The campaign strategy of staying out of sight

The campaign strategy of staying out of sight November 2, 2010

From a piece about Harry Reid’s difficult re-election campaign:

Reid has what some political strategists refer to as an “Al Gore problem.” It is widely believed that Gore would have won the 2000 campaign if he would have just stayed out of public view for the last two weeks of the campaign. But every time Gore would emerge into the spotlight, George W. Bush’s numbers would improve.

For an incumbent (or in Gore’s case, quasi-incumbent) who is not well-liked, visibility is the enemy.

via Today’s Power Play: Reid Withers in the Spotlight | Foxnews.com.

Would that more candidates would try that strategy of not making public appearances!  I suppose it would only work for incumbents, but still, not being visible would make many politicians more likable.  In the early days of our republic, presidential candidates would make a point of not campaigning, allowing their surrogates to do that for them.  It was considered undignified to appear in public asking people for their votes.  And it is undignified!

Can you think of other politicians, past or present, who might have “an Al Gore problem”?  I don’t want to bash them.  Let’s limit this to politicians who actually might be pretty good at their job, but simply don’t come across all that well.

"So, are we going to go to war to free the Georgians, Chechnyans, Tibetans and ..."

DISCUSS: Our Approach to Foreign Policy
"I still have stuffed away in one of my boxes the book I found on ..."

Where Christianity Is Growing the Most
"I would think there could be only 1 "biggest" of anything."

DISCUSS: Our Approach to Foreign Policy
"He is advocating staying out (i.e., not sending weapons to Ukraine). Lets not pretend it ..."

DISCUSS: Our Approach to Foreign Policy

Browse Our Archives