Editor’s NoteGeorge Will says it all here:

President Barack Obama’s campaign kickoff event in Columbus, Ohio on Saturday was met with a large number of empty seats, possibly indicating that enthusiasm for his campaign might be waning.

On Sunday’s “This Week” on ABC, Washington Post columnist George Will offered his theory on why Obama might be struggling this go-around.

“Look, self-absorption is part of the occupational hazard of politics, and it’s also part of the job description of being president,” Will said. “All that said, try to imagine Dwight Eisenhower talking about D-Day saying, ‘I did this. I decided this. I did this and then I did that.’ It’s inconceivable.”

That comparison between Obama and Eisenhower illustrated the problem for the president, Will said.

“If you struck from Barack Obama’s vocabulary the first-person singular pronoun, he would fall silent, which would be a mercy to us and a service to him, actually,” Will continued. “Because he was been so incontinent for the last three years that you wind up with, as you said, [an] Ohio State University with empty seats.” (Daily Caller)

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How Mitt Romney’s Campaign Put A Damper On Obama’s Big Day

Hand-to-hand political combat, as Romney aides show up at Obama’s rallies to spin back.

By Zeke Miller – BuzzFeed

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Saturday was supposed to be President Barack Obama’s day, dominated by headlines of successful campaign holding its first rally. Instead, reports prominently included references to thousands of empty seats at the president’s first rally here — just as the Romney campaign wanted it.

At The Ohio State University, over 5,000 seats in the 20,000-person venue went unfilled on the upper seating deck and behind the press cameras —a sharp contrast to Obama’s events in 2008, and even a 2010 event with then-Gov. Ted Strickland which drew 35,000.

ABC News had reported Saturday morning that the campaign expected “overflow” crowds at each event, crowds which never did materialize.

The New York Times quoted Obama senior adviser David Plouffe, not about the president’s remarks, but about the crowd size — with reporter Mark Landler comparing the rallies to “a concert by an aging rock star.”

 

Reporters had some help in noticing the empty seats. Romney spokespeople made it into both events, waiting in line like everyone else. They worked their way close to the press risers, ready to provide rapid response to Obama’s speech.

Romney Deputy Press Secretary Ryan Williams was in the audience at the OSU rally, and tweeted a picture of the empty seats — which instantly got picked up by conservative blogs. After Obama’s remarks he was swarmed by local reporters, and after giving them a standard response to the speech, he commented on the empty seats.

References to the crowd size made it into local papers and television reporters, all distracting from Obama’s message.

Democrats fired back with references to “Ford Field,” and Romney’s infamous speech to the Detroit Economic Club and the bare football stadium.

 Ben LaBolt@BenLaBolt – The difference between our events today and Governor Romney’s is that people came. 

But as the Romney campaign sees it, they had the last laugh — with Obama falling short of his own campaign’s expectations.

“They spent the day defending why they couldn’t sell-out the arena, not pushing their own message, so that was a big win for us,” one Romney aide said.

Correction: Obama’s 2010 rally was at the OSU Oval not at the Schottenstein Center where his rally was on Saturday.