Michelle Cottle: “Romney may be a good debater. He may even be a great debater. But at this point his team has fumbled the expectations game to the point where the governor will need to perform at a level well above anything we’ve seen from him to date if he wants to pull off the “W.” Just holding his own against the president — often a challenger’s primary hurdle — won’t change the game, and, at this point, a game changer is what people are demanding.”
Dubs Runs for President
A new children’s book by Dick Morris: Dubs Runs for President.
Suspected GOP Voter Fraud Spreads in Florida
Florida elections officials said that “at least 10 counties have identified suspicious and possibly fraudulent voter registration forms turned in by a firm working for the Republican Party of Florida,” the Los Angeles Times reports.
“The controversy in Florida — which began with possibly fraudulent forms that first cropped up in Palm Beach County — has engulfed the Republican National Committee, which admitted Thursday that it urged state parties in seven swing states to hire the firm, Strategic Allied Consulting.The RNC paid the company at least $3.1 million — routed through the state parties of Florida, Nevada, Colorado, North Carolina and Virginia — to register voters and run get-out-the-vote operations. Wisconsin and Ohio had not yet paid the firm for get-out-the-vote operations it was contracted to do.”
Akin Adviser Compares Him to Cult Leader
Kellyanne Conway, a consultant for U.S. Senate candidate Todd Akin (R), compared her client’s fortitude in staying in the race to that of deadly cult leader David Koresh, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports.
Said Conway: “I’ve expressed this to Todd as my client for a while now, I’ve expressed it to him directly. The first day or two where it was like the Waco with the David Koresh situation where they’re trying to smoke him out with the SWAT teams and the helicopters and the bad Nancy Sinatra records. Then here comes day two and you realize the guy’s not coming out of the bunker. Listen, Todd has shown his principle to the voters.”
Lawmaker Says Challenger is a Drunk
Rep. Allen West (R-FL) accuses challenger Patrick Murphy (D) of being a belligerent drunk in a tough new ad.
Bonus Quote of the Day
“Watching his father, George, eat an entire batch of home-made ice cream that was accidentally sweetened with salt, so that it wouldn’t go to waste, had a huge impact on Mitt. Waste is simply not tolerated.”
— Laurie Romney, quoted by the Colorado Statesman, describing her
father-in-law’s frugality.
GOP Pollster Says Obama Succeeded in Defining Romney
Susquehanna pollster Jim Lee acknowledged on a conference call for Pennsylvania Republicans that President Obama’s campaign did a good job defining Mitt Romney over the summer.
Why So Many Predictions Fail
Just published and highly reccommended: The Signal and the Noise: Why So Many Predictions Fail — but Some Don’t by Nate Silver.
Silver talks to AdWeek: “I kind of realized after writing this book that I don’t particularly like politics that much. I definitely like elections, as they’re fun to forecast and to watch evolve, but I don’t particularly like the day to day of politics or some of the people who end up getting involved.”
Paul Ryan May Be Worse Than the Hidden Camera Video
Noam Scheiber: “The conventional wisdom on Obama’s recent surge is that it’s due largely to Mitt Romney’s 47% disaster, and there’s clearly something to this. If nothing else, it’s given Team Obama grist for absolutely devastating ads. But it’s worth pointing out another dynamic that’s been overlooked here: The escalating disaster that is Paul Ryan.”
“At the time of his selection, a number of pundits argued Ryan’s strategic benefits, suggesting he would boost Romney by energizing conservatives, or by allowing Romney to run as the candidate of big ideas, or that he would at least be the party’s best defender of the Medicare plan Romney was going to have to defend whether he wanted to or not. This seemed like a stretch at the time–after all, Ryan’s Medicare plan proved to be a massive liability the one time voters weighed in on it. But who could say for sure? Fast forward a month-and-a-half and the numbers look pretty persuasive.”
I Am The Change
Just published: I Am The Change: Barack Obama and the Crisis of Liberalism by Charles Kesler.
