Dick Morris: Rick Perry has started acting like the new Nixon
October 25, 2011 12:00 AM | 2255 views | 4 4 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
The most effective move in electoral politics is to rebut an opponent’s charges and show how they are misrepresentations and falsehoods. Media guru Tony Schwartz once said, “Everyone likes a fighter, but nobody likes a dirty fighter.”

Negatives have their place in every campaign. But when one of them is an obvious stretch, twisting facts beyond recognition to mislead voters, it can backfire massively. All the more so if it concerns a candidate’s personal life. When a negative blows up in the face of the candidate who threw it, voters learn instantly about his character. They don’t have to rummage through musty, dusty old voting records to see what he is about. They saw his below-the-belt hit with their own eyes, and then voters can draw the appropriate conclusions about what manner of man he is.

That’s how it was in the recent CNN debate in Nevada. Rick Perry accused Mitt Romney of hiring illegal immigrants at his Massachusetts home. Posturing and preening, Perry denounced Romney’s “hypocrisy” in attacking his immigration record while hiring illegals himself. You could have heard the gasps around the country as Perry laid out his negative.

Everyone understood that it was the illegal immigration issue that had laid Perry low, deflating his post-announcement boom, dropping him from first place to fourth or fifth in most polls. Now, in a stroke, Perry was seeking to embarrass the candidate who had the greatest hand in pushing him down — Romney — by painting him with the illegal immigration brush.

Unruffled, Romney, at first laughed off the charge saying, “I have never hired an illegal immigrant in my life.” He went on to talk about the underlying issue of illegal immigrants, repeating his charges that Perry’s instate tuition scholarships for their children was a “magnet” to attract them. OK, but everybody watching the debate wanted more about what Romney really did. We all wondered if there was any truth to Perry’s charge, and we were not satisfied with Romney’s laughing disclaimer.

Then Perry, sensing weakness, honed in on the charge pushing it again. This time, Romney delivered a crushing rebuttal. The illegal immigrants had been gardeners hired by the landscaping company he used to mow his lawn. When he found out they were hiring illegals, he ordered them replaced them with legal workers.

“I’m running for public office, I can’t be hiring illegal immigrants,” he says he explained to the landscaping company. Then, when the company was found to be continuing to hire illegals, Romney fired them and hired a company more in compliance with the law. Case closed. But Perry wasn’t finished. He hammered Romney again with the charge, even though we now all accepted Romney’s version of what happened. Rather than rebut or correct any errors in Romney’s portrayal of the events, he just repeated the charge as if Romney had not answered it.

To make matters worse, he tried to out-shout Romney, horning in on his time. Verbally, it was the same kind of move Al Gore made in the 2000 debates when he menacingly moved over to Bush’s lectern to horn in on his space. Similarly, Rick Lazio tried it, that same year, when he walked over to Hillary Clinton’s podium in their Senate race to hand her a letter. A debate no-no.

The result is that Perry is now being seen as a bully, a smear artist, a con man and a dirty fighter — Nixon at his worst. He has amplified and compounded the damage he suffered over the illegal immigration issue with this McCarthyite personal attack.

In a larger sense, Perry is like the concert performer who can’t get it together to do well in a studio. On stage, surrounded by an adoring public and an energized audience, he beams. He gets his energy from his surroundings. But in a studio or a debate room, amid only competitors and journalists, he can’t get any mojo. He doesn’t get energy from confrontation and can’t make his points stick.

If you can’t debate, you can’t win the election against Obama, and you shouldn’t be nominated. Now after four tries, Perry still can’t win a debate. It’s time to move on.

Dick Morris is a commentator for Fox News.
Comments
(4)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
anonymous
|
October 26, 2011
One thing about Perry is he is no flip flopper.

NO ONE has created more jobs in any state than Perry. Texas is freaking BOOMING. I just cannot abide a flip flopper and liar like Mitt Romney. Mitt is the 2012 version of McCain.

Honest, ethical and moral folks will not support a man of Romney's character.
ATL-9
|
October 25, 2011
mtbrimstone,

Why don't you tell us who you like and why rather than attacking Romney.

If you believe Rick Perry has the experience and, more importantly, the intellect to lead the largest enterprise in the World then tell us why. It serves no useful purpose to make uninformed statements about Romney.

For the record, Romney did not put in place a provision to "allow illegal immigrants to receive full heath benefits for free" as you indicate.
mtbrimstone
|
October 25, 2011
How about we take a look at Romney's hypocrisy. The state health care plan he implemented ("Romneycare") included provisions that would allow illegal immigrants to receive full health benefits for free. Yet Romney went on the attack, claiming the college tuition breaks given to illegal immigrants (who had to have resided in Texas for at least 3 years and graduated from a Texas high school) was a magnet. But his free benefits under his Massechusetts health care program were not? Also, "the same kind of move Al Gore made in the 2000 debates when he menacingly moved over to Bush’s lectern to horn in on his space" in the last debate was not anything Perry had did or said, but many commentators compared it to when Romney laid his hand on Perry's shoulder as Perry spoke. Perry pressed Romney in this last debate to the point where, for the first time, Romney broke from his plastic debate-demeanor and showed his true colors. Romney made the mistake of stating, "I’m running for public office, I can’t be hiring illegal immigrants." Romney showed to the American audience that he only truly "cares" if his campaign is at stake. This confirmed to many the flip-flopper Romney truly is. Perry rose up to the occassion, pressed Romney hard, and drew the true Romney out. For many, this was a pivotal moment in the debates.
ATL9
|
October 25, 2011
Romney is obviously extremely intelligent and has a record of turning around failing enterprises like companies, the Olympics, and the State of Massachusetts.

He is a much better option than Perry and anyone who studies his biography would be impressed. He graduated as a Baker Scholar from Harvard earning joint degrees in Law and Business.

Perhaps he isn't the best politician but clearly he'd make the best President. Romney in 2012.
*We welcome your comments on the stories and issues of the day and seek to provide a forum for the community to voice opinions. All comments are subject to moderator approval before being made visible on the website but are not edited. The use of profanity, obscene and vulgar language, hate speech, and racial slurs is strictly prohibited. Advertisements, promotions, spam, and links to outside websites will also be rejected. Please read our terms of service for full guides