I Do Not Love Thee, Gov'ner Mitt
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I do not love thee, Gov'ner Mitt,
You're a RINO, all do admit;
And this I say and won't remit:
I do not love thee, Gov'ner Mitt
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I do not love thee, Gov'ner Mitt,
You're a RINO, all do admit;
And this I say and won't remit:
I do not love thee, Gov'ner Mitt
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Romney and Gingrich shoot each other while Conservatives rally to Santorum
The GOP race for the 2012 presidential election is still as volatile as it was when I last wrote about it. GOP leadership was hoping for an early end to primary uncertainty with a single front-runner. This would give skeptical Republicans a chance to warm up to the inevitable 'last man standing.'
That hasn't happened. Front-runners Romney and Gingrich each won a primary but mutual attacks exposed their many flaws to conservative voters. Paul kept a steady-state in voter percentage. Rick Santorum, the one person almost all conservatives like -- or at least don't dislike, surprised the pundits by sweeping three caucuses in a big way. Everyone likes an underdog-coming-from-behind story. It may be that GOP voters have made Santorum their 'Not-Romney' of choice.
I reworked my spreadsheets based on the latest candidate developments. Romney and Gingrich both fell in my 'Worth' spreadsheet. I am no longer convinced either of them will do much to remake entitlement programs. Romney's MBA skills make him more of a COO than a CEO. Operations men manage, they don't reform. Gingrich is too tied to big government entities for my taste. ('Historian?' What is that?) Romney also fell because of his past support for abortion and homosexual marriage. I still remain surprised that Ron Paul is the most Worth-y to me, but I like the things he says, except for his isolationist opinions.
The big shift is in the Real-Win-Worth grid. Santorum has pulled ahead of his competitors in the Win axis. He now has the highest score for a consistent, motivational message. Santorum doesn't sound like he's reading from a script like Romney, and his strong wins in MO, MN and CO show he can inspire voters to action. Gingrich lost points for 'presence and style.' The media is pulling away from him. Romney also lost 'presence and style' ground with his comments about "the poor."
On the Real axis, the candidates' positions shifted: President Bush The First walked back his Romney endorsement; Gingrich lost his biggest financial backer; and Santorum got the blessing of some very important conservative media superstars.
Looking at all the candidates, the two closest to the true 'electable' zone (strong campaign plus voter connection) are Obama and Santorum. Obama risks sliding the wrong direction in the 'Win' direction if voters are turned off by his negative rhetoric. Obama remains financially strong, but it takes more than expensive advertisement to motivate unhappy voters.
It's do or die these next few weeks for Santorum. He's already the most appealing to the conservative base. That's a plus. Still, his 'ifs' must quickly align: IF Romney goes on the negative attack, IF Gingrich descends further into vengeful neurosis, and IF Santorum scores a big win against Romney in Michigan, the former Pennsylvania senator may pull a surprise win.
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Conservatives find their voice: Romney is unacceptable
No one is in the upper right quadrant, the best place to be
There have been three primaries since I last posted about the 2012 race for the U.S. presidency. The weakest candidates have dropped out (Bachmann, Huntsman and Perry). The four remaining candidates are pretty much where they were three weeks ago. None of them have improved their electability or acceptance scores very much. Neither has Obama, who continues to have high disapproval poll ratings despite some moderate economic improvement. The primary has just begun with only a handful of delegates set aside. The campaign promises a frisky, contentious year full surges and pull-backs. It will be quite exciting.
GOP party elites are dancing with a dilemma: should they continue supporting the most 'electable' candidate (Real) or the one who can best connect with the voters (Win)? Up until now, they thought 'electability' was enough. Romney had been preparing for four years, laying down an army of supporters. So what if he's bland? People will vote for a rock if they think it can beat Obama in the national election.
It turns out they were wrong. 'Not-Romney' got more votes in each state, every time. Their man on the pedestal only took one of the three primaries. Meanwhile, Newt Gingrich, a man who causes internal bleeding in GOP aristocrats and this week's leading Not-Romney, blazes ahead of Morose Mitt. Why? Because Gingrich connects with people and his passion touches an anger inside their hearts. Likewise, Santorum outshone Romney in Iowa with his common man message. Romney looks more like Thurston Howell.
