Romney Thinks Some Bloggers Are More Equal Than Others
By Bluey Posted in 2008 | 2008 | Bloggers | Mitt Romney — Comments (20) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
Mitt Romney held his first conference call with bloggers yesterday, following in the footsteps of rivals John McCain and Mike Huckabee. Romney's campaign chose to connect the candidate to bloggers -- at least a select few -- just as the Republican presidential race reaches a critical moment.
The campaign's director of online communications, Stephen Smith, organized the call for about a dozen mostly pro-Romney bloggers Friday morning. But as soon as it was over, the buzz among bloggers was not what Romney said, but who got left off the invite list.
I was among the unlucky ones who didn't make the cut. I'd be lying if I didn't acknowledge my disappointment. It's not that I had a craving to talk to Romney; I got to do my own one-on-one interview about a year ago. But I'd never been deliberately excluded from one of these calls.
Apparently, I wasn't the only one who was miffed. Matt Lewis of Townhall told me that he wrote to Smith and press secretary Kevin Madden questioning the campaign's decision. Jon Fleischman of the Flash Report had just interviewed Romney a day earlier and couldn't believe he was left off the call.
"I think this must be a case of the left foot and the right foot not talking," Fleischman said. "When running for president, you have to avoid missteps like this, especially this late in the game."
Continued on the jump...
And Jennifer Rubin of Commentary, who reports daily about the presidential race, thought Romney's outreach to bloggers stood out in stark contrast to McCain's operation. McCain holds calls every other week, invites a variety of bloggers (some of whom openly disagree with the candidate) and usually takes every last question.
"It seems apparent that McCain's team has a far more sophisticated and more inclusive new media operation," Rubin told me. "The frequency of the McCain calls, the length the calls, the opportunity for substantive follow-up questions and the number of invitees dwarfs anything the other campaigns have done. Perhaps it has something to do with the results McCain is achieving."
In fairness to the Romney campaign, I asked Smith to explain the campaign's rationale for limiting the number of participants on the call.
"The selection process was more art than science," Smith said, "but we considered factors such as the size of the blogger’s readership, the geographic location of that readership, and the amount of influence that each blogger has within new media generally or within more particular audiences (former supporters of Mayor Giuliani or Senator Thompson, for example)."
The result was 14 bloggers who called in to chat with Romney: Reid Wilson of Real Clear Politics, Ed Morrissey of Captain's Quarters, Patrick Ruffini and Amanda Carpenter of Townhall, Phil Klein and James Antle of the American Spectator, Dean Barnett of the Weekly Standard, Paul Mirengoff of Power Line, Jim Geraghty of The Campaign Spot, Michael Illions of PoliPundit, John Hawkins of Right Wing News, Jim Hoft of Gateway Pundit, Bryan Preston of Hot Air, and Dan Riehl of Riehl World View.
Smith told me more bloggers were invited, but some couldn't participate. Of those who did, it should be noted that most have either endorsed Romney or are publicly working against McCain. Romney's outreach strategy appears to be somewhat similar to the approach of Huckabee's blogger calls. The last time I attended one, I was the only blogger who wasn't backing Huckabee.
Here's how Soren Dayton described the Huckabee calls: "Every question, except mine, started with an expression of support or love. This is not how it works for Rudy Giuliani or John McCain. The people on those calls are high-traffic national blogs focused on politics. The people on the Huckabee call were, at least, local blogs, often focused on things other than politics."
Romney's campaign was apparently trying to find something in the middle: high-traffic blogs favorable to Romney. Apparently, it worked. Smith told me "the invited bloggers asked meaningful questions and gave fair reports of the call."
Kudos to Romney for finally doing a call with bloggers. It's just too bad the campaign limited its impact by selecting such a small group of participants.
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I had the same sentiments about this call and agree, as well, with Jennifer Rubin, that McCain's calls are put together much better. I've been impressed that he has taken weekly calls and no one else has. Perhaps the Romney camp will change their ways when they see how much more they can reach out -- especially now that many hardcore conservatives are flocking to him in order to prevent McCain's nomination.
