Schadenfreude

Schadenfreude.

scha·den·freu·de [shahd-n-froi-duh]

-noun

satisfaction or pleasure felt at someone else's misfortune.

Republicans are concerned. Very very concerned. This New York Times article is a satisfying read for everyone who's gotten way too used to its always being the Democrats who fret about the listlessness of our candidate's campaign in the final weeks.

"I think you're seeing a turning point," said Saul Anuzis, the Republican chairman in Michigan, where Mr. McCain has decided to stop campaigning. "You're starting to feel real frustration because we are running out of time. Our message, the campaign's message, isn't connecting."

Tommy Thompson, a Republican who is a former governor of Wisconsin, said it would be difficult for Mr. McCain to win in his state but not impossible, particularly if he campaigned in conservative Democratic parts of the state. Asked if he was happy with Mr. McCain's campaign, Mr. Thompson replied, "No," and he added, "I don't know who is."

In Pennsylvania, Robert A. Gleason Jr., the state Republican chairman, said he was concerned that Mr. McCain's increasingly aggressive tone was not working with moderate voters and women in the important southeastern part of a state that is at the top of Mr. McCain's must-win list.

"They're not as susceptible to attack ads," Mr. Gleason said. "I worry about the southeast. Obama is making inroads."

Several party leaders said Mr. McCain needed to settle on a single message in the final weeks of the campaign and warned that his changing day-to-day dialogue -- a welter of evolving economic proposals, mixed with on-again-off-again attacks on Mr. Obama's character -- was not breaking through and was actually helping Mr. Obama in his effort to portray Mr. McCain as erratic.

"The main thing he needs to do," said Vin Weber, a former Republican congressman from Minnesota, "is focus on a single message -- a single, concise or clear-cut message, and stick with that over the next 30 days, regardless of what happens.

"He's had a lot of attack lines. But it's time to choose."

John C. Danforth, a retired Republican senator from Missouri, said Mr. McCain should turn his attention mainly to drawing contrasts with Mr. Obama and "essentially go back to the basics."

"I don't think it's enough to talk about earmarks incessantly," Mr. Danforth said. "He's made that point. You've got to get beyond that and talk about the very dramatic taxes and spending in the Obama program."

You'll notice that most of these comments are couched in advice for John McCain...what he can do to turn things around. But not all Republicans are willing to pretend they think that's even possible. On the heels of David Brooks's reportedly calling the election for Obama, now Ed Rollins uses the L-word.

Former Reagan political adviser Ed Rollins likened today's landscape to that in 1980, when voters were angry at President Jimmy Carter and the Democrats and turned to Reagan in droves once they felt comfortable with the idea of him as president.

"Barack has met the threshold," Rollins said. "Once Reagan met the threshold, people wanted to get rid of Carter and they did in a landslide. This is going to turn into a landslide."

But perhaps most satisfying of all is to see one of the co-founders of RedState, Joshua Trevino, decide, in the end, that he just couldn't bring himself to vote for John McCain (h/t fogiv):

Finally, the vote for President of the United States: an academic exercise in California, where Barack Obama will surely win by a crushing margin. But good citizenship demands voting as if it matters. Do I believe in John McCain? Not as much as I used to. Do I believe in Sarah Palin? Despite my early enthusiasm for her, now not at all. Do I believe in the national Republican Party? Not in the slightest -- even though I see no meaningful alternative to it. So, my choice for President in 2008, scrawled in my ballot as an act of futile protest, is Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana.

OK, that's your schadenfreude break for the day. Now, get back to work.

Tags: Barack Obama, John McCain, Republicans (all tags)

Comments

25 Comments

Bobby Jindal?

Their bench is sooo thin!

by activatedbybush 2008-10-12 04:22PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

Excellent article Todd, thank you. Ed Rollins' and Joshua Trevino's comments are remarkable - what zingers.

For anyone interested in a fascinating read which explores the evolution and operation of Obama's ground game:

Obama Camp Relying Heavily on Ground Effort

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/con tent/article/2008/10/11/AR2008101102119. html?hpid=topnews

by phoenixdreamz 2008-10-12 04:24PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

Would someone PLEASE do some research on the election in which Reagan won the presidency?

1. If John Anderson hadn't run, Reagan would have lost dramatically.
2. If only one person in each precinct in the country (A lot of precincts, but not a landslide maker), had voted the other way, Reagan would have lost.

The only people for whom the election was a landslide is the delusional Reaganites who have repeated it so much that they actually believe it.

