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The most powerful dynamic driving the Republican primary right now is not the race for first place. It’s the race for second. The position every one really wants – from Rick Santorum through Gingrich, Perry, Cain and Bachmann - is that of the official Not-Mitt.
In presidential debates, we’re used to seeing the front runner get taken down a peg or two by the others on stage. Recall the slings and arrows directed Hillary Clinton’s way in the early Democratic debates of the 2008 cycle. But in this year’s Republican performances, almost no one ever seems to go for Romney. Occasionally there will be a brief nudge in his direction, but then the energy will vanish like a wisp of minor turbulence before all the would-be Not-Mitts go back to attacking each other. The reason for this is the numbers, of course. A consistent 75% of the Republican primary electorate just can’t bring themselves to vote for Romney, and, as a result, they’re all up for grabs. So the real prize at this stage in the game is to be the last man or woman left standing.
When we reach that point, the primary really will get interesting. The Republican Party rules are that all states scheduling contests before April 1 will be required to allocate convention delegates by proportional representation instead of a winner-take-all system. There are now over 30 states scheduled to go before this date. That means that the winner of the Not-Mitt contest will get to run a gorilla campaign against the front runner all the way through to Spring.
If the Not-Mitt has enough staying power to make it to the convention, then the nuclear option might just get triggered. As Politico’s Rob Richie and Elsie Helgesen wrote today, “The national convention in Tampa just might take us back to a different political era: one in which delegates act on their power to choose the nominee that they think best represents the Republican Party — even if that is someone other than the apparent winner through state primaries and caucuses.” So a proper blood-on-the-floor-convention could well be what we're looking at.
It remains to be seen whether this full fledged self-destruct scenario plays out, of course, but, as we sit down to enjoy Thanksgiving turkey, it’s worth reflecting that the ravenous ball of rage that the Republicans took on when they co-opted the tea party, may well mean that the next turkey to get devoured is the GOP.
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