Categories
Election 2008 Politics

What bothers me about Hillary

The only times I believe her – really feel the conviction and weight behind her words, actually believe she is speaking from her heart, instead of uttering poll-tested phrases designed to manipulate – are when she is talking about herself.

Her new ad airing in South Carolina is a great example.

[digg-me]
via Marc Ambinder

I’m wondering who this quote is supposed to refer to:

Over the last week I listened to you and in the process I found my own voice. You helped remind everyone that politics isn’t a game.

Which couple has been accused for the past twenty years, by liberals mainly, of believing politics is just a game? Barack and Michelle? John and Elizabeth?

Peggy Noonan had an interesting point (via Andrew Sullivan) backing this point up:

Was what is called sexism part of the story? I suppose, and in a number of ways. When George Bush senior cries in public, it’s considered moving. Ditto his moist-eyed son. But in fairness, they have tended to appear moved about things apart from themselves, apart from their own predicaments. Mrs. Clinton was weeping about Mrs. Clinton. If a man had uttered Mrs. Clinton’s aria – if Mr. Obama had said, “And you know, this is very personal for me . . . as tired as I am . . . against the odds,” and gotten choked – they would have laughed him out of town.

Even one of Hillary’s other breakthrough moments before the New Hampshire primaries was about her:


The other moment from last Saturday’s debate that got a lot of airtime also demonstrated my point – at least to myself.


For me, the drama in this is not the idea Hillary is presenting, or the message. What is interesting and compelling is that Hillary is talking about herself. Obama and Edwards talk about the changes they want to make – and they use their life stories to illustrate their commitment to change, and why they believe what they believe. When John Edwards talks about how his father worked in a mill – and he does often – it’s not that interesting. What is interesting is how this “son of a mill worker” has dedicated his presidential campaign to helping those like his father. When Barack Obama tells his stories – of his unlikely candidacy, of his traveling to South Carolina and getting fired up – he is using them as an example of the idea he is trying to get across. When Hillary Clinton finally “welled up” – the subject was herself; her “new” campaign is about her finding her voice; when she talks about change, aside from her nakedly strategic attempt to get Edwards to join her in attacking Obama, she is touting herself.

In order to be a politician, one is required to be at least a little narcissistic. As one of the candidates said: “I think if you don’t have enough self-awareness to see the element of megalomania involved in thinking you can be president then you probably shouldn’t be president.” Certainly Barack Obama, John Edwards, and the rest of the candidates for president feel this election is the culmination of their lives and careers. Each of them acts as if they were meant for this moment, as if they were made for it. There is no other reason they should be running.

The problem with Hillary is that ambition and narcissism and megalomania are not some of the factors pushing her to run. They are all she has.

Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics

Fox News v. Obama

Fox vs. Barack Obama
Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics

The Laziness and Gullibility of the American People, Part II

FactCheck.org had this to say about the Obama smear email I wrote about yesterday:

Such attacks usually can be disproved with less effort than it takes to forward them to others. The statement that Snopes endorsed the false claim that Obama is a Muslim radical is an example. So we find it disappointing that they continue to circulate.

via Andrew Sullivan.

So, now those forwarding these email are not only seen as lazy and gullible (by me), but also as, for some reason, making a greater effort to forward these lies than it would take to check their veracity – which kind of contradicts the laziness thing on a level.

Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics

The Laziness and Gullibility of the American People

[digg-reddit-me]My father received the Obama smear email today. There seems to have been an addition to the email since Snopes first refuted it:

We checked this out on ‘snopes.com‘. It is factual. Check for yourself.

However, if you go to search for the story at Snopes.com

Claim:Illinois senator Barack Obama is a “radical Muslim” who “will not recite the Pledge of Allegiance.”
Status: False.

It is interesting though that the author does not say that Snopes said the item was factual, but only implies it by stating such in the next sentence, creating the illusion of a logical train of thought.

PBS created a timeline entitled “Anatomy of a Smear” last week that is useful.  PBS’s piece shows that CNN, the Associated Press, The Washington Post, ABC News, and other news organizations have investigated the claims made in the piece and found every verifiable claim to be false.

The real question this email should bring up is this: Who is making this stuff up, and who are they trying to fool?

The claims behind the email are demonstrably false, and have been widely reported as such. These smears have appeared in a number of emails, although they all follow the same story line. Someone is obviously deliberately perpetrating a falsehood – and the lies have come up during the Iowa caucuses, as well as from a campaign staff of one of Obama’s rivals.

