From the moment Romney picked Ryan as his vice presidential candidate, Obama’s campaign has redoubled its efforts to draw attention to the Republican budget plan that Ryan wrote and that the GOP majority in the House passed. In Ryan, Obama’s campaign team in Chicago concluded they had the perfect counterpoint to an election that had the makings of a referendum on the president’s handling of the lackluster economy.
“They are playing on our turf right now,” Obama pollster Joel Benenson said Thursday.
Obama’s team has focused particularly on the Ryan budget’s proposal to alter Medicare, seeking to create doubts and fears among older voters. Romney’s camp, anticipating the criticism, engaged in the debate head-on, launching a pre-emptive ad that takes issue with Obama’s health care plan and its reductions in Medicare spending
“I’m sure they have convinced themselves that doing that helps them politically somehow,” Romney’s senior adviser, Kevin Madden, said. “But I think it’s an admission that Paul Ryan is the real deal when it comes to talking about ideas and issues.”
“Team Obama clearly would rather run against Ryan/Romney than Romney/Ryan,” adds political strategist Mark McKinnon, a top adviser in the campaigns of George W. Bush and John McCain. “They want to make the election a referendum on Ryan’s budget.”
To be sure, in conservative circles Ryan is well-regarded as a lawmaker steeped in policy and budget data. And among colleagues from both parties he is seen as a smart, genial and forceful advocate of his positions. But Ryan, a youthful-looking, 42-year-old, seven-term representative from Wisconsin, is not well-known to the general public and ready to be defined by both camps.
In raising Ryan’s stature, Obama and his campaign aides are choosing to legitimize him as an intellectual leader of the party’s conservative wing. That reverses the approach Obama’s aides took in 2008 following McCain’s selection of Palin as his running mate. At the time, the Obama camp saw Palin as an untested, underexperienced candidate who undermined McCain’s main argument against Obama as a first-term senator too callow to occupy the White House.
The Obama camp’s first reaction to Palin’s selection came in a press release: “Today, John McCain put the former mayor of a town of 9,000 with zero foreign policy experience a heartbeat away from the presidency.” And while Obama dialed the criticism back, the campaign still used Palin to focus on McCain’s selection process, calling his management “impulsive” and “erratic.”
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