The New York Times calls the book “that rarest of things, a cheap inflationary takedown — a book that so exaggerates the historical significance of this four-year senator from Illinois, who’s been at his new job even less time, that he becomes both Alien and Predator.”
Latest Swing State Polls
Here are the latest polls from the battleground states, updated as needed through the day:
Michigan: Obama 50%, Romney 46% (Gravis Marketing)
New Hampshire: Obama 50%, Romney 45% (American Research Group)
Pennsylvania: Obama 49%, Romney 42% (Morning Call/Muhlenberg College)
Virginia: Obama 49%, Romney 47% (American Research Group)
Cornyn Says Akin Can’t Win
Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), chairman of the GOP Senate campaign effort, told the Louisville Courier-Journal he didn’t think Rep. Todd Akin (R) could win in Missouri adding they have “no plans” to invest money in the Senate race.
Said Cornyn: “I just think that this is not a winnable race. We have to make tough calculations based on limited resources and where to allocate it, where it will have the best likelihood of electing a Republican senator.”
Earlier this week, the NRSC issued a statement suggesting it might reverse course and support Alkin.
World’s Worst Socialist
Bloomberg: “If President Barack Obama is trying to spread the wealth, he doesn’t have much to show for it… Since Obama took office in January 2009, wealthy Americans have continued to pull away from the rest of society. In the aftermath of the recession, income inequality in the U.S. reached a new high in 2011, Census Bureau data show.”
GOP Insiders No Longer See Senate Takeover
Republicans no longer think they’re going to retake the Senate, according to the latest National Journal Political Insiders Poll, “a stunning drop in optimism for a party that began 2012 confident it would regain control of the chamber.”
Just 4% of GOP insiders rate their chances as “high,” a free fall in confidence from February when 66% of Republicans were bullish they’d win the four seats necessary to take control.
Waiting for the Romney Comeback
Rick Klein: “He’s got ’em just where he wants ’em… or something like that. We’re about a week away from the Mitt Romney comeback – or at least the Mitt Romney comeback story. The race is bound to tighten again, and the first debate is the best opportunity to drive that tightening, from the challenger’s perspective. Just as conventional wisdom is that President Obama is currently leading the race, conventional wisdom also says that Romney will bounce back. The race can’t be over yet because it’s not over yet, and Romney is primed to be the beneficiary of that dynamic.”
Who is to Blame for Mitt Romney?
Jonathan Chait: “In what you might regard as an unhealthy sign for Mitt Romney’s campaign prospects, conservatives have turned to debating the question of who is to blame for nominating this man in the first place. Arch-conservatives Erick Erickson and Ben Domenech blame the moderate establishment for foisting Romney upon the base; relative moderates Ross Douthat and Daniel Larison blame the conservatives. Oddly, nobody seems interested in claiming credit for Romney’s nomination.”
“The case for Romney, such as it is, falls to his anonymous advisers, who tell Politico that he is a brilliant and wonderful man but sadly bad at politics… Being terrible at running for office sounds like a pretty serious drawback for a presidential nominee!”
Quote of the Day
“I mean, this is somebody who kind of makes Michele Bachmann look like a hippie.”
— Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO), on Morning Joe, saying challenger Todd Akin (R) is to the far right of the Republican Party.
Romney Needs a Game Changer
Both campaigns are attempting to lower expectations for next week’s debates, but First Read says “here’s the only expectation you need to know: Romney needs a game-changer, while Obama needs a split decision. That’s what happens when one person is behind and the other is ahead.”
Charlie Cook: “If the presidential race stays on its current course for another week or 10 days, Romney faces the very real prospect that Republican donors, super PACs, and other parts of the GOP support structure will begin to shift resources away from helping him and toward a last-ditch effort to win a Senate majority–which once seemed very likely–and to protect the party’s House majority.”
Charles Krauthammer: “His unwillingness to go big, to go for the larger argument, is simply astonishing. For six months, he’s been matching Obama small ball for small ball… When you’re behind, however, safe is fatal.”

