The rise of Donald Trump has scrambled the race for the Republican presidential nomination in myriad ways. But perhaps no candidate has been knocked off-balance as badly as Scott Walker.
The Wisconsin governor was once the odds-on favorite to win the Iowa caucuses, and most analysts put him in the very top tier of his party’s contenders. These days, he barely registers in the polls, and he’s been reduced to aping Trump’s anti-politics act in a desperate effort to regain momentum.
As the Republican field gets set for its second debate, Walker faces a barrage of headlines declaring him all but toast. Still, he has some important advantages that could come to the fore over the long run of a campaign that’s still four and half months—a lifetime in politics—from its first contest. Could it be too soon to count Walker out?
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There’s no doubt he’s in a deep hole. Walker shot to near the front of the field back in January, when he gave a forceful and well-received speech at a gathering of Iowa conservatives. With his hard-right policy positions and record of accomplishment as the governor of a Midwestern swing state, many saw Walker as the candidate with the best chance of uniting the establishment, tea party, and social conservative wings of the GOP, potentially forging a powerful coalition. In July, eight out of 10 Republican insiders told Politico Walker would win Iowa if the caucuses were held then.
But Walker’s poll numbers began falling in late spring as Trump’s shot up, and they’ve kept plummeting ever since. A Quinnipiac Poll released Friday found him at just 3% in Iowa, where he has all but staked his campaign. And a New York Times survey out Tuesday put him at just 2% nationally—good for 10th place.
Perhaps the clearest sign of how Walker has seen himself upstaged is his recent campaign trail rhetoric. He’s taken to promising that as president, he’ll “wreak havoc”—a transparent effort to steal away some of Trump’s anti-establishment cred, but one that may ring hollow when coming from a man who’s been running for elected office since his twenties. His release Monday of a plan to take on organized labor as president—“to wreak havoc on Washington, America needs a leader that has real solutions,” he declared—elicited mostly shrugs from the media.
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It hasn’t just been Trump’s rise that has felled Walker—whose campaign didn’t respond to a request for comment for this story. His last debate performance was mostly bland and unmemorable. And he’s dug his own grave on the campaign trail by offering a series of equivocating non-answers that his staff often have had to clean up after the fact—on issues ranging from evolution to President Obama’s patriotism and faith. “[H]e was on three different sides of two-sided issues on a couple different occasions,” one prominent Iowa Republican told Politico recently.
Still, Walker’s campaign is a long way from dead. In fact, it wouldn’t be shocking if, by the time the Iowa caucuses roll around in February, he’s back in the thick of the fight.
Think of it this way: Trump may never suffer the kind of sharp and sudden fall that short-lived 2012 front-runners like Herman Cain and Michele Bachmann experienced, but it’s still much more likely than not that he won’t win the nomination. Political science suggests party leaders ultimately play a decisive role in nomination fights, ensuring that their party’s standard-bearer is someone who can be trusted to carry out its policy priorities once in office. And they’re arrayed in lockstep against the flamboyant real-estate mogul—thanks largely to his ideological deviations. Ben Carson, currently in second place, is unlikely to be acceptable to GOP elites either, for reasons of electability.
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