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ariesgem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-07-07 02:31 PM
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Obama Can Talk His Way to Victory
September 07, 2007
Obama Can Talk His Way to Victory
By Steven Stark

The press -- or some of it -- at least some of it have put Barack Obama on the road to oblivion. When the candidate responded, at the July 23 CNN/YouTube Democratic debate, that he would meet with rogue foreign leaders during his first year in office, much of the media excoriated him -- even though his statement was met with applause, and a subsequent poll showed a large majority of Democratic voters agreed with him. Michael Goodwin of the New York Daily News even wrote recently that Obama "is starting to get that last call feeling. He has to know his presidential campaign is running out of time."

Yet Obama's not nearly in as bad shape as the press suggests. Yes, Hillary Clinton has a substantial lead in the national polls, but Obama isn't far off her heels in several of the opening states that count -- Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina. Further, he's sitting on a ton of cash and has a large institutional base of support in the black community. Write him off at your peril.

Nevertheless, it wouldn't hurt for Obama to make some mid-course corrections as we head into the fall campaign. Here are three suggestions:

Rule out the Vice-Presidency

For some Democrats, a Clinton-Obama ticket is the best of all possible worlds. It unites the party's two front-runners. It gives Obama more national experience. The speculation is so rampant that this will be the ultimate choice that supposedly even Fidel Castro has predicted a Clinton-Obama pairing.

Obama needs to put a stop to the speculation now. Any talk of the vice-presidency diminishes him. It's not a job he should want, because it's a political dead-end and holding it would forever destroy his star quality. Besides, Clinton would never pick him in a thousand years. Obama's too much of a threat to her own ability to establish an executive aura, and it's not clear whether he's the best choice for her politically.

Even more important, as long as voters are able to dream of a Clinton-Obama ticket, Obama will be unable to take full advantage of the differences between him and the front-runner. It's time for him to put an end to the common line we hear in the debates: that "We Democrats are united about everything." Which brings us to suggestion number two:

Spell out the differences between your candidacy and Hillary's

Obama has done a decent job of articulating in general terms how a nation led by him would be different from one led by Clinton. He's talked about bringing people together, not dividing them, and how it's time for a new kind of politics.

He needs to be more specific, however, if he's going to make the sale. True, he doesn't want to attack Clinton; at this stage of the campaign, any candidate who goes negative will end up doing him or herself more harm than good. Yet he needs to make it clear how he and Clinton offer different governing styles.

Clinton's campaign promises to implement the Democratic agenda by applying her (and Bill's) proven trademark combination of savvy and resilience. But Clinton is a divisive figure -- granted, for many reasons beyond her control -- so she can't realistically pledge to end the politics of polarization. All she can hope to guarantee is that within the polarized universe that surely would follow her election, she could prevail -- if only by one vote.

In contrast, Obama has the potential to unite the country around him and, by implication, around the Democratic agenda. That's an enormously appealing idea, and one that Clinton can't possibly hope to imitate. It must be the underlying premise of Obama's campaign. Which brings us to suggestion number three:

more.............http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/09/obama_can_talk_his_way_to_vict.html


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Superman Returns Donating Member (804 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-07-07 02:57 PM
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1. Exactly
Enough of this humanizing shit, JFK burped, farted, but I didn't know about it. There's a reason why today we still look at those clips of JFK and get overwhelmed by what could have been. He was larger than politics and Obama needs to be that as well. Clinton is a fine candidate and would be a fine President, but no matter how hard she tries, her name will always prevent her from being a true agent of change. She will simply be a switch of the parties, and a switch of family name, with the same old way of doing politics, scandals and all. 2008 will be our last chance this generation to truly move the country in a new direction. Think about it. He needs to take some chances, he needs to be bold rather than cautious, and he needs to in a nice way to say that we can't afford partisan politics with a triangulated agenda.
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