Waiting for Mitt Romney to take the stage in a Florida community hall, Clint Bard, owner of a garden centre, doesn't think it's asking too much to expect him to skip the nasty attack stuff for once and focus on explaining what he would do if elected president. As if.
Today is primary day in Florida, and nothing about the campaign has been sunny. So ferocious, in fact, has been the mutual demolition derby between Romney and his main rival, Newt Gingrich, that many Repub-licans, including grassroots supporters like Bard, fear that whoever emerges as the party's nominee will be too damaged effectively to take on President Barack Obama in November.
It has also been prompting fears that a protracted civil war between the old guard establishment for Mitt and the Tea Party grassroots party members for Newt could even lead to a brokered convention in August and, conceivably, the drafting in at the last moment of a new figure entirely. (Did someone say Jeb Bush?)
"I don't understand what the Republicans are doing, but I think it's downright stupid," Bard, 61, notes. "I've had enough of it. I worry they are just setting things up for the Democrats. We are talking about two men who are meant to be the smartest in the country. When are they going to wake up?"
Not for a while, it seems. Romney and the political action committee that supports him threw the kitchen sink at Gingrich in Iowa, and when he came fifth in New Hampshire they thought him dead and let up. It was a mistake they won't make again. (Recall the double-digit Gingrich blow-out in South Carolina.) It's why it took Romney roughly two minutes to make his first mention of Newt at his rally in Pompano Beach. He said his "record is one of failed leadership", connected some fuzzy dots between his having consulted for Freddie Mac, the government-backed mortgage lender, and the housing collapse. (Newt caused it.) And he mocked the former Speaker as a whiner.