September 2, 2010 4:00 A.M. 
Caddell on the Midterm Elections 

The  polling figures paint an astounding picture -- and not just for 
Democrats, but  for the political class as a whole.




 
 
In Jimmy Carter’s White House, Patrick Caddell was, in the  words of Teddy 
White, the “house Cassandra” — an all-too-candid pollster whose  prophecies 
spooked the president’s other advisors. Three decades later, Caddell  again 
is warning his fellow Democrats about electoral doom. As he sips an iced  
tea over lunch in midtown Manhattan, Caddell sighs and tells me that the 
lessons  of the Carter years appear to be all but forgotten by the current crop 
of  Democrats in Washington. 
“President Obama’s undoing may be his disingenuousness,” Caddell  says. 
After campaigning for post-partisanship, Obama, he observes, has lurched  
without pause to the left. “You can’t get this far from what you promised,”  
Caddell says, “especially when people invest in hope — you must understand 
that  obligation. The killer in American politics is disappointment. When you 
are  elected on expectations, and you fail to meet them, your decline 
steepens.” 
In 1979, as Carter’s poll numbers slid south amidst a sagging  economy, 
Caddell drafted a memo to the president urging him to recognize that  the 
nation was “deep in crisis.” Gazing upon today’s electoral landscape,  Caddell 
paints an even bleaker picture. “We may be at a pre-revolutionary  moment,” 
he says, unsmiling. “Everything is in motion.” This November, he  predicts, 
“will be more of a national referendum than any [midterm election]  since 
Watergate.” 
The polling data show how restless the country is. “A Rasmussen  poll from 
earlier this year showed just 21 percent of voters believing that the  
federal government enjoys the consent of the governed — an astounding figure,”  
Caddell says. “Then a CNN poll showed that 56 percent of Americans worried 
that  the federal government poses a direct threat to their freedom.” 
“Democrats are aware of this,” Caddell continues. “They know  that the 
general outcome is baked.” As the fall campaign kicks into gear, “the  
question now becomes whether Obama can mitigate their losses. You see them  
trying 
to localize their campaigns and pretending that they don’t know Nancy  
Pelosi. It’s all rather amusing.” 
Unlike President Reagan at his first-term midpoint, in 1982,  “Obama is not 
able to go out there and say, ‘Stay the course.’ That’s just not  
possible. The Democrats’ hope with health care was that ‘people will like it  
after 
we pass it.’ Well, they hate it, and you don’t see any effort to promote  
it. The Democrats had a chance to do this right — most people supported 
aspects  of reform — but because of the way it was passed, as a crime against  
democracy, the country has simply not accepted it. The lies, the browbeating, 
 the ‘deem and pass’ — all of it was a suicide mission.” 
On Monday, Gallup released a new weekly poll showing Republicans  leading 
Democrats by an unprecedented ten-point margin, 51 to 41 percent, in  
congressional voting preferences — the largest gap in Gallup’s history of  
tracking the midterm generic ballot. “I have never seen numbers like this,”  
Caddell says, shaking his head. “Unless Republicans can find some way to screw  
it up, they will win big, even though nobody really likes them, either.” 
Indeed, rather than a ringing endorsement of either major party,  Caddell 
sees November as a broader referendum on the political class — the  class, he 
says, to which Obama, and his political fate, are irrevocably  tied. 
“Democrats used to be the voice of the common man in America,  not his 
dictator,” Caddell laments. “Now, with Wall Street, their mantra is,  ‘We’ll 
take your money, but we won’t kiss.’ The people who own the party —  George 
Soros, the Center for American Progress, the public-employee union  bosses, 
rich folks flying private jets to ‘ideas festivals’ in Aspen — they’re  
Obama’s base.” 
Though Obama is bruised, Caddell is quick to note that he is far  from 
finished — a point, he says, that Republicans prefer to whisper in the  
backroom. He points to Obama’s summer strategy — a serious-minded speech on  
Iraq, 
a trip to New Orleans to address the rebuilding efforts — as evidence that  
the president is “attempting to be presidential, which is the best thing he 
can  do politically.” Carter, he observes, took a similar approach in 1978 —
 focusing  on the Camp David Accords and beefing up his foreign-policy 
portfolio. As  Caddell recalls, he advised the president that it was important 
not simply to  govern, but to lead. By October 1978, the Georgian’s approval 
numbers had  begun to tick up, and the Democrats lost only a handful of 
seats in the House  and Senate. 
“With Carter, I would argue that his failures were not of the heart or of  
intent, but, perhaps, of execution,” Caddell says. “He was never 
inconsistent  with what he originally envisioned. I can’t say the same for 
Obama.” 
Successful  presidents, Caddell argues, “realize that it is not about them — 
that the  country is bigger than their presidency. With Obama, it is always 
about  him. It’s a terrible thing to have to say, but I think that it has 
become  obvious.” 
Can Obama soften the blow at the eleventh hour? Caddell says it  will be 
tough. Any efforts by Obama to right his ship, he says, will still face  an 
electorate largely uninterested in new West Wing talking points or  
presidential maneuvers. Caddell believes that 2010 will be a louder, more  
raucous 
moment than 1978 in American politics. “The discontent is much larger  than the 
turnout at Glenn Beck rallies,” he says. “A sea of anger is churning —  
the tea parties are but the tip of the iceberg. People say they want to take  
their country back, and, to the Democrats’ chagrin, they’re very serious 
about  it.” 
As we part, Caddell, once the dashing young star of Democratic  
presidential politics as an advisor to George McGovern, Carter, and Gary Hart,  
acknowledges that his criticisms may ruffle some feathers or simply be shrugged 
 
off by Democratic leaders. Still, he says, it is important to sound the  
alarm. 
After all these years, Caddell laughs, “I know my role. I’m like  Toto in 
the Wizard of Oz. My job is to pull back the curtain to reveal  the little 
man with the microphone.” 
— Robert Costa is a political reporter  for National  Review.

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