CBS Touts Unnamed 'Panicked' Republicans' 'Real Sense of Fear That Romney Really Has One Last Shot'
Thursday's CBS This Morning was practically ready to sound the death knell for Mitt Romney's campaign, with John Dickerson playing up "the real sense of fear" among anonymous Republican sources that "Romney really has one last shot." Dickerson claimed that "those battleground state numbers...are part of the reason that Republicans are so panicked....Republican politicians starting to think about their own future as separate from Romney."
Norah O'Donnell also harped on how "there's only been one public rally in five days"
for the former Massachusetts governor, glossing over the fact that he
appeared at a public forum with Univision in Florida on Wednesday.
Anchor Charlie Rose brought on Dickerson and asked, "What are
Republican insiders saying about this campaign and what it has to do?"
The CBS News political director replied with his "real sense of fear"
line, and continued that "what he's got to do is find some way to
connect with voters, and then...stay away from all of these
distractions, some of which come out of nowhere...he's got to find some
way to actually do more than just assert that he's not Barack Obama."
O'Donnell followed up spotlighting "that if the election were
held today, that Barack Obama would probably win this contest - if you
look at the electoral votes - by 332 to 206, just based on the state
polling." She then wondered if "Mitt Romney is having a
message problem, or is he having a strategy problem, based on the fact
that he held his first public rally in five days, and that Obama is
outspending Romney on television ads in these battleground states?"
Dickerson again cited his unnamed sources: "When you talk to folks who have been veterans of Republican politics...they all point basically to the candidate...that
the problems that Governor Romney is having are problems Governor
Romney is having, not the campaign itself." He continued with his claim
about "panicked" Republicans. This answer, however, didn't satisfy the
NBC veteran, as she interrupted by repeating her public rally talking
point: "But John, is Mitt Romney in charge of his schedule, if there's only been one public rally in five days?"
Later, Rose threw a softball question on the Obama campaign: "How well is the President using the power of the presidency?"
Of course, he left out any mention of the question of what happened in
the attack on the U.S. consulate in Libya and the latest developments in
the Fast and Furious controversy.
The political director acknowledged that Obama "bears a lot of
the weight of the fact that people look to him and say, why haven't you
improved things, and he's made a lot of promises, and there's a lot of
disappointment out in the electorate." But Dickerson added that
the Democrat is "using as much of the power of the presidency to do two
things: one, to show voters...here are things I'm doing specifically
that are going to change your lives; but also, to show that he actually
can do something. I mean, part of the problem with the economic picture
is just impotency, that the President has all this power, and he's not
doing anything to change it. These are ways that he can show, I'm doing
things that actually affect your life."
Near the end of the segment, O'Donnell did point out a positive
historical anecdote for Romney: "Karl Rove has an op-ed in the Wall
Street Journal today that's saying, you know, this too shall pass - this
moment for Mitt Romney...he says that in mid-September 1980,
President Jimmy Carter led Ronald Reagan 44 to 40 percent in the Gallup
poll. By late October, Reagan had slumped to 39 percent, while Carter
had risen to 47 percent. But Reagan ended up winning by nine points....Can he...turn it around the way Reagan did in 1980?"
Dickerson poured cold water on this assessment by again turning to his
unidentified Republican sources: "There is a glimmer of hope there. For
that analogy to hold, a couple of things have to happen...Romney
has to be as talented as Ronald Reagan. I think that one of the things
you hear in conversations and interviews I've done, is that – a lot of
people don't think he has those kind of skills."
The full transcript of the John Dickerson segment from Thursday's CBS This Morning:
CHARLIE ROSE: CBS News political director John Dickerson is in our Washington office. John, good morning.
JOHN DICKERSON: Good morning, Charlie.
[CBS News Graphic: "Race For The White House: Romney: My Campaign Is About The '100%'"]
ROSE: So, there you go about the campaign insiders. What are Republican
insiders saying about this campaign and what it has to do?
DICKERSON: I've been on the phone with them for the last several days,
even more so than normal, and, you know, there's a real sense of fear
that Romney really has one last shot, and that what he's got to do is
find some way to connect with voters, and then, execute – sort of, stay
away from all of these distractions, some of which come out of nowhere.
He could – you know, he doesn't control what videos pop up, but that
he's got to find some way to actually do more than just assert that he's
not Barack Obama.
