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Nominate-best-2010

Brown Bagging

Even GOP insiders don't expect Scott Brown to beat Martha Coakley. But they care how he loses.
By DAVID S. BERNSTEIN  |  December 16, 2009

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If you are finding it hard to get enthused about the seemingly preordained drubbing that Democratic Attorney General Martha Coakley will give to the GOP nominee, State Senator Scott Brown, in the special election for US Senate, you are not alone. But you may want to take a second look at the contest — which, properly viewed, has more to do with state Republican Party politics both in the immediate future and the next four years.

"Brown is not running to be US senator," says one Republican insider, "he's running to be . . . governor in 2014."

Brown, according to several Republican observers, is running a hopeless US Senate race (as Joe Malone did in 1988, against Ted Kennedy) to set the stage for a more realistic statewide race (for Malone, it was state treasurer in 1990).

Malone never did make it to the Corner Office, but his quest — including his failed gubernatorial challenge to fellow Republican Paul Cellucci in 1998 — went a long way toward defining the Mass GOP.

Brown could be poised to do the same, even though most GOP insiders harbor no illusions about Brown's chances in the January 19 election.

After all, more than 650,000 people voted in the Democratic Senate primary — nearly half of them for Coakley — but only 160,000 voted in the Republican primary. And nearly every observer agrees that Massachusetts voters are far less willing to vote for Republicans in congressional elections than for state offices.

Yet while Mass GOP leaders fully expect Brown to lose, there's a strange optimism that he will lose well. Or, at least, not lose disastrously.

"He's almost the dream candidate," says Amy Lambiaso, consultant with Liberty Square Group, who works with Republican candidates. "He's an excellent worker — he'll raise the money, he'll knock on doors."

Others echo that sentiment, and say that his efforts could help the state GOP revitalize and re-emerge as a political force in 2010.

"The Brown campaign is going to send a signal of what next year's statewide elections portend," says Bob Hedlund, a Republican state senator.

A tanking economy and a string of scandals have turned the public against Beacon Hill Democrats. For Republicans to take advantage, they need strong candidates, money, activism, and a good message.

Some state GOP insiders believe that Brown's Senate campaign might infuse that into the party. But, surprisingly, others fear it might do the exact opposite.

Defining the issues
Brown's effect on the 2010 state races could depend on whether he runs a highly ideological campaign or strikes a more centrist tone.

Throughout his political career, Brown has been considered a staunch conservative. His first race for the State Senate, in 2004, was defined largely by the issue of same-sex marriage, which Brown opposed. He is extremely popular among the conservative base of the state party, say insiders.

That's worrisome to those in the wing of the state GOP — personified by gubernatorial candidate Charlie Baker — who believe the party needs moderate candidates who focus on job creation and fiscal responsibility. They want to downplay social issues like same-sex marriage and abortion, and to distance themselves from the hard-line rhetoric of the Tea Party movement.

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Related: Elephant in the Room, Chaos Theory, The shape of things to come, More more >
  Topics: Talking Politics , Deval Patrick, Mitt Romney, Martha Coakley,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY DAVID S. BERNSTEIN
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  •   ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM  |  January 27, 2010
    Platoons of state Republicans, energized by Scott Brown's stunning victory over Democrat Martha Coakley last week, are setting their sights on November.
  •   DISASTER, THEN DÉTENTE  |  January 25, 2010
    From the first days after the earthquake struck Haiti — long before anyone knew how dire the situation was, let alone how the US government would respond — pundits were wagging their tongues about the potential political implications. A poor response, they said, would invite comparisons to the Bush administration's bungled handling of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.
  •   HOW BROWN WON  |  January 22, 2010
    As the Massachusetts US Senate election unfolded yesterday, all that the pols and pundits wanted to talk about was how Martha Coakley managed to lose the race. And there is plenty there to dissect. But there is another part of the story, and that is how Scott Brown managed to win it.
  •   READY TO RUMBLE  |  January 13, 2010
    Last summer, the upcoming race that got most Bay State politicos salivating was the run for governor.
  •   CHAOS THEORY  |  January 08, 2010
    In less than two weeks, when Massachusetts voters elect Martha Coakley to the US Senate — let's not pretend that Republican state senator Scott Brown has any chance of pulling off the monumental upset — they will trigger a massive domino effect that has the state's political class buzzing with anticipation.

 See all articles by: DAVID S. BERNSTEIN

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