Thoughts?

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August 13, 2012
Romney’s Ryan pick is meant to shake up the race, excite conservatives, rouse a 
jaded media, and save the day. But American politics is littered with bold and 
improbable decisions that didn’t work out well.
Peter Beinart
August 13, 2012
Why did Mitt Romney choose Paul Ryan? Movies. In action movies, the climactic 
scene often goes something like this: The bad guys have captured the hero. He’s 
bound and gagged thousands of miles from civilization as the final minutes tick 
away until the detonation of the super-thermo-subatomic death ray that will 
kill both him and half of humanity. In desperation, he hatches a wildly 
improbable escape plan, mutters to himself, “This is just crazy enough to 
work,” and saves the planet.

In real life things rarely work out that way. In real life you rarely hear 
stories of people on the verge of bankruptcy who put their last remaining 
dollars on a 100-to-1 shot at the track and end up living happily ever after as 
a result. A big part of the reason people go to the movies, in fact, is to 
escape the unpleasant reality that in real life people in bad circumstances who 
hatch bold and improbable plans often ended up making things worse.

Which brings us to the Ryan pick. The argument that Romney needed to shake up 
the race makes sense. He was getting killed on Bain and tax returns; 
independents were deciding they didn’t much like him; right-wing bigmouths were 
starting to mutiny. Choosing Rob Portman or Tim Pawlenty wouldn’t have changed 
that storyline. To the contrary, it would have confirmed Romney’s image as 
cautious, dull, and perhaps even resigned to defeat.

The Ryan pick, by contrast, was guaranteed to excite conservatives. And it was 
likely to elicit a positive reception from the mainstream press too, at least 
initially, because the mainstream press is deeply biased against things it 
considers boring, which the Ryan selection is not.

But American politics is littered with bold and improbable decisions that don’t 
work out very well. Jimmy Carter’s decision to demand his entire cabinet’s 
resignation, seclude himself in the woods, and then deliver a speech decrying 
America’s spiritual collapse was bold. So was candidate Walter Mondale’s 
decision to declare that he’d raise taxes in 1984. Geraldine Ferraro was a bold 
vice-presidential pick; so was Dan Quayle; so was Sarah Palin. It was bold for 
Ronald Reagan to try to win over the Iranian regime by selling them weapons and 
then divert the money to Nicaragua’s contras. It was bold for Bill Clinton to 
put his wife in charge of health-care reform. It was bold when Al Gore invaded 
George W. Bush’s space in their third presidential debate. The Iraq War was 
very, very bold.

Not all high-risk political ventures fail, of course. (Obama’s strike against 
Osama bin Laden worked out pretty well.) But with this one, the chances of 
failure look pretty good. Mitt Romney has now tied his presidential fortunes to 
Paul Ryan’s budget plan. He may say he doesn’t endorse all the plan’s 
specifics, but as a matter of political reality, he already has. Politically, 
Ryan’s budget plan is what defines him. It’s why conservatives wanted him on 
the ticket. Now, some Republicans are saying that regardless of whether you 
agree with all the details in Ryan’s plan, what matters is that he’s put one 
forward while Obama hasn’t. But that’s too meta.

Voters aren’t going to reward Romney and Ryan for their boldness in putting 
forward a plan any more than they rewarded Mondale for his boldness in 
proposing to raise taxes. They’re going to decide whether they like what they 
know of the plan and in particular what they know of Ryan’s plans for Medicare.

In the last couple of days, conservatives have urged the Romney campaign not to 
duck the Medicare fight, but instead to act aggressively to turn it to their 
advantage. But the argument over cutting Medicare didn’t begin last Saturday. 
It’s been going on for decades, with Republicans almost always on the losing 
side.

Ideologues are forever convincing themselves that if only they can find 
aggressive and articulate spokespeople, they can convince the public to believe 
things it didn’t believe previously, but they’re usually wrong. Barack Obama, a 
fairly persuasive guy, couldn’t convince Americans to support closing 
Guantanamo Bay or paying higher energy bills to combat global warming. And the 
Romney-Ryan duo is unlikely to convince most Americans to support dramatically 
changing (and likely imperiling) Medicare because when it comes to Medicare, 
most Americans just don’t share the priorities of the Republican right.

The first big difference is this: what keeps Paul Ryan and his Tea Party 
backers awake at night is the nation’s debt. (This didn’t keep Ryan from 
backing that vast, unpaid-for new government program called the Iraq War, but 
that’s another column.) According to the Pew Research Center, 84 percent of 
Republicans call the reducing budget deficit a “top priority.” That’s only 6 
points lower than the percentage who call “strengthening the nation’s economy” 
a top priority and 7 points higher than the percentage who assign top-priority 
status to “improving the job situation.” Among Republicans, in other words, 
America’s fiscal plight is as worrying as its economic plight, or at least 
they’re considered pretty much the same thing.

This helps explain the enthusiasm for Ryan, a guy more associated with 
rethinking budgets than creating jobs. The problem is that while swing voters 
also care about the budget deficit, they don’t care as much as Republicans. 
Among independents, according to Pew, “strengthening the economy” outpolls 
“reducing the budget deficit” by 22 points. “Improving the job situation” 
outpolls it by 19 points. The message is clear: While Republicans seem to 
assume that anything that cuts the deficit—even if it causes pain—is good for 
the economy, most other Americans don’t.

What’s more, even when it comes to cutting the deficit, most Americans don’t 
believe in doing it exclusively through tax cuts. According to Pew, in fact, 
even a majority of rank-and-file Republicans prefer cutting the deficit through 
both tax hikes and spending cuts than doing so through spending cuts alone. And 
when asked about Medicare spending, Americans want it to go up by a factor of 
more than 3 to 1. It’s not that most Americans could never stomach any cuts in, 
or changes to, Medicare, but given how much they value the program, they 
consider such changes a last resort. And they suspect that right-wing 
Republicans, given their ideological antipathy to federal domestic spending, 
consider such cuts a first resort instead.

It’s hard to blame Romney’s advisers for gambling on Ryan. Yes, turning the 
campaign into a referendum on Medicare cuts doesn’t bring the greatest odds of 
success. But if you believe Romney was on a losing trajectory already, what was 
there to lose? Except maybe the House and Senate.

    



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