If you follow any major sport, you
probably know about weekly power rankings. Teams are rated on their
recent performance, and their standing may change from week to week.
The ranking supposedly reveals the ultimate winner.
Power rankings have now come to the
presidential campaign. Washington Post pundits plan to rank weekly
all potential candidates, Democrats, Republicans and independents.
But not Donald Trump. Perhaps the Post assumes that he has all the
power he needs to get the GOP nomination.
The presidential campaign is well under
way, starting barely after the latest elections. The pundits are
hard at work, speculating on the latest news. The voters are likely
to be confused.
The congressional races have also
begun. Last week, Sen. Susan Collins' campaign announced her best
fundraising quarter ever. It openly attributed the support, from all
50 states, to her vote in favor the appointment of Brett Kavanaugh
to the Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, Kavanaugh's opponents have
raised a war chest to support whatever candidate opposes Collins, the
expected Republican standard bearer. Money in politics? Here is a
case of money seeking the candidate, not the reverse. It seems clear
that the campaign will be mainly about that one vote by Collins.
There might be as many as 20 Democratic
hopefuls in the presidential race. Inevitably, this campaign crowd
must be seen as reflecting the belief that Trump is vulnerable and
almost any respectable Democrat can beat him. The problem is that's
just what the Democrats thought in 2016, when the result did not
support their optimism.
Only a few of the Democrats have a
platform. The Post's power ranking focuses more on where candidates
fit in their parties, based on their personality and where they hail
from.
Are the Democrats inclined to select a
reformer willing to upset tradition, as young voters supposedly want?
Or will they prefer a candidate who appeals to the white, working
class men who usually line up with the GOP? Is it the right moment
for a woman to be elected, thanks in part to the growing involvement
of women in the political process?
Whatever happens, it would be a mistake
to conclude that the Democrats will end up so badly divided they
cannot win. Unlike the GOP, the Democrats are accustomed to internal
battles and the campaign losers often stick with the party's
candidate.
On the GOP side, Trump seems to be
having trouble finding his footing. He has always relied on the
cheers of his base, the core group of supporters who stick with him
no matter his policy choices. But other Republicans, especially in
the business community, and even some of his core are now becoming
less reliable.
The economy is strong. But if it slows,
as forecast, will Trump still be able to take credit for a boom? The
tax cut has produced only small benefits, but a large deficit, making
it less popular than it was originally.
And he has stumbled. His Wall is not
happening and he looks increasingly desperate. His rebuke of the
government intelligence chiefs backfired, and he admitted that he had
only followed their analysis in the media, when most presidents would
have been briefed by them. The shutdown failed and left him looking
unsympathetic to workers.
Moderate GOP office holders have been
hinting they might run against him in party primaries. But they
would need massive funding and enough support from reluctant
Republicans to defeat Trump in early primaries. Achieving either
seems unlikely unless more of his base washes out.
Of course, the Mueller report may
contain enough damaging information about Trump's involvement with
the Russians in the 2016 campaign that even some of his base deserts
him. His continued coziness with Russia, while the diplomats and
military openly worry, could make him more politically vulnerable.
If Trump weakens or drops out, watch
for an army of GOP candidates. They would test whether the GOP has
permanently abandoned moderate politics to become a party of the far
right.
The political scene is too unsettled
and the primaries are too many months away for television's talking
heads to get much right.
With the campaign under way, it is
worth remembering picking a president is serious business, not a
sport to handicap. Speculation can swamp knowledge. The voter far
from Washington may be treated more like a commodity than as a
citizen.
Conclusion? Don't pay much attention
to the pundits and don't rush to pick a candidate. Plenty of time
remains for candidates to emerge, shine or simply disappear. This is
not a sport.