[CBS News Graphic: "Pew Research Center Poll: Connects Better Ordinary
Americans; Among Registered Voters: Obama, 66%; Romney, 23%; Margin of
Error: +/- 2.3% Pts."
NORAH O'DONNELL: John, we have research from CBS, and I want to show
this poll - battleground states across America - that if the election
were held today, that Barack Obama would probably win this contest - if
you look at the electoral votes - by 332 to 206, just based on the state
polling. And I have a question about whether this is – Mitt Romney is
having a message problem, or is he having a strategy problem, based on
the fact that he held his first public rally in five days, and that
Obama is outspending Romney on television ads in these battleground
states?
[CBS News Graphic: "CBS News/YouGov: Electoral Votes, If Election Were Held Today: Obama, 332; Romney, 206; Need 270 To Win"]
DICKERSON: Well, when you talk to folks who have been veterans of
Republican politics - and these are some people who are close to the
Romney campaign, others haven't been running the show since, say the
Bush or Dole campaigns - they all point basically to the candidate, and
that this – that the problems that Governor Romney is having are
problems Governor Romney is having, not the campaign itself. Those
numbers are partially – those battleground state numbers that you read
there are part of the reason that Republicans are so panicked, that you
have Republican politicians starting to think about their own future as
separate from Romney. And so-
[CBS News Graphic: "Race For The White House: Looking At The Electoral Map"]
O'DONNELL: But John, is Mitt Romney in charge of his schedule, if there's only been one public rally in five days?
DICKERSON: Well, no, he's not – well, in part, he is in charge of his
schedule. If he wanted to say, look, I want to be out there
[unintelligible] all day long, make it happen - of course, he could do
that. So, part of the problem, though, is that the schedule, over the
last five days, isn't what matters. The problem is that Mitt Romney
hasn't found a way to connect with voters, and that's a problem Mitt
Romney has. No great Svengali behind him can fix that.
[CBS News Graphic: "Fox News Poll: Presidential Race Among Florida
Voters: Obama, 49%; Romney, 44%; Margin of Error: +/- 3% Pts."]
ROSE: Let me turn to the Obama campaign. How well is the President using the power of the presidency?
DICKERSON: Well, as best he can, Charlie. You know, he bears a lot of
the weight of the fact that people look to him and say, why haven't you
improved things, and he's made a lot of promises, and there's a lot of
disappointment out in the electorate. And that, of course, is what
Romney is trying to tap into - those people who think that Obama is not
as advertised.
But what the President has tried to do is, you know, when he lands in
Ohio, he announces that he's gotten tougher on China in ways that will
help car manufacturers in Toledo. So he's – it's, sort of, you know,
coming with deliverables - using as much of the power of the presidency
to do two things: one, to show voters – make connections, to say, here
are things I'm doing specifically that are going to change your lives;
but also, to show that he actually can do something. I mean, part of the
problem with the economic picture is just impotency, that the President
has all this power, and he's not doing anything to change it. These are
ways that he can show, I'm doing things that actually affect your life.
ROSE: Yeah-
[CBS News Graphic: "Race For The White House: Obama's Incumbent Strategy"]
O'DONNELL: John, I want to get your take on – Karl Rove has an op-ed in
the Wall Street Journal today that's saying, you know, this too shall
pass - this moment for Mitt Romney. But what follows is crucial, and he
says that in mid-September 1980, President Jimmy Carter led Ronald
Reagan 44 to 40 percent in the Gallup poll. By late October, Reagan had
slumped to 39 percent, while Carter had risen to 47 percent. But Reagan
ended up winning by nine points. Is there an analogy there for Romney?
Can he turn it away the way – turn it around the way Reagan did in 1980?
DICKERSON: I – there is a glimmer of hope there. For that analogy to
hold, a couple of things have to happen. Reagan has to be as good –
excuse me, Romney has to be as talented as Ronald Reagan. I think that
one of the things you hear in conversations and interviews I've done, is
that – a lot of people don't think he has those kind of skills.
ROSE: Those things especially seen – those kind of skills are seen in a debate as well-
O'DONNELL: Yeah-
ROSE: John, thank you-
DICKERSON: And these-
ROSE: I better run. Thank you, John.