Defining the campaigns for president

Only a few days to go before the great Connecticut Republican Primary of 2012 and the tension isn’t mounting.As this is being written — or more accurately, rewritten — to reflect Rick Santorum’s sudden retreat Tuesday afternoon, I guess there will still be primaries on not so Super Tuesday, April 24, in Connecticut, Delaware, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island, but they will be nothing more than coronations of a candidate who will be fortunate indeed to carry any of them in November, Mitt Romney. All of them were easily won by Barack Obama in 2008 and if Obama loses any of them in 2012, he’ll probably be on the way to losing the election.What happens to Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul on April 24 is still of some interest to the very best friends and relatives of Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul but as things turned out, our old home state is even less important than it was just a week ago. So it’s time to consider why we should all be grateful that the Republican Party has reluctantly settled for Mitt Romney as their champion.Mostly, we should be grateful because he isn’t Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich or Ron Paul in that order. The nominee of one of the two great political parties is always elected president, even when there is a formidable third party and because of that undeniable fact, there is a fairly even chance that a Republican could be our next president, especially this year.Add to that the economy’s behavior in the coming months, the lagging popularity, not to mention the disappointment in the first Obama term for various constituencies that voted for him in 2008, and all of us should be thankful his opponent isn’t from that woeful trinity of Santorum, Gingrich or Paul.u u uThe chances that Romney would be as awful a president as the Democrats would have us believe are about as good as the likelihood Obama would have turned out to have been as wonderful as many hoped and believed at this time four years ago.Because election losers allow opponents to define them in many cases, Romney should have defining himself as his first priority in the general election. To appreciate the danger of opponents defining candidates, think of 2000 when John Kerry, the Vietnam veteran with a fine record, allowed the Vietnam draft dodger, George W. Bush, to smear his record so efficiently that “Swift boating” entered the language. So Romney will have the formidable task in the coming months of once again redefining himself without once again looking like a flip-flopping opportunist. This won’t be easy. While Romney tries to change from the “severely conservative” candidate he foisted on the right wing electorate in recent weeks, the Democrats will be busily pointing every flip and flop while offering their definition of Romney as the rich guy who’s always been out of touch except when he invented Obamacare in Massachusetts.Obama will face the equally formidable task of redefining himself as the person voters thought he was four years ago and that won’t be easy either. Maybe he should try building on the truth he told the Russian president when he thought he was not being amplified and said that in his next term he’d be able to be more flexible.The trick will be doing that without scaring too many voters who are inclined to believe he’ll be so flexible, he’ll turn these United States into a socialist republic.Simsbury resident Dick Ahles is a retired journalist. Email him at dahles@hotmail.com.

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