By Chris Stirewalt
Tuesday, January 02, 2024
Nikki
Haley endured two brutal years of the presidential pre-primary. Now she stands
like a ski jumper at the top of a 53-day plunge through Iowa and New Hampshire
to the primary in her home state of South Carolina. Those seven-and-a-half
weeks will decide whether she gets to compete for the gold medal.
Assessing
her chances requires us to think first about the issues and events likely to
shape the electorate’s preferences, the stratagems and foibles of her
opponents, and the resources and capabilities of her campaign. But most
essentially we have to ask: What kind of candidate is Haley, anyway?
Her
performance has been marred by her tendency toward
calculation, approaching the point of pandering. But it’s also been
brightened by genuine toughness, enthusiasm, and her gifts as a communicator.
She’s better at this work than anyone running in either party—damning with
faint praise, I know—but she’s still a blurry figure as a potential nominee.
There
are generally two modes in which people have been elected president of the
United States for the first time: new sensations and old grinds.
Our
current president is the definitional grinder. Joe Biden was in national
politics for 48 years before he won, including two failed presidential runs and
eight years as vice president. He joined grinds like George H.W. Bush, Richard
Nixon, and Lyndon Johnson on the dean’s list of presidential persistence.
In
the current crop of candidates, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis stands out as a
grind. Through a combination of his own obvious discomfort with the work of
campaigning and the epochal waste and dunderheadedness of his campaign and PAC,
DeSantis is unlikely to make the finals this time; but he’s only 45. That’s
about the age Nixon and Biden were during their first, failed presidential
bids.
DeSantis
struck out this time, but he may—four, eight, or 12 years hence—get there, or
at least to his party’s nomination, like Mitt Romney, as a grind.
What
DeSantis couldn’t be, however, was a new sensation like Donald Trump. Trump was
very well known, but not in politics. He is most definitely a grind now,
obsessed with returning to power after his defeat. But Trump’s arrival and
rapid ascendency was not so different from that of Barack Obama, whom he
succeeded. Obama was, in turn, like his predecessor, George W. Bush, who was
the other side of the same coin as the man he replaced, Bill Clinton. While the
others were youthful and Trump was at the time the oldest man ever to assume
the presidency, all benefited from the image of an outsider bringing change to
a dysfunctional Washington.
And
without long records in national politics to defend, Trump, Obama, Bush the
younger, and Clinton could be blank slates onto which potential supporters
could draw their own images of the ideal leader. Was Clinton a ’60s radical or
a moderate Southern Democrat? Was Bush a conservative evangelical from Texas or
an old-guard, preppy squish? Was Obama an anti-war community organizer or a
post-partisan uniter? Was Trump a pragmatic dealmaker without political
allegiances or the avenging angel of Christian nationalism? Either. Both.
Whatever voters wanted to see.
But
it’s the expectations game where the new sensations have the greatest
advantage. Those individuals who in a single bound get over the undefinable but
unremitting threshold of seeming presidential to voters don’t
face the same scrutiny as the grinds. The blank-slate effect works in their
favor here, but so does the electorate’s willingness to give newcomers a break.
Bimbo eruptions, old DUIs, pestilent pastors, and even a stream of crude
conduct and comments can be hung on the old self, not the new man (or woman) of
the moment. That applies also to mistakes made along the way. Saying or doing
the wrong thing that might be fatal for a grind might bounce off of a new
sensation.
So
which one is Haley?
At
51, she’s youngish for a presidential candidate, especially these days. And
having climbed from the bottom of the pack to second place in just four months,
she certainly has the slingshot momentum of a new sensation. She’s also not
white and not a man, both of which add to her status as being from outside the
traditional pathway to power. And while she has been in politics for 20 years,
her time as a lawmaker and governor of a medium-sized state in the Deep South
was spent far outside Washington and without racking up problematic votes in
Congress. Even when she did go into the federal government, she went to New
York as United Nations ambassador, not to the swamp.
But
here’s where it gets tricky. Haley is an establishment insurgent. Like Romney
and John McCain, both grinds, she is trying to shift the direction of her party
away from populistic nationalism. Haley got elected governor 14 years ago as a
Tea Party upstart taking on the old boys’ club in Columbia. Since then, her
party has moved left on fiscal and economic issues and far to the right
culturally. Just by standing still, she has become a moderate. So unlike Trump,
Obama, and Clinton, Haley can’t base her claim to being a new sensation on
being a leader of an ideological vanguard. Trying to get your party back into
the mainstream is pretty grind-y stuff.
Among
recent presidents for role models, that leaves Bush the younger, a new
sensation with old ideas. After the many miseries of the Gingrich era and the
defeats of 1996 and 1998, Republicans were open to the idea of someone who
could steer the party back to the mainstream. Bush was broadly
acceptable to the still-ascendant evangelical conservatives but, by
lineage and career, a welcome relief to the Chamber of Commerce types. He
didn’t have much love from or for the small-government Reaganites of whom Haley
is a descendant, but two of three legs of the stool was enough for a win.
Haley
is trying to get two legs under herself, as well. The evangelical movement that
helped Bush has long since curdled into the Christian nationalism that fuels
Trump. But she is well positioned for an appeal to big-business and
small-government types who, though often at odds, have been so long out of
influence that they may be willing to ally again. A coalition of the squishes
and the traditional conservatives could be enough to get her through these 53
days with a chance to go for the gold.
Haley
is prone to error when she is trying too hard to please, as her misadventures
on the causes of the Civil War and online
anonymity demonstrate. And as she heads into the finals, even
meaningless gaffes will be frothed up by her rivals and the press.
Remember, there is a correlation between a candidate’s viability and criticism
from the media, especially for Republicans.
But
if she can cultivate the image of the outsider and the insurgent, Haley may
indeed be a new sensation.
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