A beleaguered president seeks re-election. His challenger, a candidate with Massachusetts  roots and a presidential demeanor straight out of central casting, has  to fight through a primary contest fending off charges of flip-flopping.  In the end, the challenger's strength also proves his vulnerability.
Election 2012 is looking a lot like the presidential race of 2004.
Election 2012 is looking a lot like the presidential race of 2004.
Democrats in and around President Barack Obama's  campaign are preparing to run against former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt  Romney — the man they believe likely to emerge from the Republican  contest — by borrowing from the playbook George W. Bush and Republicans used to defeat Sen. John Kerry seven years ago.
As candidates, Kerry and Romney  are remarkably similar. Both are wealthy men, products of Massachusetts  politics, eloquent on the stump but perceived as remote or aloof on the  campaign circuit.
Even before  Romney has won a single nominating contest, Obama's camp is singling him  out as a fickle politician and is preparing to go straight at Romney's  perceived strength — his record as a businessman in the face of a  flat-line economy. It was a strategy Republicans employed against Kerry,  who had to fend off charges of flip-flopping himself and whose strength  as a decorated Vietnam veteran running in the first post-Sept. 11  election was undermined by attack ads.
A key feature of the Obama strategy is Romney's tenure as head of Bain Capital,  a private equity firm he co-founded in 1984 that saved and launched  businesses such as Staples and Domino's Pizza but sliced jobs elsewhere  through cost-cutting and consolidation.
It's not the first time Romney's tenure at the helm of Bain Capital has come under attack. Sen. Edward Kennedy  pulled away from Romney during his 1994 Senate race in Massachusetts by  airing a series of ads that featured workers from an Indiana paper  plant that Bain took over, laying off employees, cutting wages and  reducing benefits.
"Basically, he cut our throats," a worker said in one of the ads."When  we made the decision to define him to voters of Massachusetts and took a  hard line in doing so, we had a lot of success," said Democratic  consultant Tad Devine, who crafted the ads for Kennedy and later served  as a senior adviser to Kerry's presidential campaign.
Obama advisers are keenly aware of Kennedy's line of attack and are counting on similar results."In  his professional life, he was an expert in stripping down companies and  leading them to bankruptcy and profiting from these ventures, with a  lot of jobs lost in the process," said Obama strategist David Axelrod, previewing a potential line of attack.
"Whenever  you're running for president of the United States and you represent  yourself in a certain way and you say here's my core asset, then you  need to be able to stand by your record," Axelrod added in an interview.  "It was problematic for him then; it will be problematic for him now."Republicans concede that Romney could be vulnerable. But they say the Romney camp should be ready for the onslaught.
Michael  Dennehy, a New Hampshire-based Republican strategist, said he remembers  Kennedy's anti-Romney ads as being "just brutal and very, very  effective."
"To some extent it  will be effective again," he said. "The variable is how Romney responds  and what they have learned from that 1994 race for Senate."
Top  Romney strategist Eric Fehrnstrom said Obama, faced with a stagnant  economy, is grasping for ways to win. "Now, they are employing a 'kill  Mitt' strategy," he said. "I suspect they'll go through many other  strategies before they realize this election is a referendum on Obama's  failed leadership on jobs."
For  now, the Obama camp is focusing on portraying Romney as a  finger-to-the-wind politician who changes his convictions to meet the  political circumstances. They cite his embrace of mandatory health  insurance when he was governor of Massachusetts and his criticism of  Obama's health care bill, which relies on the same mandate, or his  previous stance in favor of abortion rights against his current  opposition to abortion.
"I will  give him this, he is as vehement and as strong in his convictions when  he takes one position as he is when he takes a diametrically opposite  view," Axelrod said last week. On Wednesday, Axelrod pounced again,  declaring on CBS that Romney appeared to have "no core to him."
No  doubt Romney stands as the Republican to beat for his party's  nomination. He has maintained a steady position as other Republicans  rise and fall around him. Democrats in Obama's circle believe(...)More.
 
 
 
 
 
 10/20/2011 04:08:00 AM
10/20/2011 04:08:00 AM
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