When the "Pledge to America" was rolled out two weeks ago with a media blitz, Republican leaders trumpeted the 45-page booklet laying out their political agenda as a map to victory at the polls in November.
Since then, however, not many Republicans running for office are referring to the document on the campaign trail -- and some admit they haven't even read it.
The Washington Post looked for mentions of the pledge out on the stump and concluded that "relatively few Republican candidates across the country appear to be adopting it as a guiding vision, much less incorporating it into their campaigns."
That may be because the pledge doesn't seem to be resonating with voters. A new Post-ABC News poll found that just 34 percent of adults (and 46 percent of likely voters) had heard of the pledge. Of those who were aware of it, 45 percent said the document wouldn't affect how they vote in the midterm election.
But GOP leaders say the pledge was a success the minute it started being criticized by Democrats, who are no longer able to hit Republicans for lacking ideas. President Obama has referenced the pledge a number of times in the past week.
"The president was attacking us as the 'Party of No,' and now he's criticizing our ideas," Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who helped craft the document, told the Post. "He changed his whole attack against Republicans."
Read the Post's pledge analysis here.