Being a politician was one of the few things he was truly good at...Whatever his failings as a politician
To win the nomination in the first place, given his thin qualifications, (four years as governor of a relatively small state) was an impressive political feat in itself. He was helped to do this by the fact that he had chaired the committee that re-wrote the Democratic nominating rules and schedule after the McGovern debacle, so he knew how to design the best nominating strategy. He was also helped by the fact that he skillfully cultivated the liberal mainstream reporters, many of whom continue to gush over him to this very day. (I'm lookin' at you Andrea Mitchell...)
His failure to get along with Congressional leaders of his own party wasn't due to a lack of political skills. It was due to his poor interpersonal skills, as well as his prickly personality and his tediously self-righteous and sanctimonious attitude...
Then in 1980, he brilliantly manipulated the Iran Hostage Crisis to beat back the nomination challenge from Ted Kennedy; that required impressive political acumen and shrewdness...
The fact that he ultimately lost re-election in a landslide wasn't a reflection of any lack of political skills; the most skilled and capable politician in history couldn't have won given the disastrous record Carter compiled as President.
He was a godawful leader and administrator, but as a politician he truly excelled...



