The big GOP prize: Shelly Adelson's war chest
In that moment just before New Hampshire when it was briefly possible to imagine Jon Huntsman fighting deep into the primaries, New York magazine’s John Heilemann observed that Huntsman’s real audience on election night wouldn’t be the country or the voters in other early states or even the political media. It would consist of exactly one person: Jon Huntsman Sr., the billionaire chemical magnate who, if the mood struck him, could take out his checkbook and completely upend the race. “An investment of, say, $10 million — a rounding error on the Huntsman Sr. balance sheet — would allow the [son’s] super-PAC to blanket the airwaves in South Carolina and Florida with ads, many of them (no doubt) attacking Romney. And while that might still not be enough to put Huntsman Jr. in serious contention … it could inflict a serious toll on the front-runner.”
On the night of Mitt Romney’s Florida triumph, it’s safe to say that the relevant audience was yet another billionaire Republican—this one with a soft spot for the lunar musings of one Newt Gingrich. As the political world knows well by now, it was a timely infusion of $5 million from Sheldon Adelson, the Las Vegas casino mogul and fanatical Zionist, that largely underwrote Newt’s South Carolina win. And it was another $5 million from Adelson (funneled through his wife) that helped Newt muster a response to Romney’s punishing air campaign in Florida.
Here’s why Adelson matters even at this late date: Newt is still popular enough with conservatives, and Romney still sufficiently unloved, that another $5 or $10 million haul would create more than a minor annoyance for the ostensible frontrunner over the next few months, a time when Romney would like to be training his fire entirely on Barack Obama. Even amid his general evisceration in Florida, Newt still beat Romney handily among the Republican voters who consider themselves “very conservative” (42 percent to 30 for Romney) and strong Tea Party supporters (45 percent to 33), both of which accounted for about one-third of the electorate. The combination of that rump of support and the Adelson money could produce several victories for Gingrich on Super Tuesday alone, when voters in Georgia, Oklahoma, and Tennessee all go to the polls.
Without the Adelson money, on the other hand, the primary campaign goes poof. As former television executive (and George W. Bush cousin) John Ellis explained on Buzzfeed while the results rolled in, the major media outlets have already spent more than they intended to on primary coverage. After Florida, all the embeds and bloggers who provide 24-hour “man-to-man” coverage will be summoned back to their respective mother ships and redeployed into cubicles. The era of so-called free media has abruptly come to an end, at least to any candidate not named Romney. “On the day after the South Carolina primary, [Gingrich] had two busloads of reporters, bloggers and electronic media types following his every word,” Ellis wrote. “Tomorrow, he won't need two buses. He'll be lucky if the seats are filled on one.”
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We won’t know for several days whether Romney succeeded. But my hunch is that he did. If the results hold, Romney will have outpolled the combined Santorum-Gingrich total, albeit narrowly (46-45). That plainly undercuts the argument that a single conservative candidate could overtake Romney by consolidating the party’s right-wing. As for Israel, it’s hard to believe Romney didn’t have one eye on Vegas when he said things like, “This president went before the United Nations and castigated Israel for building settlements, he said nothing about thousands of rockets being rained in on Israel from the Gaza Strip,” as he did in Thursday night’s debate. (The other eye would have been on Florida’s Jewish population, of course.)
But the biggest indicator of Romney’s success at sidelining Adelson may have been Gingrich himself. Gingrich’s face looked red and puffy when he emerged for his concession speech, like a man who just told himself he may have reached the end of the line, and who didn’t take the news well. His speech was even less coherent than usual, as though he were groping for a new game plan, knowing that the old one—the Adelson money—was inoperative. Whether Adelson had actually indicated as much, or Newt had merely surmised it, is probably beside the point. When even a guy as delusionally oblivious as Newt finally takes the hint, it’s probably not something that needs to be said out loud.
Bio: Noam Scheiber is a senior editor at The New Republic. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.