Someone is betting on the laziness and gullibility of the American people. The question is: Who?

Categories
Election 2008 History Liberalism Obama Political Philosophy Politics

A Dream Deeply Rooted in the American Dream

Commentators and candidates have drawn many parallels from today’s Democratic candidates to historical figures and elections.

[via reddit]

[digg-reddit-me]Hillary Clinton has been described as Nixon and LBJ, including the latter by herself. John Edwards has been described as a FDR (mainly by himself), William Jennings Bryan and a Bobby Kennedy. Barack Obama’s historical analogues have been far-ranging. Ken Burns has compared Obama to Lincoln. David Horsey of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer has as well, as seen above. JFK’s top speechwriter has compared Obama to President Kennedy. Before his Iowa win, intelligent pundits saw parallels to failed liberal candidates: Adlai Stevenson, Bill Bradley, and Gene McCarthy.

But it wasn’t until Hillary took a swipe at Obama that the parallels to Barack to Martin Luther King, Jr. became evident. The main theme of the 2008 is, and will be, change. Americans know that we need to tackle many long-term issues:

  • global climate change;
  • radical islamism;
  • the erosion of civil liberties;
  • executive overreach;
  • the instability of the American economy;
  • globalization, the entitlement crises;
  • health care reform;
  • the inequality of opportunity and the rising gap between the rich and the poor.

Our current politics – based on tears and smears, on the Bushes and the Clintons, on money and more money – is unable to produce meaningful or lasting change.To vote for Clinton or Giuliani or Romney or Thompson or Huckabee (and to a lesser extent McCain ((The McCain of 1999 to 2002 could have changed politics. The McCain of today is still an honorable man – but despite his commendable honesty, I am not sure how much he would be able to, or willing to try to, get done.)) ) – is to vote to continue the politics of the past decades, producing gridlock and negligible progress, even as Cassandras continually point out our impending doom.

There are three candidates who embody three very different approaches to change: Ron Paul, Barack Obama, and John Edwards.

Ron Paul is quite clearly a reactionary – and in this case, I do not mean it to be derogatory. He wants to trim government to a radical extent – back to the period before the Civil War. I doubt the change he desires is possible – and, although I agree with his positions on many contemporary issues, I believe he goes too far in rejecting the American tradition after 1860. I believe there is much to criticize in the American tradition after the Civil War – but also great progress. Ron Paul’s opinions are a valued addition to the public debate.

It is easier to compare Barack Obama and John Edwards to each other, rather than to Paul. They agree on many policies and in their general themes. Their differences are about how they would lead us to the future – how they would accomplish change. When Hillary said that Barack was not Martin Luther King – it occurred to me that the movement he represents, and the figure he projects, recalls the relationship of Martin Luther King to John Edwards’s Malcolm X.

In many ways, the success of Obama is due to Edwards’s harassment of Clinton.

  • Obama is trying to bring together people of varying political persuasions and to reach consensus on the major issues America faces. Edwards believes we must fight for them – by extreme measures if necessary.
  • Obama calls on Americans to look past their race, gender, class, religion, and other social groupings to the values we share – to build on this consensus to achieve lasting change. Edwards calls on middle and lower class Americans to look to their self-interest, and to their children’s self-interest, and to be forceful in taking what they believe is their birthright.
  • Obama focuses on community organizing, bringing new people into the process and the party, and convincing skeptics; Edwards focuses on rallying the base.

Anyone can see the relationship between Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X can see the parallels. (Which makes Clinton, unfortunately for her, LBJ again.)

Martin Luther King and Malcolm X’s disagreements about how to accomplish change were more fundamental than the current divide between Obama and Edwards; but both King and Malcolm X recognized in the other the same desire for change, and respected each other as individuals and as leaders. When I saw John Edwards defend Barack Obama against Clinton – this is what I thought of – not that the boys were ganging up on her as she suggested.

Martin Luther King succeeded where Malcolm X did not because King bet that he could bring achieve more by appealing to all Americans, rather than a select group. Barack has made a similar bet. While in King’s day, the Jim Crow laws divided Americans into blacks and whites, our politics today has divided America into Red States and Blue States, liberals and conservatives, Republicans and Democrats. We have been divided into two teams – we on our respective team, often without a clear rationale, adopt positions and defend our teams against all opposition. Many others are turned off from politics by the partisanship entirely. Yet polls show that agreement exists among working majorities on how to tackle some of our major long-term problems; and even larger portions of Americans agree that something must be done to attempt to deal with the major problems we will soon face.

