Sunday, June 29, 2008

The Electric Minor Political Scandal Acid Test

Newsweek reports that the McCains did not pay taxes for four years on a piece of San Diego beachfront property. Is this a significant scandal? Will the story have any legs? Allow me to introduce the Electric Minor Political Scandal Acid Test (EMPSCAT). I've been thinking of rolling this out since at least dinnertime tonight.

EMPSCAT consists of a battery of five questions. The more of the questions that can be answered in the affirmative, the bigger the impact of the story. The five questions -- chock-full of Halperin style and/but/nots -- are as follows:

1. Can the scandal be reduced to a one-sentence soundbyte (but not easily refuted/denied with a one-sentence soundbyte)?

This question is important. Something like "Boratgate" -- the Clinton Library / Kazakhstan uranium mining quid-pro-quo-pro-quo that the New York Times reported on in January -- had all the intriguing hooks of a spy novel, but also a plot as convoluted as Mission Impossible II.

2. Does the scandal cut against a core element of the candidate's brand?

3. Does the scandal reify/reinforce/"prove" a core negative perception about the candidate, particularly one that had henceforth been difficult to articulate (but not one that has become so entrenched that little further damage can be done)?


Let's take these two together. The classic political scandal is one that makes the candidate look like a hypocrite -- a "family values" champion like David Vitter being caught with a hooker, or Larry Craig with his pants around his ankles.

But perhaps the more damaging kind is one that provides evidence toward a lingering perception about a candidate that had otherwise been hard to articulate. John Edwards' $400 haircut, for instance: doesn't seem like it should have been a big deal, but there was a perception out there that Edwards was a little superficial, and the haircut provided the "proof".

The "best" scandals combine both of these elements. Jeremiah Wright both undermined Obama's unity message and gave voice to the notion that he hadn't been fully vetted. Tuzla both cut against Hillary Clinton's experience meme and played into the perception of her having a rocky relationship with the truth.


4. Can the scandal readily be employed by the opposition, without their looking hypocritical/petty/politically incorrect, risking retribution, or giving life to a damaging narrative?


This is trickier territory than it looks. The Obama campaign couldn't say much about Clinton's comments on RFK without their looking even more tawdry than she did. The Clinton campaign couldn't say very much about Jeremiah Wright without refreshing accusations of race-baiting. And the Law of Unintended Consequences often applies. It was partially because the Obama campaign pushed back a little too hard on Geraldine Ferraro that ABC News took "Politically Incorrect Comments Made by Associates" for $200 and investigated deeper into the Wright tapes.

5. Is the media bored, and/or does the story have enough tabloid/shock value to crowd out all other stories?


A slow media cycle never hurts.

*-*

Let's put La Jollagate through the EMPSCAT.

1. Can the scandal easily be reduced to a one-sentence soundbyte (but not easily refuted/denied with a one-sentence soundbyte)?

In this case, the answer is yes: "The McCains didn't pay their taxes".

The McCains' best one-sentence rebuttal is probably: "It was a clerical error". The problem is that (i) this one has been tried before, and (ii) it takes several more sentences to explain: the property was part of a trust, the trust was managed by a bank, and the bank didn't get the bill. Besides, throwing your accountant under the bus isn't an excuse to avoid paying taxes.

2. Does the scandal cut against a core element of the candidate's brand?

Not to a large extent. McCain hasn't made an especially big deal of housing or taxation issues, for instance. It may cut a little bit against the duty part of McCain's honor and duty theme. There is also a potentially damaging subheadline -- "What? The McCains have seven houses?" -- but he hasn't really tried to run as some sort of champion of the working class.

3. Does the scandal reify/reinforce/"prove" a core negative perception about the candidate, particularly one that had henceforth been difficult to articulate (but not one that has become so entrenched that little further damage can be done)?

Again, probably not -- it seems like something of a one-off. You could try play it as McCain being old and therefore absent-minded, but that would violate Rule #4:

4. Can the scandal readily be employed by the opposition, without their looking hypocritical/petty/politically incorrect, risking retribution, or giving life to a damaging narrative?

Generally speaking, yes. It's a big enough deal that the Obama campaign won't look petty by raising it, nor so personal that they'd look insensitive. Nor is it an area where, as far as we know, Obama has had any problems (if he's been delinquent on his taxes at any point -- no sale).

What the McCain campaign will do is to try and portray it as a Cindy McCain issue rather than a John McCain issue, and remind the media that Obama said hands off the first ladies. But the Obama campaign could call that bluff and have a get-out-of-jail free card against the next Michelle Obama story. McCain also might try and bring up Tony Rezko, but that story has already failed the EMPSCAT several times.

5. Is the media bored, and/or does the story have enough tabloid/shock value to crowd out all other stories?

Yes. It isn't a sexy story, but there's little else going at the moment.

The La Jolla story passes three out of the five questions on the EMPSCAT. Medium-impact, but not spicy.

77 comments

qjk said...

John McCain may have had an inappropriate relationship with lobbyist Vicki Iseman. This according to some of his own staffers.

