As I went through the news this morning, I picked up on a subtle theme that seems to be permeating the political discourse right now.
The Hill quoted a GOP strategist saying Team Romney has “the stench of a losing campaign.”
Politico quoted Greg Strimple, who worked on John McCain’s 2008 campaign, saying, “The problem is the campaign is now in a spiral and no one knows how to pull out.” The same piece quoted a senior Republican who’s also deeply involved in this cycle’s campaign, who said, “As a candidate, [Romney] is just not going to improve.” A Romney bundler added, “[W]e’re just … imploding.”
The New York Times reported that a “palpably gloomy and openly frustrated mood has begun to creep into Mr. Romney’s campaign for president,” and some Romney aides “are now wondering whether victory is still possible.” A “flustered adviser, describing the mood, said that the campaign was turning into a vulgar, unprintable phrase.”
The Daily Beast ran a piece from Mark McKinnon, a former Bush adviser, who wrote, “I honestly don’t know what Romney can do to win support from the voters he needs to gain a majority. I thought the debates would be an opportunity, but he has dug his hole so deeply now, I don’t know if he can pull himself out…. I loved Michelle Obama’s line in her speech: ‘A presidency reveals who you are.’ So do campaigns. And mark me down as one Republican not happy with what is being revealed about Mitt Romney.”