Obama’s bet, like Martin Luther King, Jr.’s, is that with a respectful and intelligent dialogue, he can change our politics; and by changing politics, we can change America’s path together.

It is supremely unlikely that he, or we, can accomplish this. But we owe it to ourselves to try.

Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics

Bush Democrats for Hillary!

[digg-reddit-me]According to the exit polls, Democratic primary voters who had positive feelings about the Bush administration voted overwhelmingly for Hillary. Via Sullivan.

Which kind of makes sense. Which other candidate on the Democratic side would reinforce the partisanship of the Bush years? Which candidate would embrace most enthusiastically the new and improved presidential powers? Which candidate would solidify Bush’s legacy, by bringing Democrats aboard Bush’s agenda on executive power and a “tough” foreign policy?

Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics

Real change should be hard

[digg-reddit-me]Sometimes, it’s hard to have faith in democracy, in people. The same people who, in their wisdom, elected George W. Bush to a second term.

At the time though, I felt there was even a wisdom in that decision, even as it may have been unintentional; because a John Kerry presidency would not be able to fully repudiate the legacy of Bush, both because Kerry had campaigned as a hawk and because the public had not come around to see the disaster that was the Bush administration. As the fallout from the Bush administration’s incredible arrogance and ineptitude shook the country during Bush’s second term, I could only imagine a President Kerry, were he elected, and the values he stood for, getting some portion of the blame for the foreign policy setbacks, for the civil war in Iraq, for the economic crises, for the falling dollar – none of which would have been reversed by anything less than a radical overhaul of America’s domestic and foreign policies. A President Kerry would not have been in a position accomplish anything except make Bush’s disasters hurt us a little less.

It was better that the blame was placed on the right shoulders, on the right ideology – especially as a liberal president would not have been able to fully take on Bush’s legacy without the overwhelming support of the American people. Today, there is that overwhelming support to root out the Bush legacy. And with the support for Barack Obama, John Edwards, Dennis Kucinich, Ron Paul and even to some extent Mike Huckabee and John McCain, there is obviously support for stepping away from the Clinton legacy of triangulation as well.

It is hard to have faith that on February 5th, voters (who actions will account for over 40% of the delegates to the Democratic convention) will make a wise choice. Democracy is clearly a flawed method of choosing a president, even if may be the best. Fraud is always possible; the media coverage is generally less than exemplary; many people seem to make up their minds on a whim. It will be a struggle to redirect this election and this primary back where it belongs – on making a fundamental choice about the direction America is headed. The choice we face is not about policies or style, but about who we are as a nation – about restoring the processes and balance that allow Americans to be free; about bringing the country together to face the long-term challenges to our way of life; about restoring America’s voice in the world community, and creating a more sensible foreign policy based on our shared values. It will not be easy – either to win or to accomplish these changes.

But worthwhile change should be hard. In a democracy, there should be no coronation, no inevitable victories. The silver lining on yesterday’s loss is that the Democratic nominee has to fight to get much of the country behind him or her before he or she is declared the nominee. No longer are we relying on New Hampshire and Iowa, Nevada and South Carolina to decide our options. Now the fight moves on to California and New York; to Connecticut, Kansas, Alaska, Idaho, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Georgia, New Jersey, Tennessee, Colorado, Illinois, Arizona, Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Missouri, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and Utah. Now we need to prove that we can mobilize to bring real change across America, instead of in a few rural states.

It won’t be easy. But it shouldn’t be. Change is hard.

Register to vote in New York State. Donate to Barack Obama’s campaign. Or to whoever you support. Volunteer.

Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics

The Morning After

First of all, congratulations to Hillary on her win last night.  A win all the more shocking because almost every poll leading up to it showed her behind by double digits, because her own campaign staff had privately conceded defeat, and because Obama had such incredible momentum.

But now,we have a real race.  Unfortunately, it looks as if Edwards is being pushed aside in this debate – and instead of debating whether community-building and consensus or partisanship and government force are the best means of achieving lasting change, we will debate Hillary and Barack, gender and race, experience and judgment.  The intellectual debate is diminished.  But the stakes are now higher than ever.

