Sixteen candidates. Ten chairs. Next up on the “Hunger Games,” it’s debate season.
For the Republican Party, the upcoming month is going to be a cutthroat game of musical chairs as the uber-crowded GOP field vies for a spot on the first primary debate stage August 9. According to the rules set by the debate host Fox News, only candidates polling in the top 10 in national polls will be allowed on the stage — a measure of legitimacy for those contenders. One that will also bring money and momentum.
The next 30 days, campaign strategists say, will be an all-out war: In order to distinguish themselves and win a spot in the coveted “gang of 10,” campaigns are going to spend big bucks and the candidates are going to throw rhetorical bombs every which way in hopes of upping their name recognition in national polls and growing their base fast.
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“You have to light yourself on fire, and you’re going to see candidates do that to try to get attention,” former Obama advisor David Axelrod told msnbc. “They’re gonna have to do handstands, juggle, swallow swords and flames in order to get attention.”
Strategists said the competition for a spot on the debate stage has put the Republican Party in the same, unenviable position it was in during the 2012 race: A crowded field showcases more conservative rhetorical bomb-throwers while more moderate, viable general election candidates are overshadowed. If current polling holds, the GOP’s only female candidate (Carly Fiorina), a well-respected senator from South Carolina (Lindsey Graham), and the governor of one of the nation’s most important swing states (Ohio’s John Kasich) won’t make the stage — but Donald Trump will.
“If they were trying the avoid the spectacle of the debate stage, they have failed miserably,” Democratic strategist Anita Dunn said of the GOP.
Some strategists argue that state polls in Iowa and New Hampshire and other early contest states would be a fairer measure of a candidate’s viability.
“National polling at this point is largely a joke. It’s just a lot of people who do polling making a lot of free money, because, number one, voters aren’t engaged. Number two, voters aren’t engaged, and, number three, no one cares,” former Republican National Committee chair Michael Steele told msnbc.
“If you’re trying to get attention right now, you’re screaming fire in a movie theater,” Dunn said. “That is what they’re trying to avoid, it is a no-win situation for the Republican Party right now.”








