Whats Driving GOP Presidential Race: Two Polls Show

width=235By Clark S. Judge Texas Insider Report: WASHINGTON D.C. The best poll for grasping the ups & downs of the Republican presidential contest ran in the National Journal magazine 1 in late October and has been updated several times since.   In prior columns I have argued that GOP voters in this cycle are breaking differently than in 2008 when there were distinctly social economic and national security voters. In 2008 former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee won the social issue voters but was unacceptable to Republicans in the other two camps.  No candidate clearly captured the economic voters.  Arizona senator John McCain won the national security vote and was acceptable to both social issue and economic conservatives.  So McCain won the nomination. This year GOP primary voters are dividing on a line that looks more like the divide between Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush Republicans in the 1980 primaries.   The line of separation this year is no longer ideological.  Republicans are broadly of a common mind on what the country will need after four years of catastrophically misguided Democratic rule for the first two years both on Capitol Hill and in the White House. But they have different attitudes about tone style and intensity. To me it has seemed that those who look like the Bush voters of 1980 have gone to former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney. Those who look like the Reagan voters of almost thirty-two years ago have been searching.   At first a few parked with Minnesota congresswoman Michelle Bachman.  When Texas governor Rick Perry entered the race they rushed to him.  Then Perry width=234fumbled in debate all but announcingthat he was unprepared to be president and they rushed to business executive and radio talk host Herman Cain.   When Cains made it clear that he too lacked the background for the presidency they looked around again. By that time the buzz was building about former House speaker Newt Gingrich.  In debates he emerged again and again as the most knowledgeable cool headed and clear about policy of all the candidates on the stage.   Soon the Reaganesque vote was moving his way. All of this I inferred from everything I was seeing. But now the National Journal has attached numbers to the hunch. In a series of polls they have asked likely GOP primary voters their attitudes about the Tea Party.   Nor surprisingly half of GOP voters responded that they looked favorably on the Tea Party.  Forty five percent were neutral five percent hostile. The NJ grouped neutrals and hostiles together and then tracked the candidate preferences of pro-Tea Party versus the neutral/hostile voters.  As you can see from the first link below the neutral/hostile group has gone to Romney.   The pro-Tea Party voters have bounced around usually giving overall GOP leader or number two status to their favorite of the moment.   At the second link below you can see that their favorite now is Gingrich and of course he is leading in the overall polls. This is not to say that the game is up.   To date Romney has failed to give a coherent rationale for his candidacy.  His changing issue stances has left many Republicans worried that in office he wont follow through on cutting spending regulations and taxes. But as columnist William McGurn notes in this mornings Wall Street Journal he could turn his standing as a dazzlingly successful businessman into a plus in this economy and his knowledge of finance into unchallengeable bona fides for putting the nations spending and balance sheet in width=117order.  He has not to date but if he were to play to his strengths he might reestablish himself as the frontrunner in short order.   People are still listening. Meanwhile many continue to worry about Gingrichs capacity for boneheaded moves.  The significance of the debates is that they have given him a showcase to put what you might call the New Newt on display.  He is more likeable than people remember.  He has a manner on stage that fits well with the kind of personality we look for in presidents. Here is a test.  Think of all the general election match ups sine 1980:
  • Reagan versus Carter
  • Reagan versus Mondale
  • George H.W. Bush versus Clinton and so on through
  • Obama versus McCain
Ask yourself which candidate had the best temperament for the office?  Not which did I agree with on issues?  We are talking about temperament here.   In almost all cases (Bush versus Clinton is the major exception) when I have asked this question of both Republicans and Democrats the ultimate winner in each election has been the consensus pick. It is fair to say that Romney long ago established that he passes the temperament test against Mr. Obama.   In the debates of the past several months Gingrich has established that alone among the candidates who excite the Tea Party half of the party he passes it too. width=207(http://tinyurl.com/7nnvpw3) 1 (http://tinyurl.com/d92zrqh)  2 Clark S. Judge is managing director of White House Writers Group and chairman of Pacific Research Institute.
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