So, GOP leaders, what's it going to be? Continue to support Mitt, but send him to Wal-Mart to observe proles? Put an arm around Newt and douse him with Ritalin when he's in the public eye? Or send some money to Santorum, the one candidate who seems human and not neurotic? Your current strategy isn't working.
My thoughts on the candidates:
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Money? Yes. Pundit Favorite? Yes. Acceptable? No.

From the Swamp blog
The man who never gets above 25% in the GOP polls has the party nomination in the bag. Most of my favorite pundits think so -- in fact, they have been saying this for several months now. Their reasoning? Romney is the most electable: he has the money; he's played a shrewd game by letting his more conservative opponents fight amongst themselves; and Romney gives good debate. It's just a matter of time. Resitance is futile.
Conservative commentators agree that Romney is not a real conservative, but they reason all conservative voters will hold their noses and vote for Romney when he runs against Obama. What choice is there? Just deal with it, get behind the man and move on.
Not so fast. Romney has low -- LOW -- acceptance amongst conservatives. If they choose to not vote in the 2012 U.S. Presidential elections, Obama will win.
We went down this way before, just four years ago. Remember John McCain? The GOP brought forward a boring old man, a moderate Republican who inspired no one at all. Romney is McCain, Part Deux, but without the distinguished war record.
What is Mitt Romney?
The GOP is making a strategic mistake promoting a candidate who is merely 'electable.' That's not enough. America wants a leader, an inspirational person with an appealing message, and a persuader who will convince them to take a difficult road. They do not need a milquetoast-y technocrat.
Winning the election is not the end game. Winning hearts is.
Mitt Romney will not get many votes from conservative Americans. Without this block, he will certainly lose the 2012 election. Romney is not very electable after all.
I am a conservative independent. I want someone better.
Mitt versus Mitt
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Using Business Tools to Sort The Candidates
Bubble size reflects candidate 'worth' based on my values
I've become a political hobbyist since I came to social media. I read the local newspaper, get RSS feeds, follow Twitter politicos and I watch news twice a day. I seek balance so I can stay informed. I am a conservative person: fiscally, socially and on international affairs.
As I write this in late December, 2011, there are seven candidates campaigning for the GOP caucus in Iowa. Barack Obama has already been campaigning for reelection since the start of the year. I'm overwhelmed. Each poll, each newsflash, each morning analysis throws me back to Point A. Who do I want to be U.S. president? Maybe I should use my business toolkit to sort things out.
Treating the presidential candidates as 'products' with votes as 'market share,' it becomes easier to sort things out. I used two tools: a modified Cause and Effect Matrix (C&E) to identify each candidate's 'worth' to me, and a Real-Win-Worth.
Each C&E criterion was chosen by me and its relative importance to the other criteria are also mine. For example, I see the Economy as the top priority, 'Family Values' as further down, and 'Immigration' isn't a priority at all. If you were to do this, you would have different criteria, weights and values. See mine, below.
Go here to see the data on Google Docs
The RWW is a little more objective. For Real, I subsitituted campaign strength (war chest, foot soldiers, experience). Win is market-based and emotion, so I used criteria based on the assumption that voters were customers. Here were the emotional criteria (trust, inspiration, message and presence).
Go here to see this data on Google Docs
What do the charts tell us?
I work for a corporation that always deals with uncertainty. We use analytical tools to parse mushy data. In teams and no small amount of debate, we define success criteria. The comptroller is there to keep us down to earth. Marketing brings data about competitors and customers, and wants and needs of the market. Engineers know materials, manufacturing and their capabilities to produce.
I've been on teams who have used Real-Win-Worth (RWW) analysis to decide whether to enter a market with a new product. RWW is great for forcing teams to think through what's important and what is not. If the team decides to proceed with product development, they revisit the RWW periodically when time reveals more useful data.
RWW tells business teams to run after those projects where there is a real chance of Winning the market share with superior (Real) manufacturing or technical expertise. You want projects that score in the upper right corner with nice large bubbles (Worth). If your project is too small or it is too far down the axis, then either stop the project or change something to improve Real or Win.
This RWW analysis would be more accurate if it came from a team of people with different political perspectives and values. Discussion would uncover other criteria. We can assume the scores would be better balanced.
I am a former Six Sigma Black Belt and DFSS engineer. I've lead teams through RWW workshops. I plan to stay the course on this RWW through the year and I'll 'vote' or 'buy' a few times through the year.
Right now, none of them are worth 'buying.'