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DEJA VU!!! - Anatomy of Smear Campaign by Rick Davis in 2004!

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Median Democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-01-08 11:21 AM
Original message
DEJA VU!!! - Anatomy of Smear Campaign by Rick Davis in 2004!
Edited on Fri Aug-01-08 11:41 AM by Median Democrat
Here is the news you just don't get on the MSM. First, notice the author of this article, yup its Rick Davis, McCain's current campaign manager.

Second, notice the date, yup, way back in 2004.

Third, notice the elements of a smear campaign described: (a) anonymous (Rove) smears by opponents; and (b) response by the McCain campaign. However, the element not specifically discussed in this story by Davis, but discussed by KOS in an article discussing this article, is that when McCain responded to these anonymous smears, the Bush campaign responded forcefully by accusing MCCAIN of negative campaigning. Sounds familiar? Feeling deja vu?

http://www.boston.com/news/politics/president/articles/2004/03/21/the_anatomy_of_a_smear_campaign/

/snip

The anatomy of a smear campaign
By Richard H. Davis | March 21, 2004

Every presidential campaign has its share of hard-ball political tactics, but nothing is more discomforting than a smear campaign. The deeply personal, usually anonymous allegations that make up a smear campaign are aimed at a candidate's most precious asset: his reputation. The reason this blackest of the dark arts is likely to continue is simple: It often works.

The premise of any smear campaign rests on a central truth of politics: Most of us will vote for a candidate we like and respect, even if we don't agree with him on every issue. But if you can cripple a voter's basic trust in a candidate, you can probably turn his vote. The idea is to find some piece of personal information that is tawdry enough to raise doubts, repelling a candidate's natural supporters.

All campaigns do extensive research into their opponent's voting record and personal life. This so-called "oppo research" involves searching databases, combing through press clips, and asking questions of people who know (and preferably dislike) your opponent. It's not hard to turn up something a candidate would rather not see on the front page of The Boston Globe.

It's not necessary, however, for a smear to be true to be effective. The most effective smears are based on a kernel of truth and applied in a way that exploits a candidate's political weakness.

Having run Senator John McCain's campaign for president, I can recount a textbook example of a smear made against McCain in South Carolina during the 2000 presidential primary. We had just swept into the state from New Hampshire, where we had racked up a shocking, 19-point win over the heavily favored George W. Bush. What followed was a primary campaign that would make history for its negativity.

In South Carolina, Bush Republicans were facing an opponent who was popular for his straight talk and Vietnam war record. They knew that if McCain won in South Carolina, he would likely win the nomination. With few substantive differences between Bush and McCain, the campaign was bound to turn personal. The situation was ripe for a smear.

It didn't take much research to turn up a seemingly innocuous fact about the McCains: John and his wife, Cindy, have an adopted daughter named Bridget. Cindy found Bridget at Mother Theresa's orphanage in Bangladesh, brought her to the United States for medical treatment, and the family ultimately adopted her. Bridget has dark skin.

Anonymous opponents used "push polling" to suggest that McCain's Bangladeshi born daughter was his own, illegitimate black child. In push polling, a voter gets a call, ostensibly from a polling company, asking which candidate the voter supports. In this case, if the "pollster" determined that the person was a McCain supporter, he made statements designed to create doubt about the senator.

Thus, the "pollsters" asked McCain supporters if they would be more or less likely to vote for McCain if they knew he had fathered an illegitimate child who was black. In the conservative, race-conscious South, that's not a minor charge. We had no idea who made the phone calls, who paid for them, or how many calls were made. Effective and anonymous: the perfect smear campaign.

Some aspects of this smear were hardly so subtle. Bob Jones University professor Richard Hand sent an e-mail to "fellow South Carolinians" stating that McCain had "chosen to sire children without marriage." It didn't take long for mainstream media to carry the charge. CNN interviewed Hand and put him on the spot: "Professor, you say that this man had children out of wedlock. He did not have children out of wedlock." Hand replied, "Wait a minute, that's a universal negative. Can you prove that there aren't any?"

Campaigns have various ways of dealing with smears. They can refute the lies, or they can ignore them and run the risk of the smear spreading. But "if you're responding, you're losing." Rebutting tawdry attacks focuses public attention on them, and prevents the campaign from talking issues.