Doesn't this match your five criteria? Yet the story's been all but ignored.

Rhode Island X said...

Sounds about right. It'll probably get played for at least at least a couple of days, and we'll be reminded of it on occasion for a little while. Provided something big doesn't knock it out.

EMPSCAT...You might want to rename it, it almost sounds dirty. The five points are solid. For #5, there are more variables: Does the campaign have an ace story up their sleeves (Edwards' endorsement of Obama after Clinton's big win), or will they manage to stumble and keep the story alive for extra cycles? Do they have some dirt they've been waiting to release on the other candidate, to shift scrutiny? That has to do with management. Praying something newsworthy happens to overshadow the minor scandal is just relying on luck.

qjk said...

Also: John McCain dumped his first wife (the one who waited for him while he was in Vietnam) after she was crippled in a car accident, then immediately remarried to a younger, wealthier model who happened to have connections in a state where he wanted to run for public office.

Surprising how many people still don't know about that.

In place of EMPSCAT, let me propose the following test:
1. Does the scandal reflect badly on John McCain? If yes, the story is buried.

Rhode Island X said...

The Iseman story didn't have a smoking gun...It was spun off as innocent. I don't remember anything more than that.

The first wife divorce story has potential to really change things. Problem is, the first wife doesn't seem to be bitter; she supports McCain! Just wait until things get heated...I'm expecting the Democrats to drop this story at the opportune time. It's a matter of timing and delivery. It could be a very damaging blow, but Obama has expressed desire to reign in 527s and control his campaign's (positive/uplifting/hope) message. Delivering a story like this will take a lot of finesse...Or perhaps it'll eventually get enough traction online that cable news picks it up.

Alex said...

Obama's best angle of attack isn't to make it seem like something illegal happened or that McCain is personally responsible for the failure to pay taxes. It would be far more effective to use it as a building block in the "John McCain does not know enough about the economy to lead it" attack. After all, if he can't figure out his own taxes, how's he going to competently make decisions about something as hideously complex as the US economy? I wouldn't term it a scandal so much as something you could drop again and again in a stump speech.

asmodeus said...

How can Catholics vote for someone who's divorced? Stick that juicy item in a mailer! The house thing is no kind of scandal,though. What Obama can do is to use it to rebut the 'elitist' branding - as far as I'm concerned owning myriad houses is elitist.

Anonymous said...

You- "Newsweek reports that the McCains did not pay taxes for four years on a piece of San Diego beachfront property."

Did you even read the story? The property "is owned by a trust that [Mrs. McCain] oversees." You were clearly implying that Sen. McCain neglected an obligation to pay the taxes, which isn't the case.

You- "What the McCain campaign will do is to try and portray it as a Cindy McCain issue rather than a John McCain issue..."

Can you cite to anything that says that Sen. McCain has anything to do with this? It's certainly not in the article.

Newsweek- "County records show the bills, which were mailed to a Phoenix address associated with Mrs. McCain's trust, were returned by the post office."

How the f*ck is this a scandal when the county records indicate that Post Office returned the notices? She never got the notices!

I guess it's only "silly season" in politics when your candidate is being slimed with inane accusations. Not that you care, but this post destroyed your credibility in my eyes.

Jyrinx said...

@:44 - Gee, I'm sure he's so sorry you've gone.

Come on. He's not saying anything about the merits. This was purely about process. (Note that “is it reasonable?” is conspicuously absent from the test. Otherwise flag-pin-gate would've been DOA.)

LAW said...

The correct framing for this is having Obama say on the stump something like "John McCain tries to say I'm "elitist" and that I don't relate to the American people. I don't know how you get off saying that when you have so many houses that you can't even remember to pay taxes on all of them. All I know is that me and Michelle only have one house, we pay our taxes, and we are feeling the effects of a tough economy just like the people of America."

Given this, I disagree that this doesn't hit #3 for McCain. It's not a secret that he's mega rich, but he keeps all of his assets in his wife's name so it becomes hard to really get him on it without crassly dragging her into it. The home tax issue will become the $400 haircut in the way that it is a simple example that an opponent can use to point out that McCain himself does in fact live an extremely privileged lifestyle.

Anonymous said...

I agree with law right above.
I disagree that this does not undercut something for McCain.
His new angle this week has been "My country first". Hard to pursue that line of defense when you dont pay your taxes.
He also claims to be "not an elitist" (seven homes ?), to be a defender of good budgeting (that and credit card debt when you are worth 100M is a little ridiculous).
And I think #1 is here very potent. "he has not paid his taxes for five years" is a VERY VERY VERY powerful soundbite.
We shall see on Monday. I see it as potent but then again I thought Vicky I. would bring some more scrutiny of his liaisons and that didn't pan out so we shall see.

Anonymous said...

Oh and 2:44 is obviously one of the McCain trolls they are sending to "defend" him on various blogs as has been reported by the press.
Don't pay attention.

Wait Wait Fans said...
This post has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Yes on 3: He's incompetent on economic issues.