Thomas B. Edsall

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Thomas B. Edsall

The Huffington Post

Giuliani Poised To Launch His Own Version Of The "Southern Strategy"

November 4, 2007 12:01 PM


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Strategists for Rudy Giuliani are quietly preparing a significantly race-based campaign strategy to strengthen support among socially conservative white voters, in the South as well as in the North.

The former Mayor carries the burden of three marriages and a Brooklyn accent, but he has more race cards to play than any of his opponents, and his success in the fight for the nomination - according to close observers of the campaign -- may depend on how aggressively he plays his hand.

The themes the campaign are lining up for renewed emphasis are those reflecting Giuliani's confrontational stance towards black New Yorkers and their white liberal allies, as well as his record of siding decisively with the police against minorities who launched protests alleging police brutality during the years he was mayor from 1994-2001.

Giuliani's eight years as New York's chief executive exemplified a Northern adaptation of the GOP's politically successful "Southern strategy" - the strategy playing on white resistance to and resentment of federal legislation passed in the 1960s mandating desegregation - resistance that produced a realignment in the South and fractured the Democratic loyalties of white working class voters in the urban North from 1968 to 2004.

"Race is at the heart of Rudy's story," according to Wayne Barrett, one of Giuliani's preeminent biographers. Giuliani ended race and gender preferences in New York's city contracting. He eliminated open admissions at City University and re-instituted testing requirements for the school -- requirements which disadvantaged black and Latino applicants seeking to complete the four-year curriculum. Also angering black leaders, Giuliani instituted tough law and order policies that were consistently cited by his administration as the driving force pushing crime rates down over 60 percent during his tenure as Mayor.

Equally important in courting a racially conservative Republican primary electorate in the current presidential election, Giuliani brought to a halt the black and minority domination of New York city politics.

In 1993, Giuliani defeated New York's first black mayor, David Dinkins, by 53,367 votes, 49.3 to 46.4, after calling Dinkins a "Jesse Jackson Democrat." In 1997, Giuliani used the mayoral bid of Al Sharpton as a wedge issue against the other Democratic primary candidates, describing their refusal to renounce the controversial black leader as an insult to New Yorkers. In effect, Rudy stood up to and beat three icons of the black community - Dinkins, Sharpton and Jackson - all figures recognizable to white Republican primary voters.

In addition, Giuliani has begun an attempt to appeal to voters who disagree with him on such issues as gay marriage and abortion by citing his record as an authoritarian defender of the traditional social order against the assault of cultural liberalism - a record dovetailing with his stands on racial issues.

He closed the Brooklyn Museum after it put on display a painting of the Virgin Mary covered with Elephant dung. He presided over the clean-up and revitalization of a sex-dominated Times Square, the most notorious red-light district of a city considered a den of sin by the Religious Right.

"Giuliani made it a priority to clean up the smut from Times Square in New York. Pre-Giuliani and post Giuliani are worlds apart when it comes to pornography in that area," Christian Broadcasting Network correspondent David Brody recently wrote on his blog. "Giuliani gets bashed as the pro-choice, pro-gay rights social liberal. But on this issue of pornography will social conservatives admit that Giuliani was solid?"

Uncommitted conservative Republicans contend that Giuliani should move quickly to capitalize on his mayoral successes, independent of his widely heralded performance in the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

"He should be showcasing those things where he took on the politically correct forces, the Manhattan liberal establishment," said conservative operative Craig Shirley.

Giuliani leads in virtually every national poll by an average of 12 points. But former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney currently holds a very strong 13.5 point lead in Iowa, a solid 8 point lead in New Hampshire, and a slight lead in Michigan.

As a result, Romney is currently favored to win two, and possibly three, of "first in the nation" contests. Doing so would push Romney to a dominant position in the GOP primary.

The fourth key Republican test is the South Carolina primary with a GOP electorate that is overwhelmingly white and disproportionately conservative on social and racial issues.

For the first seven months of this year, Giuliani led in 15 out of 16 polls of South Carolina voters. In August and September, however, Former Tennessee Senator Fred Thomson moved slightly ahead of Giuliani. In the most recent surveys, Romney has taken a razor-thin lead.

If Giuliani were to lose the first three contests to Romney, his chances of winning the nomination would sharply diminish and perhaps disappear. For that reason, South Carolina is becoming crucial to Giuliani's survival, and hizzoner needs to regain his early advantage there, wresting sympathetic voters away from encroaching competitors.

"We will make sure voters understand what he did as mayor of New York, over and above 9/11," concurred a key source in the Giuliani campaign. "I sure would if I were him," said Republican pollster Glen Bolger who notes the appeal of Giuliani's record to conservative voters.

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- paixa3 See Profile I'm a Fan of paixa3 permalink

Let me see, 9-11 happened in Miami?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:46 AM on 11/06/2007
- msmaggie See Profile I'm a Fan of msmaggie permalink

This is why Democrats lose elections. What this article accuses Guiliani of is what? Defeating Dinkins? Cleaning up Times Square? Ending affirmative action programs? Dissing Al Sharpton?

