Whether he’s present at them, the Louisiana gubernatorial debates have been all about Sen.
David Vitter and his campaign strategy, as witnessed in the two most recent this week.
For
the first and last time presumably this election cycle, statewide
televised forums occurred on consecutive days, the first with Public
Service Commissioner
Scott Angelle, Lt. Gov.
Jay Dardenne, and state Rep.
John Bel Edwards, and the
second including them and Vitter. The events’ tones differed as a result.
Two
things distinguished the first: the bland, technocratic presentation
that lacked almost any ideological referents and almost as much
discussion and referents made
about Vitter by the other three. Knowing nothing else about the
candidates or contest, one might have thought the Republicans Angelle
and Dardenne and Democrat Edwards all were moderates of the same party
as they differed by small degrees in their issues preferences
as expressed there and almost went out of their way to avoid drawing
distinctions on their core beliefs.
In
the cases of Dardenne and Edwards, that was purely intentional. Edwards
continues to follow the Democrat playbook as well as anybody can,
serving up plenty of God
and guns to distract Louisiana’s right of center electorate into
ignoring his tax-and-spend redistributionist agenda (and with a little factual distortion thrown for good measure). He knows he loses if the
race is made ideological, which also explains why
he tries to make this a contest of personalities and tying his
opposition to Gov.
Bobby Jindal, as some portion of the electorate associates Jindal
with lack of leadership on Louisiana issues as a result of the
governor’s pursuit of the presidency.
Dardenne
seeks to downplay ideology as well, in that he can present himself as a
conservative generally yet not rigidly so, implicitly appealing to
non-conservatives
who don’t wish to have a stringent version in the state’s highest
office. If the contest became more ideological, his chances also would
suffer as a majority of the electorate would gravitate towards
conservative candidates of greater fervor; otherwise, he
can hope enough non-conservatives who don’t think the
liberal-wolf-in-sheep’s-clothing Edwards can win will unite with enough
conservatives to get him a win.
By
contrast, Angelle displays a kind of schizophrenia concerning ideology.
In discrete campaign communications he plays up a general conservatism,
and even in debates
he will bring that up in broad strokes, in order to make who many in
the public consider a blank slate into one that conveys conservatism.
But during debates on specific issues, he only occasionally has made
explicit ideological references and contrasts with
his opponents. He and Dardenne both share a reason from abjuring from
these: they want to face Edwards in the runoff where if then they turn
up the ideological comparisons, they win.
Here,
Angelle’s strategy to get there with Edwards differs from that of
Dardenne’s desire to position himself as the acceptable choice capable
of victory, although their
tactics merge. Angelle wishes to push Vitter decisively out of the
established “solid” conservative space, on the basis that he is a nicer
person not infected with Beltway politics, even as Dardenne wants to do
the same at the margins in order to peel off
enough conservatives to join his more moderate coalition.
In
order to do this, they must attack Vitter. Naturally enough, Vitter
hits back, but unlike theirs his attacks don’t focus on the personal
traits of his Republican opponents,
but rather on specific issue preferences and actions of theirs that
illustrate asserted failures of leadership, impute dysfunction in
Louisiana governance, and claim lack of conservative credentials on
their part.
This
came through in the vibe of the second debate, where Vitter
deliberately sought to frame answers more ideologically than his
opposition with just a few jabs at them,
while Angelle and Dardenne threw more jabs at Vitter and did not often
turn attention towards broad ideological appeals. For his part Edwards,
who gains nothing by veering from his Trojan Horse strategy, stayed that
course, letting his liberalism out only
when the questions left him no choice.
Yet
even he has joined with Dardenne and Angelle in tossing out from time
to time disparaging remarks about Vitter. As polls continue to show
Vitter and Edwards in the
inevitable runoff, the frequency of these personal attacks have
increased – by Dardenne and Angelle from a sense of desperation that
unless they can tear down Vitter enough they will miss the runoff and by
Edwards in a sense of certainty that he will face
Vitter in the runoff and the time is right to do the same.
However,
this strategy likely has more chance to fail than succeed. Vitter’s
long history in the state makes it difficult to peel off committed
supporters who have plenty
of confirmation of his conservative credentials and are so pleased at
that record that they discount his personal foibles. Indeed, with
especially the Republicans sniping at Vitter when he’s not in the room
and in commercials, this plays exactly into Vitter’s
hands as far as his theme of “broken Baton Rouge” goes, where it seems
politicians would rather complain about one individual not around to
defend himself. The semi-interested voter begins to wonder if Vitter’s
opponents are so obsessed with him that maybe
this is because Vitter is an outsider threatening to break up
comfortable arrangements in state government that have held the state
back – validating the image Vitter has cultivated for a quarter of a
century to a state public suspicious of its government
and politicians.
What
these recent pair and all the statewide televised debates have shown is
the contest still revolves around Vitter and not so much ideology and
issues unless he forces
the pace. That gives him a power no other candidate has – since the
others spend so much effort trying to define him rather than themselves
and thus attention keeps coming back to him, he has the ability to
redirect it to control the election’s narrative to
his benefit. Redirect it to ideology, and he has the advantage over all
others. Redirect it often enough and he appears the most statesman and
they seem small by comparison. So far, he appears sufficiently agile at
this to win.
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