Martin O'Malley
Related: About this forumVia the National Journal:
But an enduring rule of Iowa politics, the candidate reminds listeners, is that "the inevitable front-runner is always inevitable right up until caucus night." (That would be Hillary.) Rule No. 2: "The challenger who is surging in July is never the candidate who is surging in January." (That would be Bernie.) Here, the governor erupts in laughter. "So, by golly, you'll be glad to know that we are preventing ourselves from surging too early!" (snip)
O'Malley's camp expresses confidence that the Left ultimately will calm down and find its way to their man. "Bernie is going to be useful to us," says Appleby. "He is a stalking horse. I think he is carrying the ideas that Elizabeth Warren has and Martin has, tooa kind of economic populism." But as appealing as Sanders is with his purity and independence and feistiness, says Appleby, "it doesn't seem to me very likely that the Democratic Party is going to nominate a 74-year-old socialist." And when Sanders "collapses," he predicts, "Martin will take up that mantle."
Hyers makes a similar argument. "The first thing we needed was a contest," he tells me. "When I was having this same conversation six months ago, people were like: 'It's no competition. Hillary has got 85 percent of the vote. It's going to be her. Why are you even bothering?' " Now, says Hyers, the media and public are paying attention to this as a real race, which means his guy can get on with step two: "We've got to make our case." Even this second step is facilitated by all the Bernie hubbub, argues Hyers: He notes that, without it, the Hall of Fame Dinner would never have turned into a big cattle call with saturation coverage. As it was, the national media turned out in droves, "and our guy got to shine a little."
(For the record, this is the Martin O'Malley group and it is talking about his campaign strategy.)
I have long felt this way about how the campaign is dealing with Bernie Sanders and how they will go up against CLinton for the nomination.
If anyone wants to go back to the very early posts after this group was created, it was clear to me that this campaign always knew it would be an uphill battle against SoS Clinton. Right now they are keeping on point and waiting for things to settle down.
"the inevitable front-runner is always inevitable right up until caucus night."
OMalleys central argument has been heavy on experience rather than visceral populist anger.
I am not here to knock the Senator, but there is something to be said about political campaigns. I understand this strategy. I like what the campaign is doing and how they are approaching the road to a nomination.
elleng
(136,055 posts)"and our guy got to shine a little." Was much more than 'a little,' he won the night, and not only according to US, but then came BLM, took the wind out of our sails.
'OMalleys central argument has been heavy on experience rather than visceral populist anger' absolutely! I compared him with bernie @ Urban League, watched @ c-span last night, and MO'M's SO much more appealing to me, he's substantive and bernie is a grumpy complainer. Of course they're OUR complaints, all of us progressives, but we need a person with practical solutions!
This race reminds me so much of 2004. Sanders is the Dean of the hour and Kerry is the guy the media laughed at for being boring and delusional. Then, Kerry came on strong at events and debates and ended up winning Iowa.
Unfortunately, now we have a Hillary sucking up all the media attention with her scandals and name recognition.