Authors: Calvin Trillin
Amidst all this, Mitt Romney could at least
Refer to turmoil in the Middle East
As one example illustrating how
Stability and long-term peace is now
In that sad region further out of reach
Than when Obama gave his Cairo speech.
Mitt said we’d been too quick to spare the rod
In Syria, when dealing with Assad,
And hadn’t made it clear how we will ban
The bomb from all those mad dogs in Iran.
Romney Outsources His Foreign Policy to the Neoconservatives
After 9/11, the neocons captured one Republican president who was naïve about the world. Now … they have captured another would-be Republican president and vice president, both jejune about the world.
—Maureen Dowd,
The New York Times
Advisers to Mitt from the neocon right
Believe that America must show its might.
Though draft dodgers all, they’re in favor of force—
With other folks’ kids on the front lines, of course.
Through Romney’s campaign, they have all slithered back—
The people who brought you the war in Iraq.
Obama’s weak, Mitt tried hard to contend—
Although considering Osama’s end,
That notion wasn’t such an easy sell.
And some thought it would not help Mitt to dwell
On matters like what touched off Mideast mobs
Instead of concentrating hard on jobs.
He’d started out by saying that’s what mattered,
But now the shots from Mitt’s campaign seemed scattered.
Barack’s convention bounce did not recede,
And gradually he opened up a lead.
Mitt’s team was braced for what the polls were bringing:
That states that swung were now no longer swinging.
Yes, in Ohio, many polls would find
That Mitt was ten percentage points behind.
Ohio
(A reprise sung by Republicans)
Why, oh why, oh why-oh?
Why are we losing in Ohio?
Why is this our fate in our golden-ring state?
This simply doesn’t compute.
What a lame campaigner!
Given his gaffes, Mitt should stay mute.
Oh why, oh why-oh, should we lose Ohio?
How could we ever have chosen this guy-oh?
Maybe we should have picked Newt.
When analysts then analyzed the polling,
Some said the bell for Mitt’s campaign was tolling.
Some right-wing bloggers said that they would guess
That pollsters are as biased as the press.
The Romney campaign spokesmen said, “Just wait:
Our man will crush him in the first debate.”
The pundits said, whenever they’d expound,
Mitt still had time to turn this thing around.
But, given early voting, they would note,
Some states had folks now lining up to vote.
From pols and pundits, therefore, what we heard
Was that the first debate, October third,
Was something close to Romney’s do or die.
Advice to him was not in short supply.
Aggressiveness is good, said some, although
Not so aggressive that you fail to show
You’re likable. (Well, sort of—more or less.)
Remember that when starting to aggress.
Specifics, some said, were what Romney needs—
Though those could get him lost among the weeds.
So no specifics? Or should Romney fling
Some zingers, or embrace the vision thing?
Newt Gingrich, who, to judge by his career,
Might counsel Mitt to bite Obama’s ear,
Was much less snarky, offering advice
That humor often proves a great device—
Though laughs from Mitt would be an aberration
As likely as some aural mastication.
Newt Gingrich’s Deepest Feelings About Mitt Romney’s Upcoming Debate with Barack Obama
(Sung standing alone on center stage, illuminated by a single spot, during a guest appearance by the Speaker on
Glee
)
Our candidate must—and right here is the key—
Express big ideas, as big as the sea.
He must fill our base with tremendous esprit.
With supersized schemes, he must show just how he
Will see that free enterprise always stays free.
He must be heroic, like some Maccabee.
The bottom line, friends, is so simple to see.
It should have been me! Oh yes, don’t you agree?
It should have been me! Yes, it. Should. Have. Been. Me!
In all, this first debate was heavy going.
Statistics fail to get the juices flowing.
It got so thick, so lacking in one-liners,
Some people fell asleep in their recliners.
Of those awake when all was said and done,
Most had this thought: The challenger had won.
Mitt’s answers, whether factual or not,
Were clear and crisp, and all those answers got
Delivered with a quite commanding style.
The President seemed listless all the while—
Less certain of the points that he would share
And wishing he were anyplace but there.
So Democrats looked on with some dismay.
“The President,” some said, “is MIA.”
No traps were sprung; no knockout blows were struck.
But Mitt’s campaign at last had got unstuck.
In spin-room chats, his men were all aglow.
Barack, they said, no longer had Big Mo.
The press found this a scrumptious dish to swallow.
It meant there was a horse race still to follow.
