By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, November 04, 2015
Politics is a breeding ground for martial metaphors,
starting with the word “campaign” itself. Politicians “under fire” “take flak”
as their consultants sit in “war rooms” and launch ad “blitzes” in “targeted
districts” and “battleground states” to put their clients “over the top” — with
the help of their “troops” in the field. When that doesn’t work, the generals
sometimes resort to some dreaded “nuclear option.” Even if it succeeds, the
pundits often declare it a “Pyrrhic victory.”
Most of us don’t even realize we’re using bellicose
language. For instance, I’d guess most people think “over the top” is a term
from football, not a reference to First World War trench warfare.
Still, there’s a reason politics lends itself to such
language. Watching Senators Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio emerge from the pack after
last week’s CNBC debate, I was reminded of my favorite character from Tolstoy’s
War and Peace.
“The strongest of all warriors,” Field Marshal Kutuzov
explains, “are these two: Time and Patience.”
With Napoleon’s army advancing, Kutuzov wisely wanted to
wait for reinforcements before engaging in battle. When Russian generals
demanded that Kutuzov attack Napoleon at his strongest, the field marshal
replied, “Dans le doute, abstiens-toi.” (“When in doubt, do nothing.”)
Strategic patience is a difficult and valuable quality in
an era of ever-shrinking news cycles and 24/7 social-media carping. The
temptation to react instantly to every controversy is hard to resist. So far,
Cruz and Rubio have been the Kutuzovs of the race, while Jeb Bush and Donald
Trump look an awful lot like the Napoleons.
Consider some of the candidates who’ve already dropped
out. Wisconsin governor Scott Walker was undone because he was ill prepared to
be the front-runner. Texas governor Rick Perry, whose impatience led to
self-immolation in 2012, was well equipped on the issues this time, but he
fatally attacked Trump when the Napoleonic mogul was at his strongest.
Meanwhile, Cruz hung back, refusing to criticize Trump
even though Trump was siphoning off many of the senator’s supporters and
stealing Cruz’s populist thunder. A brilliant, classically trained debater,
Cruz barely registered in the first two debates. That was a choice. He was
biding his time.
Then there’s Rubio. He also refused to take Trump’s bait,
but of more strategic importance was his decision to draft behind Bush, the
anointed candidate of the so-called establishment. Rubio understood that he
couldn’t defeat Jeb. He had to wait for his former mentor to defeat himself.
Both Cruz and Rubio seized their moment in the CNBC
debate. Cruz’s perfectly pitched attack on the moderators and Rubio’s surgical
jointing of Bush demonstrated that they both have what the Germans call fingerspitzengefühl, a real-time mastery
of battlefield conditions “at the fingertips.”
Cruz revealed himself as the real contender for the
“outsider” mantle he’s been maneuvering for all along. Dans le doute, abstiens-toi doesn’t actually mean doing nothing; it
means preparing for your moment. As the Roman philosopher Seneca famously said:
“Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.”
In preparation for his opportunity, Cruz built a massive
ground operation, setting up campaign chairs in all 172 counties in the first
four primary states. Of course, Cruz still needs Trump to crumble, but he
doesn’t seem worried about that.
Rubio’s success last week was more obvious. He
demonstrated that he’s the alternative to Bush among establishment donors
looking to back a winner. It’s no coincidence that within days of the debate,
mega-donor Paul Singer came out as a Rubio backer.
What happens next is unknowable. But it’s becoming ever
more plausible that the race will come down to these two Cuban Americans.
(Perhaps waiting for the Castro regime to die breeds a certain amount of
patience in Cuban conservatives?)
The “establishment” candidate usually wins the
nomination, though this has not been a year to rely on the “usual.” Still, you
can see the pincer movement unfolding, with Cruz and Rubio clearing out the
opponents in their respective strategic theaters. And then, when one defeats
the other, he will choose his opponent as his running mate to unify a party at
war with itself, ultimately pitting Hillary Clinton against “los hermanos
Cubanos.”
No comments:
Post a Comment