sábado, 15 de octubre de 2011

Pagando el precio de una decisión precipitada



Washington Examiner:
What's wrong with Rick Perry? How did the successful, well-liked, long-term governor of one of America's largest states enter the Republican presidential primary race with great fanfare, zoom to the top of the polls, and then slide almost as quickly back into the pack?

Blaming the Texas governor's problems on a lackluster debating style -- as Perry himself has done after a number of poor performances -- answers only part of the question. Yes, debates are particularly important this campaign season. But debates are more than just style and popularity contests. They reveal deeper things about candidates; voters watching debates can learn not only how a candidate handles tough questions but whether he is really, truly prepared to run for the White House.

Early in Perry's candidacy, there was a spate of stories suggesting he's not smart enough to be president. They weren't subtle; one was headlined "Is Rick Perry Dumb?" But even Perry's critics could look at those stories and say: Here is a man who has successfully governed a large and complex state, presided over prosperity and growth, dealt with the political challenges that go with it all, and won re-election repeatedly. Successful governorships don't just happen by accident; Perry's results in Texas show he is a smart, competent executive.

But the debates have revealed a different problem. The Rick Perry who has taken the stage in four Republican debates so far is a man who, for all his governing success in Texas, appears not to have thought enough about why he wants to be president of the United States and what he would do if he achieved his goal. When critics gently say that Perry's presentations have been "light on details," they're really saying Perry doesn't seem to have thought things through.

More than anything else, a lot of thinking should precede a run for president. There's no time to think about much of anything once the campaign begins, and there's no way a candidate can collect and organize a lifetime of experiences into a coherent approach to national issues once he's flying from stop to stop. A candidate has to have done his thinking long before he hits the road or steps on a debate stage.

(...) There's no doubt former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has thought a long, long time about being president. Romney can tell you, at any level of generality or detail you want, why he is running and what he would do if he won. He adjusts to new issues and questions by building on all the preparation he's already done.

For Romney, debate preparation involves taking all the things he has already thought through and finding the most effective way to present them in one-minute answers. For Perry, debate preparation is trying to learn new stuff about national issues that he should have been thinking about a long time ago.

It's often pointed out that since Perry entered the Republican race late, on Aug. 13, he had little time to build a campaign organization and hone a campaign pitch. That's true, but the fact is, if Perry wanted to be president, he should have been thinking seriously about the substance of national issues -- not just money-raising and state chairmen -- years before he declared his candidacy.

Now Perry is paying the price for that lack of preparation. And if that, in fact, is the real problem behind his poor debate performances, then he's not going to improve as a candidate in the next few weeks. It's far too late for that.

2 comentarios:

Anónimo dijo...

Perry aun tiene tiempo para recuperarse. Necesita una convincente actuación en el debate del próximo martes en Las Vagas. Ha recaudado muchísimo dinero, más que ningún otro candidato, y sus campañas siempre comienzas con problemas. Sucedió por ejemplo en las Primarias de Texas en la elección a Gobernador donde se impuso A Key Bailey HutchIson cuando la Senadora lo tenía todo para ganar consiguiendo el apoyo del clan Bush. Y al final Perry ganó y en la elección general ganó de calle al candidato demócrata. Sinceramente se le está dando por acabado a Perry y eso es un error.

Dicho esto indicar que sigo pensando que el candidato más solvente para enfrentarse a Obama en noviembre de 2012 sigue siendo Romney. Mitt Romney es posiblemente, bajo mi modesto punto de vista, el candidato mejor preparado para optar a la Presidencia que hayan tenido los republicanos en muchísimos años. Apuesto por Romney.

Como he venido indicando durante todo este tiempo soy de la opinión que seria altamente positivo repetir la formula de 1980 en la Convención de Detroit siempre y cuando Perry no se viniera abajo antes de comenzar la elección.

Ojo con Chris Christie porque su candidatura a la VP cada vez adquiere más fuerza. Sus números en Nueva Jersey, referido a popularidad, están en alza.

Queda mucho.

Un abrazo para todos

Casto Martín

Anónimo dijo...

Absolutamente de acuerdo contigo Casto.

Miguel (Madrid, España)