Posted by
Ned Barnett on Tuesday, April 29, 2008 4:42:24 PM
By Ned Barnett (c) 2008
I have been giving a number of interviews to the media on campaign strategy and tactics - from Neil Cavuto and Fred Imus to Gannett and Newsweek - for media looking for answers, here are a few things you might want to know:
· I have been in politics professionally since the
early 70s when I was speechwriter for two governors (one Democrat, one
Republican) in South Carolina, writing about economic development issues, my
area (at the time) of specialization
·
I worked with the late Lee Atwater on the Ford
campaign in ’76 (Ford/SC) – I handled strategy and media for Lee, who was at
that time the youngest state party chairman of either party – he was 23, and
even then he was brilliant
·
In spite of my work with Ford, I was recruited
to serve on the Press Secretary’s staff in Washington (Carter) – I’d gone to
school with several of his people – but was starting a family and didn’t want
to uproot that family for what might be a short-term position
·
From ’74-’80, I worked on behalf of specific
candidates – a Democratic Lt. Governor, during his bid for the Governor’s
chair, a Republican Congressman, etc. – working media, strategy and
speechwriting (usually focusing on economic development and healthcare – and
more generally on business issues rather than social issues)
·
In the mid-80s, I took a special post-graduate
independent study program in market research; this refined both my research
abilities and – more important – my ability to both analyze what research
results really mean and to pinpoint Americans’ attitudes (as indicated by – but
not always boldly spelled out by – public opinion research)
·
After taking time off for a career detour that
included (but was not primarily about) lobbying on behalf of hospitals and
healthcare organizations, I worked with Perot until he melted down, then became
head of strategy and media for Clinton/Gore-Nevada ’92 (Democrats took Nevada
for the first time since Truman in ’48)
·
After a falling out with the Clinton
administration (even before they took office), I focused on working on behalf
of more conservative/pro-business associations and advocacy groups (Citizens
for a Sound Economy, Citizens for Health, etc.), as well as candidates for
state and national office (i.e., Senator)
·
Beginning in 2004, I have been – for radio talk
shows, print reporters, and now Fox – analyzing candidates statements and
actions (their PR) then reverse-engineering those actions to identify the
underlying strategies … then critiquing those strategies as being either sound
or flawed … and when I do this for the media, I strive to remain solidly
non-partisan – I’m not flacking for any one candidate, party or cause, but am
able to look at each campaigns’ actions. In 2004, I did 56 interviews
(including five appearances on the Fred Imus show in Tucson), and have done
more than a dozen so far this season. Write-ups of some of these
“reverse-engineered” strategy critiques can also be found at: http://barnettonpolitics.blogspot.com/