Frank Rich’s brilliant piece on negative campaign ads—their history, their effectiveness, and their absolute necessity if Obama wants to win reelection—is required reading for all the weak-kneed, pansy-assed, hand-wringers in the media and the Democratic party:
Barack Obama has made his mistakes as a politician and as a president, but here is one thing he indisputably did right: pummel Mitt Romney with a volley of attack ads once Romney sewed up the Republican nomination. Obama was playing by the rules, honoring historical precedent in both parties, and pursuing the one must-do task before him in an election year (winning). And yet from the blowback that erupted once his Bain ad hit the fan—from his own camp, from the pious arbiters of Beltway manners, and, of course, from his adversaries—you’d think Romney was an innocent civilian under assault by a drone. What was everyone so shocked about? As far back as August 2011, Obama’s political hit men were signaling the inevitable to Politico: The president, “resigned to running for reelection in a glum nation,” had little choice “but to run a slashing, personal campaign aimed at disqualifying his likeliest opponent.” The Bain ad that Obama ran last month was no surprise either: It followed the template of those used by Ted Kennedy against Romney in the Massachusetts Senate race of 1994. (The ads helped: Kennedy won by seventeen points.) If anything, Obama’s variation on the theme is less nasty than Newt Gingrich’s Bain-bashing ad during the GOP primaries.
Nonetheless, the bipartisan civility police swooped down in full force to cry foul, with Cory Booker’s charge that attack ads are “nauseating” typifying the moralistic tone. “What ever happened to hope and change?” asked Bob Schieffer of CBS News. He apparently forgot that even the sainted Obama hope-and-change campaign of 2008 spent heavily on negative ads—more than the McCain campaign did. (Does no one recall the exquisite “Seven,” in which the old hero was presented as a doddering doofus unable to name the number of houses he owned?) David Brooks lamented that Obama’s negativity was “self-destructive” and left him “looking conventional.” Peggy Noonan gloated: “The president opened his campaign with a full-fledged assault on his opponent. This is a bad sign in an incumbent!”
Try selling that wisdom to George W. Bush, an incumbent who started assaulting John Kerry with attack ads as early as March in 2004 rather than reprise his “compassionate conservative” campaign of 2000 (much of it in reality a dispassionate disemboweling of Al Gore). Or to Bill Clinton, who started twisting the shiv in Bob Dole in April 1996, never for a second worrying whether a sorrowful Sunday-morning talk-show pastor might ask, “What ever happened to the Man From Hope?” Those two incumbents both won, as it happened.
The serious questions raised by the early Obama ads are not whether they were too much but too little: Was waiting until May behind the curve? Are the ads vicious enough to inflict lasting damage? Is there a nuclear option in Obama’s advertising arsenal that can blow Romney out of the water as LBJ’s immortal mushroom-cloud “Daisy” ad did Barry Goldwater on Labor Day in 1964? Given the anemic employment numbers and the pack of billionaire GOP sugar daddies smelling blood after their Wisconsin victory, a reboot of hope and change would truly be the reelection campaign’s most self-destructive option. Obama is embarking on one of the roughest political races in memory, not a nostalgia tour. He is facing an opponent with a proven record of successful carpet-bombing attacks, as Gingrich and Rick Santorum can attest. Just because that proposed super-PAC stink bomb branding Obama as a “metrosexual” disciple of a frothing-at-the-mouth Reverend Jeremiah Wright was aborted doesn’t mean that more of the same and uglier aren’t on the way. The premise of Romney’s entire campaign amounts to one long complaint against Obama, and shadowy donors whose names you’ll never learn can do the dirty work under PAC cover while Romney claims his hands are clean.
The president, any president, should go negative early, often, and without apology if the goal is victory.

And yet Obama will still lose this election because of the economy. All this wasted effort….
stjohnsrules: Woah, are you from the future?
I always thought St Johns was permanently stuck in the past, say around 1962.
Does it really matter who wins? In either case, gay people will still be oppressed, innocent civilians will still be slaughtered by our government, the warrantless wiretapping of Americans (in obvious contradiction to our Constitution) will continue unabated, and our economy will still be stuck in the shitter.
I’m fucking amazed that Savage even supports this asshole. Is there other mass murders he would support, if only on the condition that they supported gay lifestyles?
If you still think voting is useful, find a 3rd party. Otherwise, if you agreed with anything candidate Obama said in 2008, and you still continue to vote for Obama in 2012, than you’re a hypocrite.
#4: Wow. I may not agree with everything you said but god damn if I don’t support your fucking right to say it. Walk hard.
@5: Wow. I may not agree with everything you said but god damn if I don’t still think you’re a moran.
@#6. hahahahahaha….Moran? Dude, if you’re going to insult someone’s intelligence, at least lern how too spel…..hahahaha
#7: You just missed the joke.
http://0.tqn.com/d/politicalhumor/1/0/n/U/…
So it’s an inside joke between morans? Wow. How unbelievably bland. You guys really need to work on your material. I just made this is up. “Hey ROM, I heard you were busted huffing paint and tagging buildings downtown. Only instead of paint, you were actually huffing penis and instead of buildings, you were tagging (insert any moran here) in the backside. What do you think? It’s fucking gold, yo!
This guy is like a lulz goldmine.