Things Losing Candidates Say...
Roll Call
Im running a grass-roots campaign. This translates to: Im not going to raise any money. Running an effective grass-roots and get-out-the-vote operation is important for a campaign, but winning a competitive House or Senate race requires multiple millions of dollars to make your case in paid advertising.
The only poll that matters is the poll on Election Day. This doesnt guarantee defeat in the upcoming election, but it means you are losing the race at the time and have no empirical evidence to the contrary. Its up to the candidate to change the dynamic of the race.
Im the next [insert big name politician here]. This means the campaign strategy is to emulate a previous candidate who overcame nearly impossible odds to win their own race. Whether a candidate is invoking Republican Scott P. Browns special election victory in Massachusetts or then-Illinois Sen. Barack Obamas improbable presidential run, its probably unlikely that the candidate using this phrase will be able to replicate those victories.
Im not going to run any negative ads. This is one way to virtually guarantee defeat. We can argue about the definition of negative, but campaigns are about contrasts. And successful campaigns rarely let the opponent run unscathed and define himself or herself only on their own terms. The caveat to this is if outside groups run negative ads on behalf of a candidate. But if youre a candidate who wins without running negative ads, then you were probably going to win anyway.