We chose to address the attacks by trying to get the media to focus on the dishonesty of the allegations and to find out who was making them. We also pledged to raise the level of debate by refusing to run any further negative ads -- a promise we kept, though it probably cost us the race. We never did find out who perpetrated these smears, but they worked: We lost South Carolina by a wide margin.

The only way to stop the expected mud-slinging in 2004 is for both President Bush and Senator Kerry to publicly order their supporters not to go there. But if they do, their behavior would be the exception, not the rule.

Richard H. Davis is president of the Reform Institute and a partner in Davis Manafort, a political consulting firm. He was a fellow at Harvard's Institute of Politics in 2002. He was campaign manager for John McCain in 2000 and has worked in every presidential campaign since 1980

/snip
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Fridays Child Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-01-08 11:34 AM
Response to Original message
1. k/r
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Skidmore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-01-08 11:37 AM
Response to Original message
2. Past time for surrogates on our side to demand honesty from the
media. Call them on their lazy reporting and their willingness to swallow whatever the Rovian machine puts out without question.
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Median Democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-01-08 12:19 PM
Response to Reply #2
7. One Thing That Obama Needs To Be Careful Of - Avoid McCain's Mistake!
McCain allowed himself to lose focus in the 2000 primary campaign by spending a lot of his time responding to the smear, then even more forcefully, to Bush's accusations that McCain is the one who started negative campaigning. In the end, the race became about McCain's character, rather than McCain's idea or Bush's qualifications.

Now, McCain's race card is not original. Davis's article back in 2004 pretty much shows you the blue print. What McCain is trying to do is provoke a response from the Obama campaign. That is why GOP surrogates will be in the media screaming in unison that Obama is racist, throwing the race card, and trying to start a race war.

My thought is that it is a mistake to get involved in a mushy issue like race. Rather, I would point out that it is McCain's campaign that seems preoccupied by race these days, that Obama is not accusing McCain's campaign of racism, and that this is just a distraction from the real issues.

McCain's mistake in 2000 was that he took it personally, and started attacking the character of Bush, and in so doing, McCain did not look presidential, while Bush stayed above the fray.

The question is whether Obama's campaign has the patience to ride out this smear from the McCain campaign or do they get provoked into making a mistake like McCain did in 2000?
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Hope And Change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-01-08 11:38 AM
Response to Original message
3. K & R!
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Major Hogwash Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-01-08 11:39 AM
Response to Original message
4. His picture that KO used yesterday looked like Jeffery Dahmer.
So, I guess McCain is assured of getting the cannibal voters' vote.

So, who is voting for McCain now?
Racists
Warmongers
Yacht owners
Cannibals


Some group of supporters!
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SuperTrouper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-01-08 11:42 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. You forgot misogynists
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Median Democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-01-08 07:04 PM
Response to Reply #4
8. The Sad Thing Is Despite This Smoking Gun From McCain's Campaign
Nothing will happen.

The media could just skewer McCain for copying the smear campaign used against him. The same principles are involved. Worse, McCain hired the folks who smeared him, who McCain loudly and publicly condemned. This is not a secret, yet the media remains remarkably silent on what would be a great story. If there was any doubt that the media is biased against the Democrats, this should disabuse us of this notion.
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Median Democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-01-08 11:52 AM
Response to Original message
6. Here's The Daily KOS Article Discussing Davis's 2004 Article
To tie the knot further, Rick Davis had a first hand look at how Karl Rove conducts a smear campaign. Some of the stories regarding the 2000 smear campaign have been google bombed, so they are now hard to find, but the McCain campaign in 2000 accused George Bush and Karl Rove of orchestrating the racist push polls. The Bush campaign then attack McCain for essentially throwing the race card, and called McCain discpicable for doing so, and attacked McCain's character.

Now, this was not too hard to find, so you would think that a professional journalist would point out some of these obvious parallels, as well as the fact that Rick Davis, the author of the 2004 article, is McCain's current manager, and Karl Rove, who orchestrated the smear campaign referenced by Ricky Davis, is now an informal adviser to McCain, and that McCain's proteges are officially affiliated with McCain.

Bottom line: Politics makes strange bedfellows, and for all of McCain's high minded talk, he ended embracing the people who smeared his own daughter, the way George W. Bush embraced the man who smeared his own father.

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2004/8/26/31853/5881
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