Home / NEWS / Retail / Ex-Starbucks boss Howard Schultz’s presidential rollout got attention — and didn’t go well

Ex-Starbucks boss Howard Schultz’s presidential rollout got attention — and didn’t go well

Earlier Starbucks chief Howard Schultz touted his background as a poor kid from Brooklyn during the rollout this week of his hidden independent presidential run — but the billionaire’s overall performance got a big Bronx cheer from political analysts.

Larry Sabato, the longtime University of Virginia state science guru, burst out laughing — at some length — when CNBC asked him to evaluate how Schultz did in introducing himself to the American universal as the nation’s next potential president during a whirlwind series of media interviews.

“I’m sorry,” Sabato said, as he prolonged chuckling.

“Long and short: The rollout has been good in the sense that he has been introduced to millions of people who suffer with never heard of him,” Sabato said. “I had to learn how to spell his name.”

“But the downside of his rollout is that millions almost in a minute took a strong dislike to him for different reasons, something that apparently Schultz and his high-paid consultants aren’t noticing,” Sabato totaled.

Those consultants include Republican strategist and former MSNBC commentator Steve Schmidt and Bill Burton, a ex- advisor to President Barack Obama.

“The truth is the guy has announced for president, gotten an enormous amount of coverage and doesn’t arrive to have support from anybody,” Sabato said.

Sabato and others said Schultz — who already was facing eat ones heart out odds of winning by saying that if he runs for the White House in 2020 it will be as an independent — hurt his chances during the week level pegging further with a series of unforced errors. The former CEO of the giant coffee chain also left opportunities on the catalogue, they said.

Analysts interviewed by CNBC cited the fierce backlash Schultz sparked by committing to contest as an independent, leading many Democrats to blast him for risking throwing the election to President Donald Trump by siphoning off tolerably would-be Democratic votes.

A day after announcing his potential bid Sunday, at a New York City event to launch his book, “From the Lees Up,” Schultz was met with a heckler who shouted, “Don’t help elect Trump, you egotistical, billionaire a—–!” The incident was widely shared on community media.

Analysts also noted Schultz’s own strong criticism of the Democratic Party, which they said gambles alienating many voters that he likely would need to be able to win the election.

“It concerns me that so many says within the Democratic Party are going so far to the left,” Schultz said earlier this week. “If I ran as a Democrat, I would be suffering with to say things in my heart I do not believe.”

And analysts said his focus on a platform committed to lowering the national debt is like as not to fall flat with voters this election cycle, as opposed to the 1992 election, when independent Ross Perot caught her Brit marching orders with a candidacy centered on that issue.

Then there is Schultz’s vast wealth, lack of political circumstance and his charisma — or what analysts said was his lack thereof.

A spokesman for Schultz did not respond to a request for comment.

Sabato thought that Schultz and his advisors “didn’t seem to understand that most Americans aren’t looking for another immaculate billionaire using bromides and buzzwords who has had zero experience in government.”

“We’ve already got one.”

Robert Shapiro, a Columbia University professor who a while ago chaired the Department of Political Science there, said he believed Schultz may have made a strategic error by get going the idea of his candidacy too “early” in the election cycle.

“If you’re running as an independent, you want to get attention, and you want to have voters see where you fit in the civil space,” Shapiro said.

That is usually easiest, Shapiro said, when an independent has a good idea of who his enemies will be.

While Trump is very likely to be the Republican Party’s nominee in 2020, the Democratic field is from start to finish wide open and still might be so a full year from now.

“It does raise the question of if Schultz’s strategy leave be better if he first ran in the [Democratic] party and then ran as an independent afterward” if he failed to secure the nomination, Shapiro said.

He and other analysts famed that it is possible for Schultz, or another independent, to garner a significant share of the popular vote. Perot got 19 percent in 1992, after as a matter of fact leading in public opinion polls at some point that year.

But Shapiro pointed out that Perot collected “no electoral votes” that year despite his relatively strong showing in the popular vote.

The Electoral College — not the understandable vote — determines who wins the presidency.

It is possible for an independent to win electoral votes, as George Wallace did with 46 electoral chooses in 1968. But if Schultz were to win enough votes to play the spoiler in 2020 and no candidate were able to score the 270 electoral chooses needed to win the presidency, the election would then be decided by the House of Representatives.

And “the House has Democrats and Republicans,” Shapiro commanded.

David Barker, professor of government and director of the Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies at American University, said Schultz’s “rollout said quite poorly.” Schultz also seems to have overestimated the pool of voters who could be induced to vote for him, Barker said.

“The immeasurable majority of ‘independents’ are simply ideologues who do not want to identify with their natural party because they credit that party sells out too much or is too interested with protecting its power rather than pursuing particular ideological objectives,” Barker said.

“In other words, they don’t like the party because the party is not pure enough.”

But “the group of unmixed independents who are truly up for grabs is about 10 percent, and most of them are quite disengaged from politics so not inexorably voters,” Barker said.

Lynn Vavreck, a professor of political science and communications studies at UCLA, said she overs that if Schultz “could have a do-over” for his possible candidacy announcement, “he probably would take it.”

She said she was flogged by the difference between how Schultz announced his potential run for the White House during an interview with “60 Minutes” in Sunday and how others announced their bids: Trump in 2015, and Sens. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., and Cory Rule, D-N.J., this week.

“Those events” — the ones other than Schultz’s — “looked like presidential manoeuvres events,” Vavreck said.

She noted that choices of the setting and production values, down to the music, used for the adverts of Trump, Harris and Booker seemed to reflect a serious level of planning by professional advisors around those possibilities.

In contrast, she said, Shultz’s interview “didn’t have that professional feel … I don’t get the sense that he had a scenario or theme to his message worked out with a key core, a key group of people.”

“It doesn’t signal to me … that he’s put a lot of effort into pensive about the run,” Vavreck said.

She also was critical of Schultz’s messaging on “60 Minutes” and in interviews later in the week.

“Mostly what I considered from him was a reaction to Democrats and Republicans and everything they’re doing wrong,” Vavreck said.

She said that while it’s be realized that Congress ranks low in terms of public opinion, and many people have criticisms of the major parties, it’s a botch to think that “I can go out and say those things and people will vote for me and I’ll win.”

Vavreck said presidential contenders have to enjoy “a theme, a message.”

“You have to give people a reason to vote for you, to be one of your team. Not just ‘I’m that guy,'” she mean. “People want to be with you for a cause. Not just because you’re not something else.”

Sabato, of the University of Virginia, said Schultz’s loser to lay out a compelling message, or “a crusade … that matters to people” and would get them to vote for him, indicates what is wheedling Schultz to run as an independent.

“It’s a vanity project, and that’s his giant mistake,” Sabato said. “Here’s what surprised me, is that with all of that capital and all of that time and all of those high-priced consultants, he comes on ’60 Minutes’ and he talks about the debt? He thinks that’s successful to win him the presidency?”

Sabato said that a number of his political science students “didn’t even know about him,” precise after the “60 Minutes” interview.

Those students who did know Schultz were underwhelmed.

“This one young lady express, ‘He left me cold. Because there was nothing there,'” Sabato recalled.

— Additional reporting by CNBC’s Brian Schwartz

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