Change for a Slogan
by Jerome Armstrong, Tue May 13, 2008 at 06:26:57 AM EDT
2008: "Change You Can Believe In" vs "Change You Deserve" (The Republican slogan is also used to market an antidepressant).
When Jerry Brown used the "change" argument in '92 during the primary, it was a pretty powerful message for an insurgency campaign that limited itself to $100 contributions, and subsequently, Bill Clinton co-opted that message to win the GE. In 2000, who can forget how Bush pivoted after losing NH to the maverick reformer McCain, to become the "reformer with results" for the SC primary. So it's not surprising to see the Republicans adopt the vacuous "change" mantra.
Tom Matzzie comments on it:
McCain has a credible brand with the public, who see him as a maverick and a reformer. If McCain succeeds on his current path, he may be able to use his own popularity to infuse the Republicans with new life and a new narrative--the "Change Republican." The risk is amplified because there are 34 open House seats and 5 open Senate seats. Unlike incumbents, these Republican candidates--who aren't from Washington--could seize onto McCain's "Change Republican" brand and ride his coattails to a Republican comeback. Democrats could lose the House and Senate, and the White House would be out of reach.
It wouldn't be all "change." They'd combine this with the usual scare tactics and terror-mongering--tired old tactics that failed in 2006.
If McCain is able to leverage that into becoming a "change Republican" he'll have done what Matzzie says, which is pointed out in the above examples: "Sometimes being the first person to adopt a message isn't the winner--your opponent can hijack the dialog in the media and turn it to his advantage."
Update [2008-5-13 10:45:29 by Jerome Armstrong]: An interesting related email I got today:
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