One week from tomorrow the Iowa caucuses will be held, and instead of poll numbers, we'll finally get to see what some actual voters think of this Republican field. That being said, it's always fun to look at polls and make predictions based on them. I haven't officially decided what I think the Iowa results will be; however, I am fairly certain the results will do one main thing: propel Mitt Romney to an easy nomination.
Looking at a graph of Iowa polls since August is like looking at the back of a camel. First there's the Bachmann rise and slow fade, then there's the Perry rise and fairly precipitous fall, then there's the Cain rise and quick death, then the rise of Newt Gingrich and his current fall, with none other than Dr. Ron Paul rising to the pole position. However there has been one constant on this schizophrenic graph, Governor Romney sitting at around 20%(*I always use the Real Clear Politics poll which averages out all the major polls). This is, of course, a reflection of the dynamic that has played out nationally.
There is a serious yearning for a credible Not-Romney candidate to come and take the nomination out of his seemingly boring hands, but there has also consistently been a pragmatic thread in the party that understands the inevitability of a Romney nomination (why he's sitting in the 20's still and always has)--in 1996 people may have liked Pat Robertson, but they understood it was Bob Dole's turn, for whatever reason.
Nobody is better organized nationally--it's well known Mitt's campaign is prepared to take this thing all the way to California in June, which can't be said of any of the other candidates--and like it or not, that matters a lot. Romney also is killing it when it comes to endorsements--both Congressional and Gubernatorial--also highly, highly important.
So, tying this back to Iowa, despite the fact that people seem to think a Ron Paul win would taint Iowa forever, they're certainly wrong. All the Paul surge and collective muddling of the field is is a reflection of the national concerns people have about the field. Paul is the 5th conservative the Iowans have tried on for size, hoping like hell to find Mike Huckabee again, but instead they've found a radical right winger that could never win a general, this applies to each candidate below too, (Bachmann), a successful Governor who comes off like an idiot on TV (Perry), an overall moron and likely sexual predator (Cain), and an opportunist conservative who, to channel David Brooks, trusts government a bit too much (Gingrich). These candidates have all proven to be horrendous Presidential candidates; they would all win no more than 5 states in the Electoral College and cause Republicans to have no control over either chamber of Congress as well. And somehow these four have kicked their opportunity so badly that, Iowans seem to be embracing a Libertarian!
Why would Iowans embrace a Libertarian? Well, first of all 22% is not embracing, and second because they've been presented with a terrible choice. All they want is a credible conservative that can win. Unfortunately anyone fitting that description sat on the sidelines. So it's either pick a seemingly fake conservative (Romney, Gingrich), pick a radical that is quite out of step with the rest of the country (Bachmann, Perry, Santorum), or pick the ultimate radical in American politics, Dr. No himself, Dr. Ron Paul.
While calling him the ultimate radical may not be a sterling endorsement for me, it actually is for many. Because he's a radical against government spending, and less government spending means less taxes. That makes people happy. That makes him a Republican these days. His foreign policy positions are dangerous, quite dangerous in fact, but random voters don't care one bit about foreign policy, they want less government and they want it now, dammit! Foreign policy is a sideshow for elites to care about. Iowa voters most certainly are not elites, so most of them aren't alarmed when Ron Paul talks about Iran. Swing voters in the general, that's a different story, but right now all Iowans want is less government in their lives.
This is why the Ron Paul people (who conventional wisdom says can't make up more than 15% of the electorate) are gaining traction. It never would have gotten to Ron Paul if a credible conservative arose. Last cycle there was Mike Huckabee, this cycle there is absolutely nobody that credible. Iowans know this, and instead of the "evangelical" vote going to one base Republican, it is fragmented amongst Perry, Santorum, and Bachmann, who are now the lower tier. They are currently taking up 27% of the support. If this group had coalesced as it did for the Huck in '08, that person would be in first place and likely win something like 35% of the vote, an easy victory given the current state of play.
Instead we're heading for a cluster at the top with a flawed candidate winning who, unless it's Gingrich (who could hold his own in the South), and the air is seemingly out of his balloon, has no chance to take on Romney anywhere else and it's just Mitt and Huntsman in New Hampshire, then Mitt is off to the races. Plus, for someone to beat Romney the inevitable, they had to take momentum from Mitt by employing the Obama strategy on Clinton, the formerly much stronger Democratic inevitable in 2008.
The playbook is as follows. Go all in in Iowa, whether you think you play there or not, all while building an organization for the long haul behind the scenes and when you win Iowa you've got big Mo on your side and you're ready for the campaign. You need a special candidate when the inevitable is somebody the party actually wants, but in the case of Romney, a legitimate conservative not necessarily a transformative figure could have easily followed this playbook. In fact, if they were recognizable enough nationally, they could have quickly become inevitable instead of Mitt.
But that hasn't happened and it’s too late for it too. Let's just hope Romney puts up enough of a fight to make sure the GOP takes back the Senate, because from the looks of things now, it's going to be a rejuvenated Obama versus an unpopular Romney, a recipe for disaster for Republicans who want to take back the White House.
The Republicans had a chance to make this election a big one, but they blew it when they couldn't get a credible conservative to unseat the unreliable Romney. Team Obama must be unable to believe their luck.