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Matthew Dowd

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Iowa Straw Poll: A Macbethian Event

Posted: 08/14/11 03:11 PM ET

AMES, Iowa -- As I approached the Hilton Coliseum at Iowa State University where the Republican straw vote took place Saturday, I noticed a sign saying the Shakespeare play Macbeth would be here soon. It seemed a fitting harbinger: a play about ambition and the twists and turns of fate. The three witches refrain of "Double, double, toil and trouble, Fire burn, and cauldron bubble" bounced around in my head as I made my way into the cauldron of activists rallying for their candidates.

The Ames straw vote of 2011 is now in the books, followed by the departure of Tim Pawlenty from the race on Sunday morning, and it gives us some indication of where this presidential race may now be heading. There are some interesting takeaways, some of which feel a little Shakespearean.


  1. Michele Bachmann's slim victory in the straw vote was historic. Here is a candidate who just got in the race, with little campaign experience and organization, and she beats every other person in the field. In the history of the Republican presidential nominating process, no woman has won one of the elimination rounds -- primary, caucus, to straw vote. Bachmann benefited from feminists such as Gloria Steinem and Betty Friedan, who paved the way by fighting for women's equal rights, but she is on the opposite side on nearly every social issue. Bachmann is now more of a force in conservative politics than Sarah Palin. Palin waited too long and now she has been eclipsed.

  2. Ron Paul's close second finish (153 votes shy of victory) is fascinating. Here is a Republican who is anti-war, pro-legalization of prostitution and drugs, and who basically thinks we did Iran wrong and should allow them to have nuclear weapons -- and he nearly wins the Republican Party's straw vote! It shows that Republican voters are not nearly as pure on all issues as many people think, and that if you have an authentic anti-Washington rhetoric and are genuine in your beliefs, you can do rather well. It's a lesson that we should pay attention to voters, rather than conservative leaders or commentators -- or radio hosts who say they speak for conservative voters.

  3. The results of the straw vote once again show that if you have a choice between passion and organization, pick passion every time. The top two candidates at the straw vote did not have the organization the other candidates' had, but they definitely had the commitment and passion of their followers. As we look forward, it is important to keep this in mind in how we assess the prospects of the remaining candidates.

  4. For all intents and purposes this has become basically a three- or four-person race: Mitt Romney, Rick Perry, Michele Bachmann, and Ron Paul. Pawlenty is out. While other candidates may stay in, this field has definitely been winnowed, and rather quickly. The debates coming up will be very important as these four candidates position themselves against each other, and seek to find voters. Further, as the other candidates drop out, watch whom they endorse, where their staff goes, and which direction their voters head.

  5. The temperature of the political environment among Republican voters is increasingly angry and hot. Candidates who have cool demeanors or images, or who don't arouse emotions (like Pawlenty and Huntsman) are in real trouble. This should be a real concern going forward for Romney, who has a businessman's logical approach to the campaign and who, when he uses heated rhetoric, doesn't always sound genuine. Republican voters are going with their hearts right now, and not necessarily their heads.

  6. My expectation is that the Republican establishment and many of the leaders around the country will begin to have discussions about coalescing around either Mitt Romney or Rick Perry. Most believe Bachmann and Paul have no real chance of winning the presidency, and nominating either could easily help reelect President Obama. Watch for signs of movement to start pushing activists to get behind Perry or Romney, and possibly some Republican super PACs involved in doing just that.

Many pundits have questioned whether this straw vote will matter, or will it really give us the direction for the race. I am one who believes it gives us a good indication of what is to come, though politics -- like life -- has a great tendency to be unpredictable, and to quote Macbeth, maybe "it is a tale, told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."


We will know which is which in due course, my friends.


This post originally appeared in National Journal.

 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adam of CA
Independent Information Hunter
05:06 PM on 08/15/2011
Mr. Dowd's insights clearly hints to the rumblings across the country by showing that the Straw Poll was about emotions. Very accurate assessment of the Straw Poll results.

These First Responders from Iowa are sending the message from the Mad-As-Hell generation that politics as usual is rejected. So many Comment Boards across the cyber web field are voicing the same disgust. And many talking heads have published that the time IS ripe to bury both parties and allow one party to arise in Nov. 2012 that can map the road for Americans to get jobs.