A few positive notes: Now that Hillary has something to lose, will she still go negative across the country against Obama?  There was widespread acknowledgment that this would be her only strategy to stop him if he won in New Hampshire.  I was concerned about how she might try to take him out – and that, if nothing else, she would increase his negatives going into a hotly contested general election.  Now though, her options have changed.  If the postulates about why Hillary won New Hampshire are correct – that she got a sympathy vote from many women, as opposed to a change in the view of the issues at stake, or in the perception of Obama or herself – then New Hampshire shouldn’t change the fundamentals of the next three weeks.  If Obama is able to maintain his lead in South Carolina, and win there; and if he still receives the endorsement of the Culinary Union in Nevada as expected, he seems likely to win in the union-dominated caucuses there.  Hillary will win Michigan because she is the only major candidate on the ballot – the Democratic National Party having asked all the candidates to withdraw, and write-ins are not permitted.  The contest will continue until February 5th. Having won New Hampshire and Michigan, and assuming she places 2nd in South Carolina and Nevada (which is not a safe assumption), she will go into February 5th as a co-front-runner with Obama.  Given this, attacking Obama too harshly will risk her support as well as his – although I think she has more to gain from it than Obama has to lose, at least in the primary.  (Her negatives are already high, and her voters know this, and have overcome them.  Obama’s voters, for all their dedication, have not had to deal with negative stories about their candidate for the past dozen years.)  Still, I think she will start running a front-runner’s campaign again – because it is prudent.  She might show emotion a bit more; and there will certainly be a few groups financed by wealthy Clinton supporters that will run negative ads against Obama in any battleground states.

The question now is simply: what are the facts on the ground in the February 5th states.  We won’t have a clear answer on that until next week probably, as polls take into account the Iowa bounce and the New Hampshire bomb.  A national campaign will probably benefit Hillary – as she is better known; although the internet and the net roots may now play a bigger role in organizing which would benefit Obama as Hillary generates almost universal dislike and distrust among the netroots and internet-savvy public in general and Obama is viewed sympathetically.  The final point: If this election comes down to the fundamentals – if it comes down to people trying to decide the direction of the country – then Barack wins.

Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics

Running out of ballots

Epic Turnout for Dems

[digg-reddit-me]Drudge is reporting a massive turnout for Democrats. Many New Hampshire towns are reporting that they are running out of ballots. MSNBC is also reporting this with less details.

It seems likely that such a massive turnout is probably good for Obama’s chances. The question on my mind is what will the margin be. In the unlikely event that it is over 15% with unprecedented turnout, I think it’s time for Hillary to call it quits. If it’s 10% or over, Obama is in a very, very strong position.

Regardless of the results here though, expect the Clinton to come out vicious. As Bill was today. And as Hillary was yesterday. The only way for Hillary to win is to bring Obama’s negatives up as high as possible.

If Obama wins New Hampshire impressively, the question becomes, where will Hillary choose to make her last stand – in South Carolina or on Super Tuesday.

I’ll keep updating as news comes in.

Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics

If you get the girl up on her tiptoes, you should kiss her…

[digg-reddit-me]Matt Yglesias comments today that:

I think it bears mentioning that it’s always worth trying to not overread the trends. A month ago, it looked like Hillary Clinton would probably win the nomination.

Although I agree with Matt’s fundamental point, I think he misses a few essentials. He made a few assumptions, as did much of the “chattering class”, that were called into question by the Iowa results:

  • that the approximate 50%/50% split between red and blue America was a result of fundamental differences; or at least that this split would not be able to be bridged by a single candidate;
  • that fundamental change was not possible (which makes a lot of sense for someone whose life has included a Bush, then Clinton, then Bush, and perhaps another Clinton in the White House);
  • that Hillary’s and Mark Penn’s spinning had any basis in reality.

While it is true that the inevitability of a Hillary victory was the conventional wisdom among “the chattering class”, and that this meme was passed down to that portion of the country that was paying attention, it was not accepted by several astute political observers. First, I should point out that I have great respect for Matt, having following him from his initial blog to the TPMCafe to The Atlantic; I do not consider him to be a political commentator on the level of “the chattering class”. There are many examples of the chattering class who comment gamely about politics on air, generally discussing slight variations on the so-called conventional wisdom – and these include almost anyone included on television “debate” or “discussion” shows or podcasts, most especially those who are regular commentators. I do not especially fault these men and women – many of them do not even suggest they pay close attention to politics; I only fault a system which gives these dolts’ opinions disproportionate weight. But there are exceptions among them – opinion-spouters who also are opinion-shapers, and more importantly, who see politics through their own eyes. In this case, I would like to especially point out Andrew Sullivan, Frank Rich, David Brooks, and George F. Will. ((I have problems with each of them, and at times, each certainly has fallen victim to tidal waves of opinion. But in this instance each clearly saw something their peers were blind to.))

