Kepler
Si certus es dubita
Re: Campaign 2014: The Epic Struggle To Win The Senate And Change Nothing
It does make sense. The only objections to it (that it's not really the candidate's choices; that there are serious environmental restrictions that can cause his campaign to suceed or fail due to nothing at all that they're doing) feed into the environment of the presidency anyway. Not a bad approximation.
However, as you point out, it only works if you think policy doesn't matter. As much as the capabilities of a given president may matter, a less effective leader going in the right direction is infinitely better than a very effective leader going in the wrong one. But it could still be a useful discriminator in the primaries.
I have a friend who has a finance/poly sci background and now teaches at the university level. Conservative by nature. A couple of years ago, he made an interesting comment on what things he looks at to decide whether a presidential candidate has the skills to do the job, political persuasion aside. He said that with the longer lasting and increasingly complex campaigns he looks at the candidate's ability to manage a campaign. Not exclusively, of course, but with significant weight. Either the candidate does it well (or not) or the candidate understands how to choose capable people to do it for him (or not) and delegate effectively. Presidential campaigns are marathons that require long-term strategy and the ability to address diverse interests across a wide range of economies and cultural groups. In addition to those long-term management skills, it requires candidates to deal with inevitable crises that require quick response and judgment.
Some of that makes sense. With the way the distinction between governing and campaigning has disappeared (or never really existed), though, I get uncomfortable using a person's ability to manage a good campaign as an indication whether that person can govern effectively.
All that just relates to a person's ability to lead, of course, not the direction he or she would lead.
It does make sense. The only objections to it (that it's not really the candidate's choices; that there are serious environmental restrictions that can cause his campaign to suceed or fail due to nothing at all that they're doing) feed into the environment of the presidency anyway. Not a bad approximation.
However, as you point out, it only works if you think policy doesn't matter. As much as the capabilities of a given president may matter, a less effective leader going in the right direction is infinitely better than a very effective leader going in the wrong one. But it could still be a useful discriminator in the primaries.