Mr. Dowd has sensed the winds of change in Ames, Iowa. He has yet to verify the same winds blow across the 49 other States. The Times Are A Changing, indeed!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alafonse
It's definitely a crap-shoot.
01:55 PM on 08/15/2011
Here's hoping Perry gets it.
I heard a recording of Perry on TV this morning...GD, he sounded just like GWB, only with better pronunciation!
Nearly crap-ped my drawers— his voice was like deja-vous of 8 years of nightmare politics.
01:51 PM on 08/15/2011
I'll take Richard III. Lying, manipulative, divisive, backstabbing and ultimately without a horse (understanding of the real economic situation - lack of jobs). In other words, mere political animals.
12:47 PM on 08/15/2011
"Angry and hot" is what the GOP electorate has been for too long. Rational thought is out, it's cool to be angry. When are the adults in the GOP going to speak up? Lower your tone and you'll get drowned out as weak.
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12:28 PM on 08/15/2011
Kucinich 2012.
10:36 AM on 08/15/2011
I agree with #6 -- it will be Romney or Perry -- most likely Perry because the GOP leaders know their base will not vote for a Mormon.
10:16 AM on 08/15/2011
Does anyone else find it ironic that people are talking about 'slimming down'. 'trimming the fat', making government 'leaner and meaner', all the while eating cubes of deep-fried butter rolled in chocolate?
laurelphot
your micro-bio.
10:29 AM on 08/15/2011
Like hoe the Republican Congress ralked about cutting wasteful spending at $174,000.00 to $195,000.00 in Salary each. And each having a Personal Staff of 10.
Hell, it was a Republican shindig, HYPOCRICY was di rigore!
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gutenmorgen
a.k.a. poopdeck
10:05 AM on 08/15/2011
What actually comes to my mind is Verdi's (last composed) opera "Falstaff".
01:54 PM on 08/15/2011
how bout the fate of the endlessly deceived common man in Berg's Wozzeck? Breakdown.
10:03 AM on 08/15/2011
The media love for Perry will wear off. The last thing they want is a clear front-runner. That's why they've been goading Perry and Chris Christie to get in the race. Because the idea of Romney or anyone else being declared the nominee this early would cause people at home to tune out. We saw this in 2008. As soon as McCain emerged as the presumptive nominee, the media lost interest in the Republican primaries and just focused on the horse race betwee Hillary and Obama. Now that Perry's in the race and Bachmann has had such a strong showing, expect more negative press coverage for the two of them and less for Romney. And before long, you'll hear them hyping Sarah Palin again along with Chris Christie and maybe even Jeb Bush.
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Ponderus
Enriched with lanolin.
09:53 AM on 08/15/2011
Republicans don't vote with their hearts, assuming they have any, they vote with their colons. That's why this country is in the crapper.
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modrocker
If I tell you who I am, my wife will disagree
09:07 AM on 08/15/2011
One more thing to remember about all of the excitement for Ricky Goodhair, and how he's going to shake things up. Remember 2008, when the GOP was just holding their breath until Mr. Excitement, Fred Thompson entered the race? I can still hear the thud of his crash landing. Now, Ricky seems a good deal more dynamic than Fallin' Fred, but then again so did T-Paw.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
raker
09:07 AM on 08/15/2011
The Iowa straw poll is a no-contest contest in which the loopiest candidates place highest, and the richest among them do best. So Bachman, Paul and Santorum were the stars in Iowa. What a surprise.
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modrocker
If I tell you who I am, my wife will disagree
08:51 AM on 08/15/2011
Something to remember about Rick Perry. There are few elected positions in America that are more of a figurehead job than Governor of Texas. Texas is owned and operated by the Texas legislature and the governor acts as little more than a rubber stamp. It's like singer Kinky Friedman, who ran a tongue-in-cheek campaign for governor, stated on his campaign posters, "Vote Kinky for governor of Texas. How hard can it be?" In Texas, not very. But it does give the governor more time to travel around the country and brush up on their "I'm presidential material" act. And in Ricky Goodhair's case, to keep that do lookin' sharp and pose with guns raised to make him look like Wyatt Earp resurrected. And he does have that Southern Baptist evangelist as politician schtick down to a science. I'm not sure how much mileage he's going to get out of that this time around though. It might work in Republican circles, but it's a bit transparent for general consumption. And as Mr. Dowd pointed out concerning Ron Paul, a candidate who comes off as sincere about what he says may make inroads. Perry seems about as sincere as a B-actor.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PrometheanSalvation
Bringing fire to cleanse the land.
12:39 PM on 08/15/2011
One important thing to remember is Perry is afraid to debate, he ducks out of them here in Texas when it's time. Can't do that when your running for president. I'm expecting to have a little fun watching him squirm.
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modrocker
If I tell you who I am, my wife will disagree
12:54 PM on 08/15/2011
Oh yeah, Rick's looking to get his hair mussed. He better keep that stylist nearby.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Republican = FAIL
07:51 AM on 08/15/2011
Bachman as Lady Macbeth, I can totally see it.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rf dude
Just an average Man of Bronze
03:19 AM on 08/15/2011
A heart and a head - the only two things I would NEVER associate with Republican Voting...
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vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
07:04 AM on 08/15/2011
a-men, brother