So in the dozen days folks had to wait
To watch once more those two men in debate
They tuned to cable, hearing pundits speak
On why Barack Obama’d been so weak,
And why the man had even failed to mention
The Mitt remarks that riled up such contention:
That video, sent Democrats from heaven,
In which Mitt says exactly forty-seven
Percent of us play victims, with the goal
Of living lives as moochers on the dole—
A speech for weeks Mitt would not disavow.
“Completely wrong” is what he called it now.
Mitt Doesn’t Think That Nearly Half the People in This Country Are Moochers After All
After weeks of acknowledging only that his 47-percent remarks were “not elegantly stated,” Mitt Romney now says that they were “just completely wrong.”
—News reports
He was, he says, completely wrong;
To care for everyone is vital.
He’s singing now a different song,
And “Etch A Sketch” is that song’s title.
With Mitt called winner of the first debate
Republicans began to celebrate.
Another job report was then released.
That grim percentage had at last decreased,
Though not at an accelerated rate.
The figure now, at last, was under eight.
“Conspiracy!” the right-wing bloggers cried:
The numbers had been cooked, or maybe fried,
To serve some liberal reelection goals—
Exactly what they’d said about the polls.
But soon they had no reason to complain.
The President, reporting made it plain,
Had lost his lead. The latest polls had shown it.
In just one night, some said, Obama’d blown it.
A message by the voters had been sent:
They found Mitt credible as president.
And now some Democrats began to panic.
Was that debate, they asked, Barack’s
Titanic
?
In this great orator, whom they’d revered,
Had every ounce of mojo disappeared?
And could, by chance, Republicans be right
That he’d become just too used up to fight?
The Democrats now found themselves conceding
Obama’s standing in the polls was bleeding.
As Biden’s night approached, they hoped that Joe
Could staunch that, or at least could slow the flow.
It’s possible that Biden got that done.
Though pollsters disagreed on just who won,
The veep at least had focused some attention
On facts his boss had somehow failed to mention—
Like how Mitt’s scorn for poorer people soars
When he and fat cats talk behind closed doors.
This veep debate became a little snarky,
With Biden calling Ryan claims malarkey.
They clashed on numbers and they clashed on facts.
They clashed on who should pay how much in tax.
A Simple Guide to Every Single Republican Tax Proposal Ever Made
(As verified by 178 independent studies)
Sure, sometimes they call it supply-side,
And sometimes they say job creation
Is risked if our entrepreneurs
Think profits get snatched by taxation.
It comes to the same simple credo
Around which the party has danced:
If rich people pay less in taxes,
Then everyone’s life is enhanced.
Joe Biden from the start had come out slugging.
Though Ryan’s team said what came out was mugging.
Joe’s smile, Dems said, would not have been so visible
If things that Ryan said had been less risible.
This tussle was, no matter how it went,
Just warm-up for the next week’s main event.
The Democrats, with fears he might lose twice,
Bombarded B. Obama with advice.
It turned out that they had no need to worry,
Obama took command, and in a hurry.
He didn’t seem the same guy as before.
He won, said pollsters who were keeping score.
Though neither toward the other was benign,
Mitt seemed at times the one who crossed the line:
Toward both the moderator and his foe
He acted like a bossy CEO.
And also, said the tweets and posts and e-mails,
With his remarks he’d lost some ground with females.
He said he’d asked (not true, as it transpired)
For names of able women to be hired
When he became the boss in Boston, Mass.—
To crack the ceiling that they faced of glass.
Thus “binders full of women” was a phrase
That banged around the Internet for days.
The ref was Candy Crowley for this brawl,
The head butts and the gouges hers to call.
Benghazi’s muddled tale, Mitt had a hunch,
Was where he’d likely land a roundhouse punch.
It seemed to be a weakness to exploit,
But Mitt at trying that proved maladroit.
Romney Attacks Obama on His First Response to the Benghazi Killings
(Or, We Never Promised You a Rose Garden)
Mitt thought O’s response had not talked about terror.
Of that he was certain, but he was in error.
A warning was sent, but one Mitt failed to heed:
Obama, politely, had said “Please, proceed.”
’Twas Crowley who told Mitt, and left him dejected—
A pushy A-student by teacher corrected.
He’d laid out a trap, and then
Snap!
The next minute
The Mittster himself was the one who’d stepped in it.
The Fox News types said everyone’s aware
That Candy Crowley was, of course, unfair.
In their religion one can seem quite pious
By blaming everything on liberal bias.