OPINION:
Mitt Romney is the most improbable of presidential candidates - a weak juggernaut.
He is poised to sweep every primary contest - a first for a non-incumbent. Yet in Republican ranks there’s an abiding sense that he should be beatable - and beaten.
It’s not that Mr. Romney doesn’t have fans. His events in New Hampshire were packed to the rafters and felt like general-election rallies. He’s surging in polls in South Carolina and Florida.
Still, the non-Mitt mood just won’t go away. Indeed, it’s intensifying. One reason for that is people are starting to doubt whether he is, in fact, the best candidate to beat President Obama. For instance, you hear conservatives wondering more and more whether all of the attention from the White House is a head fake. Mr. Romney certainly makes a convenient foil for a presidential campaign already in populist overdrive. The desperate attacks from Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry on his career in the private sector are indefensible, but Mr. Romney has a gift for inviting them. You can be sure Mr. Obama is grateful to Mr. Gingrich and Mr. Perry for making them bipartisan critiques.
Still, I suspect there’s no head fake. Mr. Romney has his faults, but his 2-percent-milk personality makes him hard to demonize. He seems more like a superhelpful manager at a rental-car company than a fire-and-brimstone preacher. The White House would dearly love the opportunity to run against a culture warrior. It seems many in the media would like the same thing. Hence the absurd grilling of the candidates in Saturday night’s ABC/Yahoo/WMUR-TV debate.
For reasons that remain mysterious, the moderators wasted vast swaths of time quizzing the candidates on homosexual marriage, whether they thought states could ban condoms and how Rick Santorum would respond if one of his sons declared his homosexuality. Because, as we all know, how a president would treat his hypothetically homosexual son is the defining issue of our times.
Mr. Romney was at his best swatting away the swarm of inanities at the debate - birth control is “working just fine.” He’s weakest, however, when discussing himself. In this, he is the anti-Obama. The president is never more eloquent and heartfelt than when he is talking about himself; it’s his ideas he can’t move.
Mr. Romney, meanwhile, has the opposite problem. Voters can buy his policies; it’s the salesman who leaves them unsure. For instance, in the Sunday “Meet the Press” debate, Mr. Romney suggested that he didn’t run for re-election as governor of Massachusetts because to do so would be vain or selfish somehow. “That would be about me.”
Newt Gingrich ridiculed that as “pious baloney.”
And he was right. Mr. Romney’s claim that he’s just a businessman called to serve - Cincinnatus laying down his PowerPoint - is nonsense. Mr. Romney, the son of a politician, has been running for office, holding office or thinking about running for office for more than two decades. “Just level with the American people,” Mr. Gingrich growled. “You’ve been running … at least since the 1990s.”
For some reason, Mr. Romney can’t do that - or at least it seems that he can’t. His authentic inauthenticity problem isn’t going away. It’s sapping enthusiasm from the rank and file. The turnout in Iowa was disastrously low, barely higher than the turnout in 2008 - and if Ron Paul hadn’t brought thousands of non-Republicans to the caucus sites, it would have been decidedly lower than in 2008. That’s an ominous sign given how much enthusiasm there should be for making Mr. Obama a one-term president. It’s almost as if Mr. Romney’s banality is infectious.
Mr. Santorum’s tie in Iowa is widely attributed to his diligent door-to-door campaigning. The Iowa political hacktocracy is deeply invested in the idea that the retail politicking in Iowa pays off. But it wasn’t paying off three weeks before the voting, when Mr. Santorum was in single digits. No, Mr. Santorum’s Iowa success was attributable almost entirely to Mr. Gingrich’s Newtacular implosion. Mr. Santorum was simply the last non-Romney standing who hadn’t been torn apart by the press or Mr. Romney’s super PACs.
The most persuasive case for Mr. Romney has always been that if he’s the nominee, the election will be a referendum on Mr. Obama. But that calculation always assumed Republicans will vote for their nominee in huge numbers no matter what. That may well still be the case, but it feels less guaranteed every day.
Every four years, pundits and activists talk about how cool it would be to have a brokered convention. This is the first time I can remember when people say it may be necessary.
Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.
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