There is a lot that is deeply objectionable about Rudy, but this knee jerk, tired old liberal bullshit: for the love of God, get some new material.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:41 AM on 11/06/2007
- pzdoff See Profile I'm a Fan of pzdoff permalink

Yup, he's gonna atart doin photo ops at KFC, and talkin like Fred Thompson. That oughta do it........asshole

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:40 AM on 11/06/2007
- LeonFreilich See Profile I'm a Fan of LeonFreilich permalink

THE GIULIANI WATCH

Worn in Dayton

Or in Devon,

It always says

9:11.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 PM on 11/05/2007
- SeanGardner See Profile I'm a Fan of SeanGardner permalink

Great article Mr. Edsall. You wrote something that I believe is very apopo:

"Giuliani leads in virtually every national poll by an average of 12 points. But former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney currently holds a very strong 13.5 point lead in Iowa, a solid 8 point lead in New Hampshire, and a slight lead in Michigan."

This means that Giuliani, for all of the leads in those NATIONAL POLLS, he is trailing in the early contests, which means that if he loses those contests, those big leads in NATIONAL POLLS will start to come down.

The same can be said for the Democratic side. Hillary is leading in the NATIONAL POLLS, but if she loses Iowa and New Hampshire, those commanding leads in the NATIONAL POLLS will start to come down.

So no leader in the NATIONAL POLLS - Giuliani or Clinton - can rely on those polls when they don't accurately reflect what's going on in the early contest.

Other than that, I love your analysis of the contentious relationship between Giuliani and blacks, latinos, and white liberals in New York City. Most people were unaware of that. Thanks for touching on it.

As always, your articles rock.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:20 PM on 11/05/2007
- TheSchul See Profile I'm a Fan of TheSchul permalink

Democrats, and those who like democracy in general, need to start thinking of ways to discuss the Giuliani threat in terms that are different from the way in which we discuss those with whom we simply disagree.

Giuliani is not McCain, Romney, Thompson or even George W. Bush. Giuliani is a far more insidious threat to our democracy. He has hown throughout his career that he does not respect the inistitutions of democracy when they get in his way. That is simply unacceptable from anyone running for the Presidency.

How can we stop discussing his strategies and policies as if he were just another candidate and start framing him as the true choice he represents, a radical shift away from a constitutional democracy?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 11/05/2007
- Alessan See Profile I'm a Fan of Alessan permalink

People in the south don't want Rudy Guiliani values. Most can't even pronounce his name.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 PM on 11/05/2007
- didereaux See Profile I'm a Fan of didereaux permalink

Well, they solved Rudys' problem with cows....sort of!(yes, it's kid &work-place safe)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/12461951@N03/
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2083/1876509586_698ad16994_o.jpg

;)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 11/05/2007
- Donelsco See Profile I'm a Fan of Donelsco permalink

Giuliani's southern strategy won't work for him. Southern conservatives will remember how Bill Clinton used his "Sister Soja" moment on them. He applied that tactic to show his Bubba bonafides. After seeing what we got it would be very surprising if this liberal trick worked again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 11/05/2007
- Carlee See Profile I'm a Fan of Carlee permalink

Rudy is not ready to be president. He is horribly uninformed and dismissive
http://joeleonardi.wordpress.com/2007/11/03/iran-%e2%80%94-the-next-great-threat-too-much-like-the-last/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 AM on 11/05/2007
- Monrocsol See Profile I'm a Fan of Monrocsol permalink

Rudy is the worse person alive to be president.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 AM on 11/05/2007
- Beckyjo See Profile I'm a Fan of Beckyjo permalink

I am not surprised to read everything in this post. I am so afraid of Giuliani. He is simply an extension of Pres. Bush. They are joined at the hip in relation to their cowboy impulses. It appears they get up each morning feeling it is necessary to prove how tough they are. Giuliani is a thug...he acts like a thug...he talks like a thug...his close associates are thugs and he is easily led by bigger thugs. Surely this is not the kind of president we need at this scary time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 AM on 11/05/2007
- bushdoescrack See Profile I'm a Fan of bushdoescrack permalink

rudy's 9/11 bullshit will be lost on the southern inbred's who believe 9/11 is a convenience store.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 AM on 11/05/2007
- SaintZak See Profile I'm a Fan of SaintZak permalink

Oh, he's playing the race card. I thought he'd just campaign in Scarlet O'Hara drag.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 AM on 11/05/2007
- VOTER See Profile I'm a Fan of VOTER permalink

Which dress style will the Rude One wear while

campaigning in the South?

For Rudy, this is a very important question and the

only one he is capable of answering.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:06 AM on 11/05/2007
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Nico Pitney is National Editor at the Huffington Post.
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Thomas B. Edsall is the Political Editor of the Huffington Post. He is also Joseph Pulitzer II and Edith Pulitzer Moore Professor at the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism.
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Sam Stein is a Political Reporter at the Huffington Post, based in Washington, D.C. Previously he has worked for Newsweek Magazine, the New York Daily News and the investigative journalism group Center for Public Integrity.
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Jason Linkins is a Political Reporter at the Huffington Post, covering media and politics. He's based in Washington, DC. Previously, he wrote for HuffPo's Eat The Press, and has also contributed to DCist and Wonkette.
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Rachel Weiner is Associate Politics Editor at the Huffington Post.
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Katharine Zaleski is News Editor at the Huffington Post.
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