David Brooks first called on Barack Obama to run in October of 2006. Frank Rich also was talking about the potential of an Obama candidacy in 2006, and as much as endorsed him just as Clinton’s inevitability argument started to fall away. George Will called on Obama to run in December 2006 – not because he supported him as a candidate – but because Will saw that Obama needed to reach for his moment. As Will said, “if you get the girl up on her tiptoes, you should kiss her…[Obama] is nearing the point when a decision against running would brand him as a tease who ungallantly toyed with the electorate’s affections.” All of these men continued to see Obama as the logical Democratic candidate even as the rest of their peers fell for Mark Penn’s bull about inevitability.

Finally, and most influentially, Andrew Sullivan has been blogging about Obama for since…I can’t remember when this British conservative’s published his first fawning post about the liberal senator. It was a long time at any rate. Sullivan suggested as early as May 2007 that Obama was “A man…meeting the moment.” He also wrote a cover story for The Atlantic pushing Obama’s candidacy at roughly the same moment Hillary was peaking. Sullivan explained that:

The logic behind the candidacy of Barack Obama is not, in the end, about Barack Obama…[T]he most persuasive case for Obama has less to do with him than with the moment he is meeting. The moment has been a long time coming, and it is the result of a confluence of events, from one traumatizing war in Southeast Asia to another in the most fractious country in the Middle East. The legacy is a cultural climate that stultifies our politics and corrupts our discourse. Obama’s candidacy in this sense is a potentially transformational one. Unlike any of the other candidates, he could take America—finally—past the debilitating, self-perpetuating family quarrel of the Baby Boom generation that has long engulfed all of us.

Andrew Sullivan concluded:

The paradox is that Hillary makes far more sense if you believe that times are actually pretty good. If you believe that America’s current crisis is not a deep one, if you think that pragmatism alone will be enough to navigate a world on the verge of even more religious warfare, if you believe that today’s ideological polarization is not dangerous, and that what appears dark today is an illusion fostered by the lingering trauma of the Bush presidency, then the argument for Obama is not that strong. Clinton will do…But if you sense, as I do, that greater danger lies ahead, and that our divisions and recent history have combined to make the American polity and constitutional order increasingly vulnerable, then the calculus of risk changes. Sometimes, when the world is changing rapidly, the greater risk is caution. Close-up in this election campaign, Obama is unlikely. From a distance, he is necessary. At a time when America’s estrangement from the world risks tipping into dangerous imbalance, when a country at war with lethal enemies is also increasingly at war with itself, when humankind’s spiritual yearnings veer between an excess of certainty and an inability to believe anything at all, and when sectarian and racial divides seem as intractable as ever, a man who is a bridge between these worlds may be indispensable.

I hate to quote so much from another person – but Sullivan’s arguments have done much to supplement my own support for Obama. More than anyone else who might be considered a card-carrying member of the chattering class, Sullivan has made the case for Obama.

I am sure there are other prescient individuals who cautioned against the accepted consensus of the opining class that Hillary was inevitable. But these four – from their perches in the establishment media saw hype for hype and could see how this moment in history was made for Barack Obama.

At least so far.

Obama concluded his momentum-taking Jefferson-Jackson dinner speech by saying:

I don’t want to spend the next year or the next four years re-fighting the same fights that we had in the 1990s. I don’t want to pit red America against blue America. I want to be the President of the United States of America.

And if those Republicans come at me with the same fear-mongering and swift-boating that they usually do, then I will take them head-on. Because I believe the American people are tired of fear, and tired of distractions…we can make this election not about fear, but about the future, and that will not be just a Democratic victory, that will be an American victory, a victory that America needs right now!

I am not in this race to fulfill some longheld ambitions or because I believe it’s somehow owed to me. I never expected to be here. I always knew this journey was improbable. I am running in this race because of of what Dr. King called “the fierce urgency of now.” Because I believe that there’s such a thing as being too late, and that hour is almost upon us.

Barack Obama was virtually assured the Democratic nomination in the decade.  If he had just waited his turn!  The powers that be saw Obama as “the future”.  But a fundamental understanding of the fickleness of the public mood, an understanding of the immediacy of the crises that face America, a fierce but closely held ambition,  and to cite, Martin Luther King, Jr., “the fierce urgency of now” led Barack to seek the White House ahead of all schedules.

And America now faces a choice.