Martin O’Malley is facing a double bind: He can’t wage the kind of campaign he’s naturally suited for, leaving him stuck to run as something he’s not.
The former Maryland governor announced his candidacy for president in Baltimore today, two days after the latest national survey put his support in the race for the Democratic nomination at just 1%. This is not some statistical fluke. In a total of 53 public polls dating back to December 2012, O’Malley has tallied more than 2% exactly once, in a March 2014 survey that put him at 4%. In nine polls, he’s clocked in at 0%.
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This lack of traction comes even though O’Malley checks off a lot of boxes for Democrats. His gubernatorial record includes the enactment of a state-level Dream Act, strict gun control, gay marriage, and the abolition of the death penalty. So he can — and does — brag that he’s delivered on the party’s agenda in a way that no other would-be Obama successor (or, for that matter, Obama himself) has.
He’s also touting a populist economic message that’s very much in sync with the liberal grassroots: hiking the minimum wage, reinstating Glass-Steagall and expanding Social Security. And he’s been preparing for this moment for years, traversing the country as the chairman of the Democratic Governors Association during the 2012 cycle, and snagging a plum speaking role at that year’s Democratic convention and spending the last year on the rubber chicken circuit. And for all of that, he’s essentially not registering in the polls.
Granted, you could argue that O’Malley shouldn’t be registering in the polls at this point. Not many voters are paying attention yet, he hasn’t been on the air with any ads, and he’s been crowded out of the media spotlight by Hillary Clinton. Plus, national polls don’t mean that much when all of the action this year will be in the early primary and caucus states — where O’Malley still has plenty of time to make inroads and position himself for a breakthrough performance. So sure, maybe it’s as simple as that, and a few months from now we’ll be talking about his surprising traction.
Steve Kornacki
Steve Kornacki, author of "The Red and the Blue: 1990s and the Birth of Political Tribalism," is a national political correspondent for NBC News and MSNBC.








