beastie wrote:I'm curious about this. Normally, when the incumbent had approval ratings below 50 (which Obama did at the beginning of the election cycle) and unemployment at 8%, conventional wisdom is that the challenger will win. Why did you have such low expectations for Romney?
I just remember the amount of "energy" there was for Obama last time round. The songs, the iconography, the stadiums. There was a huge amount of love and support. I even teared up (for joy) the night he was elected, because even though he was a Democrat and I hadn't voted for him, I was overwhelmed to see our first black president. It was a huge historical moment.
I also haven't been effected with the same loathing and disdain that many other conservatives have towards him. While I almost totally disagree with him politically, I still really
like the guy. I know people who can't stand the way he walks and talks and have a real personal revulsion for him, but I just don't have a problem with him on that level.
On the other hand, Romney just doesn't do much for me. And as a white, middle class, conservative Mormon, that has always really worried me. If Romney can't connect with
me, then what does that mean for everyone else. I respect him and think he would be a much better president, but there just isn't that "spark". And as I told my brother-in-law four years ago, I firmly believed that for the Republicans to win in 2012 they would need a "certified rock star".
Romney is many things, but he's not a rock star. So while I understand all the statistics and data that argue why Romney "should" win, if he doesn't, I'll always argue that it was because he just couldn't connect.