Obama and McCain: The Stakes Are Too Huge for 'Civil' Politics
By Frank Rich, The New York Times via alternet.org, 8-25-08
As the real campaign at last begins in Denver this week, this much
is certain: It's time for Barack Obama to dispatch "Change We
Can Believe In" to a dignified death.
...
What we have learned this summer is this: McCain's trigger-happy
temperament and reactionary policies offer worse than no change. He
is an unstable bridge back not just to Bush policies but to an
increasingly distant 20th-century America that is still fighting Red
China in Vietnam and the Soviet Union in the cold war. As the country
tries to navigate the fast-moving changes of the 21st century, McCain
would put America on hold.
What Obama also should have learned by now is that the press is not his friend. Of course, he gets more ink and airtime than McCain; he's sexier news. But as George Mason University's Center for Media and Public Affairs documented in its study of six weeks of TV news reports this summer, Obama's coverage was 28 percent positive, 72 percent negative. (For McCain, the split was 43/57.) Even McCain's most blatant confusions, memory lapses and outright lies still barely cause a ripple, whether he's railing against a piece of pork he in fact voted for, as he did at the Saddleback Church pseudodebate last weekend, or falsifying crucial details of his marital history in his memoirs, as The Los Angeles Times uncovered in court records last month.
What should Obama do now? As premature panic floods through certain liberal precincts, there's no shortage of advice: more meat to his economic plan, more passion in his stump delivery, less defensiveness in response to attacks and, as is now happening, sharper darts at a McCain lifestyle so extravagant that we are only beginning to learn where all the beer bullion is buried.
But Obama is never going to be a John Edwards-style populist barnburner. ... Nor will wonkish laundry lists of policy details work any better for him than they did for Al Gore or Hillary Clinton. Obama has those details to spare, in any case, while McCain, who didn't even include an education policy on his Web site during primary season, is still winging it. As David Leonhardt observes in his New York Times Magazine cover article on "Obamanomics" today, Obama's real problem is not a lack of detail but his inability to sell policy with "an effective story."
That story is there to be told, but it has to be a story that is more about America and the future and less about Obama and his past. ...
Most Americans, unlike the press, are not obsessed by race. (Those
whites who are obsessed by race will not vote for Obama no matter
what he or anyone else has to say about it.) And most Americans have
turned their backs on the Iraq war, no matter how much McCain keeps
bellowing about "victory." The Bush White House is now
poised to alight with the Iraqi government on a withdrawal
timetable far closer to Obama's 16 months than McCain's vague promise
of a 2013 endgame. As Gen. David Petraeus returns home, McCain
increasingly resembles those mad Japanese soldiers who remained at
war on remote Pacific islands years after Hiroshima.
...
How we dig out of this quagmire is the American story that Obama
must tell. It is not a story of endless conflicts abroad but a
potentially inspiring tale of serious economic, educational, energy
and health-care mobilization at home. We don't have the time or
resources to go off on more quixotic military missions or to indulge
in culture wars. (In China, they're too busy exploiting scientific
advances for competitive advantage to reopen settled debates about
Darwin.) Americans must band together for change before the new
century leaves us completely behind. The Obama campaign actually has
plans, however imperfect or provisional, to set us on that path; the
McCain campaign offers only disposable Band-Aids typified by the
"drill now" mantra that even McCain says
will only have a "psychological" effect on gas prices.
Even as it points to America's future, the Obama campaign also has the duty to fill in its opponent's past. McCain's attacks on Obama have worked: in last week's Los Angeles Times-Bloomberg poll, Obama's favorable rating declined from 59 to 48 percent and his negative rating rose from 27 to 35. Yet McCain still has a lower positive rating (46 percent) and higher negative rating (38) than Obama. McCain is not nearly as popular among Americans, it turns out, as he is among his journalistic camp followers. Should voters actually get to know him, he has nowhere to go but down.
The argument against Obama's "going negative" is that it undermines his message of "transcendent politics" and will make him look like an "angry black man." But pacifistic politics is an oxymoron, and Obama is constitutionally incapable of coming off angrier than McCain. A few more fisticuffs from the former law professor (and many more from his running mate and other surrogates) can only help make him look less skinny (metaphorically if not literally). Obama should go after McCain's supposedly biggest asset -- experience -- much as McCain went after Obama's crowd-drawing celebrity.
It is, after all, not mere happenstance that so many conservative pundits -- Rich Lowry, Peggy Noonan, Ramesh Ponnuru -- have, to McCain's irritation, proposed that he "patriotically" declare in advance that he will selflessly serve only a single term. Whatever their lofty stated reasons for promoting this stunt, their underlying message is clear: They recognize in their heart of hearts that the shelf life of McCain's experience has already reached its expiration date.
Is a man who is just discovering the Internet qualified to lead a restoration of America's economic and educational infrastructures? Is the leader of a virtually all-white political party America's best salesman and moral avatar in the age of globalization? Does a bellicose Vietnam veteran who rushed to hitch his star to the self-immolating overreaches of Ahmad Chalabi, Pervez Musharraf and Mikheil Saakashvili have the judgment to keep America safe?
R.I.P., "Change We Can Believe In." The fierce urgency of the 21st century demands Change Before It's Too Late.
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Content Copyright 2008 Harrison County Democratic Party or Original Sources
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