Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
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30.11.16
Campbell's strange debate strategy unlikely to pay off
There’s no mystery as to why Republican frontrunner
for Louisiana’s Senate seat Treasurer John
Kennedy may not enthusiastically wish to participate in a debate with his
Democrat runoff counterpart Public Service Commissioner Foster Campbell. More curious is
why Campbell
seems not to want the joint appearance to come off as well.
With polling
giving Kennedy a commanding lead in the Dec. 10 runoff election, he can
fall back on the tried and true tactic of running out the clock. When in the
situation that dynamics favor you and the only way to lose is to make some
tremendous mistake, you limit your chances to make these, while not looking
like you completely want to ignore campaign events.
By contrast, someone as deeply down as Campbell
would want to emulate Democrat former Sen. Mary Landrieu, who as soon as she
found out she fell well short of winning without a runoff against Republican
Sen. Bill Cassidy
in 2014, even though she led him narrowly in the general election she immediately
asked
for an absurd six debates in the month prior to the runoff. Cassidy laughed
that off and they had one a few days prior to the final election where he blew
her out.
Kennedy, for appearances sake, seemed
amenable to two debates, with consortia of television stations. He didn’t
appear interested in one with Louisiana Public Broadcasting that Campbell
wanted, nor also one in front of the media in Baton Rouge this week. Campbell
declined on one of the television station arrangements, but expressed interest
on a Dec. 2 date with the other.
But then the one cued up for the common date
foundered when the candidates disagreed over whether to have a live audience;
Kennedy didn’t want it, Campbell did. When it became clear that, thusly,
nothing would come off Campbell began complaining to anyone who would listen
that Kennedy wished to duck debates.
Of course, that was a silly, if not hypocritical
charge: Campbell himself had turned down one opportunity, and all he had to do
was to agree not to have a live audience for another. Kennedy made a perfectly
reasonable request there, not only because a previous debate of six candidates
featured disruption
before and after even without an audience, but also because in the wake of
the election of Republican Pres.-elect Donald
Trump, the political
left has engaged in disruptive tactics that could find expression during
the event, given the emphasis
the Angry Left has made on supporting Campbell despite its misgivings over
some of his issue preferences.
A debate would improve Kennedy’s electoral health
only if viewers can see him in command, reinforcing his position in the polls.
Further, since Campbell turned down one, Kennedy can equivalently claim
Campbell shies away from debates and prefers uncritical forums by which to
propagate his views, as indicated by the Democrat’s appearance on sympathetic
media outlets like MSNBC.
Yet Campbell’s bizarre alleging explains why he
would not acquiesce on the audience question, if he genuinely wanted to get
Kennedy into a spot where the Republican could make a big unforced error: he
calculates that he can get more political mileage with certainty out of making
the false charge than with the possibility of hitting a home run courtesy of a
Kennedy mistake during a debate. After all, the live audience question is
absolutely trivial unless Campbell thought enough leftist disruptive elements
could goad Kennedy into a gaffe, a
mistake which seems unlikely that Kennedy would perform.
Therefore, Campbell prefers to manufacture an
issue over debates – one that few, if any, voters not already committed to
showing up and pressing the button for him will pay attention to, much less
care about. But when you’re as far behind as he is, even if the payoff that you have a remote chance to achieve by acting alternatively could deliver the necessary boost to your chances, you’ll grasp at any straw.
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