"Count it the greatest sin to prefer life to honor, and for the sake of living lose what makes life worth living."
-Decimus Juvenal
Well, it's his first time doing it, he's probably just testing the waters by putting these limitations on it. While I'm sad he didn't offer one to Redstate, I can see how is rationale is justified. He just wanted to talk to people who liked him, and who won't blast him on their blogs if he doesn't have a great answer. That's very important, especially seeing how close we are to the big day.
Courage becomes a living and an attractive virtue when it is regarded not only as a willingness to die manfully, but also as a determination to live decently.
Isn't this a bit late to be starting this? Why wait until you are nearly out of the race to have a conversation with bloggers? Wouldn't this have made more sense five months ago?
What is it with all the WHINNING in the Republican party these days?
To take this as a slight is childish. The candidate did not have a lot of time and there HAS to be a limit to the number of bloggers on the call.
I bet you a dime if you let the campaign know you wanted to be in on future calls they will make that happen for you.
In the meantime, maybe you could work on your self-esteem a little but.
I don't have a self-esteem problem, but thanks for expressing your concern for my health.
You're missing my larger point: It's a little late for Romney to finally be reaching out to bloggers on this level. More importantly, it's strange, in my opinion, to limit the audience to mostly pro-Romney bloggers.
has been hammering Romney for a long time now. Not that that justifies him being left off the list but personally, I don't like Matt's articles due to the obvious bias and someone in Mitt's campaign probably holds a grudge.
*I will never surrender to John McCain*

I am supporting Ron Paul in the primary because we should spend another dime on Iraq and I favor complete withdrawal of the troops, but Romney has a GREAT pro-legal immigration stance and he's good on judges.
If it's Romney vs. Obama....I *might* vote Romney.
If it's McCain vs. Obama....I will campaign for, donate to, and vote for Barack Obama with enthusiasm.
This is what we're reduced to? Complaining that the right folks don't get invites to conference calls?
I thought you'd see this as an opportunity, Mike. You guys at Edelman are the undisputed leaders of blogger-call logistics. Maybe the Romney campaign should throw some cash to you for advice.
mayhaps, but I'd still be wary about putting friendly folks with openly antagonistic folks on the same call..Certainly for his first call. Having a fight break out, or getting sandbagged like the first time he engaged RedState would have been a worse result from the call, I'd think.
Yes bluey- it's Obama\Clinton or bust if McStain is the nominee.
We must unite against John McCain both in the primary and the general election.
Who got an invite or not doesn't seem to rank with the GWOT, 20+ million illegals, border security, the economy and a few hundred other issues - my $.02.
Bloggers who got to INTERVIEW Romney are miffed because they weren't invited to a conference call? I don't see the problem. If the campaign actively filtered the bloggers to make sure they were only Romney supporters, then I agree, that would be in poor taste but this IS a campaign and we're awefully close to Super Tuesday so I can understand the rationale.
John McCain turned the corner with me when I got on his call and wrote it up.
Mitt Romney is foolish not to reach out with these calls.
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"If we want to take this party back, and I think we can someday, let’s get to work." – Barry Goldwater
And it's true--he takes openly confrontational questions from callers and answers them respectfully and truthfully.
I personally don't think anyone feels HURT by not being invited; the point is, what the heck is Romney afraid of? BLOGGERS? Seriously?
How is he going to deal with the disloyal opposition and the attack dogs in the WH press room? How is he going to deal with our foreign enemies if he can't stand a little heat from bloggers? (Oh wait, he's gonna call the lawyers and the State Department. LOL.)
What's he gonna do, vet all the WH Press Corps to ensure they're friendlies? (It'd be nice in some cases, i.e. Helen Thomas, but it would be stupid.)
Where was Glenn Reynolds, then? Or Charles Johnson? If they want publicity, you'd think they'd be obvious choices.
As I said above, if he can't take the heat from bloggers, how's he gonna handle the disloyal opposition?
some 100 million of them?
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
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And as a huge new fan of Redstate I am disappointed that Erick and company did not get an invite. Although I try and imagine Mark Kilmer in a room with him...Nah, on second thought Romney's health is paramount!
-White Goodman