Rick Perry says there are too many debates. Is he right?
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Rick Perry says there are too many GOP presidential debates, and that they鈥檙e counterproductive. On Fox News the other day the Texas governor told Bill O鈥橰eilly that his participation in all these word fights might have been a mistake.
鈥淎ll they are interested in is stirring it up between the candidates instead of really talking about the issues that are important to the American people,鈥 said Governor Perry.
His campaign says Perry is committed to appearing on stage at the next Republican debate, in Rochester, Mich., on Nov. 9. After that it will decide whether to participate on a case-by-case basis.
鈥淭here are numerous 鈥 15, 16, 17 鈥 debates, and we鈥檙e taking a look at each one and we鈥檙e making the appropriate consideration,鈥 said Perry spokesman Mark Miner on Thursday.
Is Perry right that there are too many debates? Or is this a baseless complaint, like Emperor Joseph II鈥檚 infamous criticism of a Mozart opera for having 鈥渢oo many notes鈥?
Well, Perry is simply saying out loud what many Republican operatives believe, for one thing. As Byron York points out, there are a dozen debates scheduled between Nov. 9 and the Florida primary on Jan. 31. Given normal holiday breaks, 鈥渢hat鈥檚 a lot of debates in very little time,鈥 .
We count a total of 21 debates overall between last August and the end of the primary season. Totals vary, depending on what you define as a 鈥渄ebate,鈥 but by our total there were 17 debates in the corresponding time period in the 2008 presidential cycle.
So yes, there鈥檚 debate creep. Plus, the events themselves are becoming less PBS and more 鈥淴 Factor,鈥 with flashier graphics, more attention to staging and other production values, and a general amp-up of attempts to define distinctions between candidates.
Jon Stewart hit this fingernail on the head that superimposed a Blue Angels fighter jet interior fly-by on the opening of a recent CNN/Tea Party debate.
Yes, debates can introduce to America candidates who aren鈥檛 well-known. But after a while, don鈥檛 they become exercises in survival, nothing but efforts by presidential hopefuls to negotiate a dangerous evening without committing some kind of perceived gaffe?
But that鈥檚 Perry鈥檚 problem 鈥 he鈥檚 committed more than his share of those gaffes. So even if he鈥檚 right, he鈥檚 wrong. He can鈥檛 afford to not debate because he can鈥檛 afford to continue to debate. Or something like that.
鈥淲e know he wants out of the debates. That is precisely why he should not have raised it himself," writes Erick Erickson, editor of the conservative .
Also, it is possible that Perry and everyone else bemoaning the plethora of debates has missed a fundamental point: In today鈥檚 wired world, debates may be the campaign. Period.
Yes, there is all that hand-shaking in Iowa and hot beverage consumption in New Hampshire diners. But perhaps that matters less than those of us in the old school think. And maybe that鈥檚 why Herman Cain is doing so well and defying all those flavor-of-the-month prognostications.
Cain鈥檚 got little in the way of a national campaign infrastructure. He hasn鈥檛 even appeared in early primary states that much. Some suspect his campaign at least began as a book tour in disguise. But he鈥檚 done well in the debates 鈥 and now he鈥檚 a front-runner, maybe the front-runner, in the GOP White House race.
Newt Gingrich similarly has no staff and little money. But he鈥檚 on the rise, thanks in part to recent strong debate performances.
So here鈥檚 our suggestion for 2016: Presidential Debate Island. Candidates live in huts on Teddy Roosevelt Island in the Potomac and vie in such competitions as the 鈥Wolf Blitzer Twenty Questions Limbo鈥 to win New Hampshire delegates and other valuable political prizes.