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A Strategy of Tactics
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This spot, produced by the
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dean of Democratic media consultants, Bob Squier, begins by indicting the
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Republicans for "another negative" attack. Initially, it doesn't even bother to
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identify the substance of the attack. Survey research shows that one of the
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most effective negative charges is that the other side is being negative. This
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ad seeks to create a context of doubt for any and all Republican attacks on
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Bill Clinton. In fact, both sides run negative ads.
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Eventually the ad implies
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that its subject (sort of) is immigration. The purpose is to pre-empt another
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"natural" Republican issue. Immigration continues to be social and political
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dynamite, and this spot tries to take the match out of Republican hands. The
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Buchananesque toughness of the pictures validates the toughness of the
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language, leaving the impression that Clinton is as anti-immigrant as any
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Republican.
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The spot now shifts to its
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own negative fusillade against Republicans. They opposed protecting U.S.
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workers from "replacement" by foreign workers. The actual issue is not
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explained, but the charge taps into the populist anger about stagnant wages,
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foreign competition, and the globalization that both Clinton and Dole, in fact,
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have supported. Next, the spot says the Republicans opposed Clinton on more
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police and anti-drug programs: another effort to pre-empt, or even reverse, a
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perennial Republican advantage.
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During this attack phase,
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the ad alternates film of House Speaker Newt Gingrich with vaguely relevant
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footage (What's inside the rug--an American job or an illegal alien?), while
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repeatedly referring to "the Dole-Gingrich budget." But where is Dole? His
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picture can't be used because, in theory if not in effect, the ad is an act of
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legislative advocacy, paid for by the Democratic National Committee, not the
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Clinton campaign--and legally, Dole, as an ex-senator, can't be its obvious
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target. The Clinton campaign converts a legal restriction into a political
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virtue, marrying Dole to the grainy black-and-white visage of America's most
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unpopular politician. By contrast, Clinton appears intermittently in decidedly
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presidential footage.
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The Clinton campaign
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doesn't want to be about one or two big things this year; it's not the economy
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stupid. This spot is the vivid expression of a strategy of many tactics. There
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is no message here, but an almost telegraphic mix of hot-button words.
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--Robert Shrum
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