snip ...
So when the New York Times dropped its long, carefully sorrowful piece on Graham Platner last week, I read it the way a retired safecracker watches a heist movie.
And here's the thing. The hit fell short. I knew of the woman at its center, and she was
always one of the tribe. She was a Republican operative, a DC MAGA apparatchik who ran Ladies for Brett Kavanaugh. That was always going to sully the attack, and given she was once part of Ali Alexander's circle of CPAC freaks, I wondered how credulous the Times would be.
Turns out, not as credulous as MAGA hoped.
It fell short because the playbook only works on people who agree to play the victim, and this is a sweeping lesson for Democratic candidates. It fell short because Fifield expected the Times to print her accusations verbatim without giving Platner a chance to respond and offer both a rebuttal and the testimony of other women he'd dated.
The GOP's entire theory of Democratic candidates rests on one assumption: that the left will be so delicate, so morally fastidious, so desperate to be seen as clean that the faintest smudge on the campaign escutcheon becomes a death sentence. They repurposed Alinsky against Democrats decades ago: make the enemy live up to their own book of rules, because you know they can't, and you know they'll flinch first.
It's a beautiful con, and it only requires one thing to work: cowardice.