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Home Front: Politix
The New Rules of Politics
2008-01-31
Karl Rove, Wall Street Journal

In the aftermath of the Florida primary, some new rules for winning the nomination have emerged and some old rules have been ratified. As we head toward the 23 contests next Tuesday, it's worth considering a few of them.

The new rules include:

- Television ads don't matter as much as they used to. Going on the air with the earliest and most ads doesn't count for nearly as much as it once did. Campaigning this time has been so intense, long and geared toward retail politics that people -- especially in the early states -- form opinions that are difficult to alter by early and voluminous advertising. Mr. Romney, who spent $2.4 million on TV ads in Iowa beginning last February, found that out.

Voters are discounting advertising. They may be blocking out ads, relying more on personal exposure, information from social networks, alternative information sources like talk radio and the Internet, and local media coverage. By Feb. 5, when it costs $16 million to burn one television spot in every state that's voting, it's simply too expensive to be on air everywhere at once.

The 20th century's closing decades saw the rise of the TV ad man as the most potent operator in presidential campaigns. The 21st century's opening decade is seeing the rise of the communications director and press spokesman as the more important figures on a campaign staff. It is the age of the Internet, cable TV, YouTube, multiple news cycles in one day, and the need for really instantaneous response. Ads and ad makers are still vital -- but not nearly as much as they were just a few years ago. . . .
Go read the rest.
Posted by:Mike

#3  #2 Hillary and Bill says there are no rules (or laws) in politics.
Posted by: JohnQC 2008-01-31 12:49

You are correct. Once upon a time integrity, honesty, and truthfullness mattered. But liberals had to get rid of anything that taught Americans such worthless moral values. So getting rid of the predominate Christian influence such as the 10 commandments in schools and in public places and the Bible in the court room was critical. Now lieing and bearing false witness against your opponent with the help of the now liberal media is considered fair.
Posted by: www   2008-01-31 15:22  

#2  Hillary and Bill says there are no rules (or laws) in politics.
Posted by: JohnQC   2008-01-31 12:49  

#1  Rove mad his impact with direct mailing and phone banks. Both of which seem to have lost effectiveness as well.
Posted by: OldSpook   2008-01-31 11:41  

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