Until last week, Cassidy only had
to perform the former. Every indicator revealed him on a clear path to victory,
with Republican candidates garnering 57 percent of the vote in the general
election, his enjoying a double-digit
lead in polling, and early
voting statistics having swung in his favor. Perhaps more precisely, even
as they can be imprecise, early voting totals cast foreboding over Landrieu’s
campaign, with Republicans increasing their turnout while Democrats’ dropped, especially
among blacks, where post-election
statistics and exit poll results that Landrieu
got 94 percent of the black vote but only 18 percent of the white vote
suggest 64 percent of the votes she received were from blacks makes that
especially troubling for her.
Then accusations that Cassidy didn’t
work enough hours to fulfill a state contract surfaced, regardless of whether
there was plausible deniability that it tacitly
was coordinated by her campaign. For most of his time in Congress, Cassidy
worked a few hours a week overseeing medical students and in consultations,
being the only specialist in his discipline in the Louisiana State University
hospital system and having that employment authorized by the House.
It wasn’t a very credible charge to
begin with, but a rule in politics of the electorally successful kind is that
when something of that nature gets thrown at you, there must be a response or
people may believe it. Cassidy could point out that shortages in time were because
he could not quantify everything he did and that same-day work and votes on
Capitol Hill were as a result of him consulting in mornings and voting in
afternoons. He also could remind voters that Landrieu had no
believable benign explanation for why her campaign charged taxpayers for
chartered campaign flights, she had admitted fault, but that she never would
have paid back the people except that she had gotten caught.
Being desperate, Landrieu was going
to try to validate this as an issue as much as possible, even challenging
Cassidy to bring
his work records with him to the debate. The Louisiana Republican Party
neatly parried that by asking Landrieu to bring her records regarding the
charter flights to the debate, of which she
promised to review all from her initial term on but did not do so from 1997
through the early part of 2002. The review that was done, once present on
the Internet, has disappeared
from posting, although Landrieu claimed she brought the 1997-2002 results
to the event. Yet better for his fortunes would have been if Cassidy himself
had made this request.
Also better for him would have been
an unambiguous explanation about the timesheets, that during the event Landrieu
repeated about a dozen times were a combination of disappeared, forged, and
into the hundreds of thousands of dollars of unperformed work. He could have
clarified all the ones from recent months were out there (and he did say he
signed them), the others the state had sequestered and not yet located, and
that the nature of academic work is difficult to quantify in many instances and
those located sheets did not reflect the entirety of his output. Of course, in
the debate format that’s difficult to get across, so instead he used a tactic
where he said a quarter century of service the charity hospitals was done for
the benefit of patients, many poor, while Landrieu’s illegal (which she
mendaciously denied) spending of taxpayers funds benefitted, he implied, the
rich and powerful such as Landrieu and her cronies.
Whether that was the best tactic for
that issue was debatable, but in its context it’s defendable. Few people
watched the debate, and some more will consume media accounts about it, and
comprehensive explanation often gets lost in the shuffle that in a he-said/she-said
situation cannot produce a definitive refutation that will shut up the other
side. More to his advantage, it also caused Landrieu to come off as shrill and
petulant, which does her absolutely no favors for winning the relatively
persuadable voters out there. The few genuinely undecided voters who tuned in
might have been wondering how Louisiana could elect three times a woman whose
tenor and tone came across as a parody of obsessive psychosis, but that was not
her target audience.
For the fact is most voters have
their minds made up by now, so her approach was no accident, because in the
desperate straits she finds herself needing to escape she had one goal: scare
two groups of people, one to vote and one not to. The appeal to her base,
mostly blacks and the Angry Left, through divisive rhetoric that all but
accused generally Republicans and Cassidy specifically of being Beelzebub, was to
get them to show up at the polls (no doubt with a heightened sense of urgency
given unfavorable early voting statistics for her). The harping on Cassidy and
the timesheets every four minutes or so was to discourage those who had voted
for the other competitive Republican in the general election, Rob Maness, whose
message that Washington politicians could not be trusted she hoped to transfer
onto Cassidy; knowing there was no way they would vote for her in the runoff,
her aim was to discourage them from voting at all this Saturday by making him
seem like the kind of politician Maness railed against.
Similarly, that wasn’t really
Cassidy’s intended audience either, for his objective was to keep riding the
wave and dancing with what got him there, focusing on making
the contest a battle of ideologies, where if he demonstrates he is a conservative
and Landrieu is a liberal he wins regardless of what Landrieu does. He played
it very safe, to the point of missing opportunities (such as when Landrieu was
on the defensive about the implication she would raise taxes in order to preserve
Social Security and tried to deflect that by declaring tax hikes only on the
wealthy, he could have pointed out that
would do little to make the program solvent).
That safety, which included making
no stupid statements, probably led to him losing ground on the timesheet issue,
which meant Landrieu achieved one of her objectives – but likely to much too
small of a degree. If we must (as some great unwritten rule says we must)
decide who “wins” these things, by evaluating whether the candidates achieved
their objectives, then Landrieu played her lousy hand as best she could, but
Cassidy played his strong hand well enough to take the pot.
Cassidy remains in control of the
contest. And there may
be some lagniappe to that ….
1 comment:
Wow, what a red herring argument. The issue is not so much the amount of money involved, although it compares to the Landrieu fiasco you continue to label as a "real" issue. The issue is fraud, claiming to do work in Baton Rouge while on the floor of Congress. Now, that means Cassidy is not even good at fraud. Again billing time is not the issue as much as double billing time. Of course you know that but you have to distort and cover.
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