Even though months of groundwork in Iowa and New Hampshire have so far not paid dividends in the polls for Democratic presidential candidate Martin O’Malley, he and his team insist they don’t sweat the rise of Sen. Bernie Sanders and the continued strength of Hillary Clinton.
Despite O’Malley’s strong progressive resume, the former two-term governor of Maryland is the first choice of just 2% of national Democrats, according to the most recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. And he’s not doing much better in early state rankings, where many Democrats have still not heard of him.
O’Malley was supposed to be the liberal alternative to frontrunner Clinton, but he’s seen Sanders snatch that mantle in recent weeks and consolidate support among progressives’ wing of the party with giant rallies in liberal locales. The dynamic leaves O’Malley with little room to move up and, at least for the moment, an unclear path to relevance, let alone victory.
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Despite all that, team O’Malley maintains he’s right where he needs to be, on pace for a slow-burn success. They see Clinton as weaker than expected and Sanders as a passing fad. Liberals may want to have a fling with the Democratic socialist from Vermont, but will settle down with the proven executive from Maryland.
This is how O’Malley thinks he can win the Democratic nomination.
“We’re doing exactly what we want to do,” O’Malley’s top strategist Bill Hyers told msnbc in an interview. Hyers managed New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s come-from-behind campaign and says O’Malley has plenty of time to enact his own upset in Iowa’s February Caucuses.
Many voters don’t really start deciding until six weeks out from elections, Hyers says, so O’Malley’s surge can come “as late as two-weeks out” from the Iowa Caucuses.
Between now and then, he’s laying the groundwork with a strategy that couples small events with big ideas. His aides see O’Malley as the best retail politician in the field and he’ll spend the next seven months doing the unglamourous, but valuable work of introducing himself to as many people as possible.
O’Malley called it his “summer of introduction” on Baltimore radio station WBAL this week, acknowledging that despite his all of his efforts, he’s still largely unknown.