However, Obama would be wise after he is elected to declare it a landslide repeatedly, since it looks so good in later campaigns.

Carl

by CarlJ 2008-10-12 07:24PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

Oh, yeah, that John Anderson was a real bastard!  I was watching a PBS special on the 1980 race, and he basically was Ralph Nader on steroids, and Reagan had no compunctions about using him in the worst way... praising him and all that, even though I'm sure Reagan couldn't stand him at all...  They had nothing in common...

by LordMike 2008-10-12 07:59PM | 0 recs
Jindal: the next savior

The Exorcist himself!  Good old Piyush!  Oh, I'm sorry -- "Bobby."  At least Barack isn't calling himself "Skippy" or something ...

by Tangie3 2008-10-12 04:30PM | 0 recs
Re: Jindal: the next savior

i have no problem with governor jindal being named piyush, but "bobby?"  when does he get his big boy name?

by Doug Tuttle 2008-10-12 05:50PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

Get back to work?  I just got back home from canvassing.  You guys are slave drivers!

by thezzyzx 2008-10-12 04:41PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

Me too! And I got to get back out again tomorrow. I'm exhausted. I couldn't feel my legs when I got up this morning.

Heck, I just got the orders from the top today regarding GOTV plans, I'm freaked out abut how bad my life is about to be.

*I'm working a TX State House race. Dem Challenger.

by Trowaman 2008-10-12 07:41PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude
All jokes aside, it may behoove our Party to do some opposition research on Mr. Jindal. This guy is popping up on way too many Republican wish lists of candidates for 2012.
We need to see what we are going to be dealing with.....
by xodus1914 2008-10-12 04:45PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

Well he presides over the most corrupt (or at least the second most corrupt state...and yes, I am looking at you Alaska) in the Union and he once performed an exorcism. I don't think oppo research is going to be much of a problem.  

by JDF 2008-10-12 05:29PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

sarah vs. bobby" anyone?  my hope for 2012 (with romney or huckabee thrown in for good measure.)

by Doug Tuttle 2008-10-12 05:51PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

He is a danger... the man is, if anything, eloquent... and, like Reagan, can make the most wingnutty stuff seem quite reasonable....

He is someone to watch out for...

by LordMike 2008-10-12 08:00PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

mmm ... schadenfreude.


by truth hurts 2008-10-12 04:50PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

The final cap on schadenfreude came for me reading the new projections at 538.  94.1%!  On to V-Day troops!

by iowa dem 2008-10-12 04:57PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

not just anyone though, you have to delight in some friend's misfortune.  

by anna shane 2008-10-12 05:42PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

What?  I have some republican friends.

by iowa dem 2008-10-12 07:42PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

then it works.  Just doesn't work for enemies.  It has to be a guilty pleasure.  Not a righteous one.  

by anna shane 2008-10-13 05:17PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

The first time I heard the word landslide in reference to Obama was from a Conservative Commentator, about 6 weeks ago. That might have been Rollins as it was couched in the same language as the above quote.

by notedgeways 2008-10-12 06:27PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

bill said he'd win 'handily,' and that was when they were still virtually tied.  

by anna shane 2008-10-13 05:18PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

We need to be pushing the Jindal write-in in Louisiana...   AS in "Real Republicans don't waste their vote for McCain, they write in the Governor!"

by Skipster 2008-10-12 07:11PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

Aww... damn... I don't like this... every time the GOp gets "concerned", they bring in someone that has some actual semi-competence to shake things up.  That's what happened in July, and they did manage to step on Obama's buzz all through August..

So, I guess they will somehow manage to get it together these last few weeks and come up with something that is at least coherent...

Fortunately, there are only 3 weeks to go!

by LordMike 2008-10-12 08:02PM | 0 recs
the R message is connecting

but people are rejecting it.

at least reasonable people are.

by TrueBlueMajority 2008-10-12 08:45PM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

Be honest: you were looking for Balls to the Wall, weren't you.

by Jess81 2008-10-12 10:38PM | 0 recs
Schadenfreude the best known German word now?

As a German, I would prefer the much more positive "Kindergarten" in this position. No false impressions, pls: That Germans have a special word for "malicious joy" doesn't mean we are especially fond of other people's misery!

by Gray 2008-10-13 03:16AM | 0 recs
Re: Schadenfreude

You can also use our own English word with the same meaning:

epicaricacy: n. - taking pleasure in others' misfortune

by Aggro 2008-10-13 07:54AM | 0 recs

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