and reasonable thing Obama has done. This may make a handfull of white supremicists happy but it really is an embarrassment for mainstream Republicans interested in serious governance.
      GOP, please get the idiocy out of your party.
    • 35 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 5 users disliked this comment
      a Wed Jun 01, 2011 01:38 pm PDT Report Abuse
      GOP/tea self-interest is not best served by an educated electorate. People who vote tea party are stupid. It is a match made in heaven.
    • 62 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 11 users disliked this comment
      springtime Wed Jun 01, 2011 11:52 am PDT Report Abuse
      "As individuals, Republicans are responsible, reasonable people who raise families and care for their communities."

      Good Lord! What has this dimwit been smoking? The Party of Values has horny ole Newt running, whose current wife was giving him blow jobs in his car while wifey # 2 was battling cancer. How does Christie care for his community or his state when he takes a state copter to his son's game and then can't walk 100 yards to his seat? Bachmann is all against government except when she is raking in farm subsidies. Palin is against Obama's health care plan but has no problem accepting disability payments for her youngest child. Boehner has bragged he knows over 100 lobbyists.

      Huntsman and Pawlenty seem like decent men, but don't attempt to paint the rest of that tawdry , disgusting group with that same brush.
    • 24 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 3 users disliked this comment
      RAY Wed Jun 01, 2011 04:30 pm PDT Report Abuse
      Repubs proved they were not in reality with that stupid Ryan plan so now their trying to shove it
      down everybodys throat.
      They are continually grandstanding trying to put their crap back in the horse and they dont even
      have the countrys best interest at heart.
      They only talk about tax breaks for the wealthy and want to continue giveing subsiditys to the big
      oil gurus and they think the voters should fall for that bull.
    • 22 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 3 users disliked this comment
      RAY Wed Jun 01, 2011 04:40 pm PDT Report Abuse
      If the Repubs dont change their agenda and start putting the country first there is going to be mighty
      few of them left in Washington within ten years.
    • 47 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 9 users disliked this comment
      usaidthatoutloud Wed Jun 01, 2011 12:00 pm PDT Report Abuse
      what was the point of this article again?

      is there anyone other than republicans that don't know they are out of touch with the majority of Americans?
    • 54 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 11 users disliked this comment
      Anthony M Wed Jun 01, 2011 11:43 am PDT Report Abuse
      Since when have conservative republicans ever had a handle on anything unless it was mandated by corporate america.

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