By J.P. Freire on 2.19.08 @ 12:08AM
Barack Obama's greatest asset, and his greatest defect, is his ability to speak.
When Barack Obama was
pelted for cribbing some language from a speech
given by Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick, it was a blessing
for the Clinton campaign. They had been working for some time to
get the charge to stick, that Obama is a great salesman without an
inventory. It's not important whether he "stole" the line,
"borrowed"
it with permission, or happens to have a good ear. The Clintons
wanted the press to stop gushing about how the man looked
(stylistically and, gasp, racially). They wanted them to listen up.
And what timing -- on the eve of the primaries, Barack Obama was
taking flack for doing the one thing he does well. Speaking.
This followed a more general assault in the press over the past
week. Obama-rama was (finally)
going through the meat-grinder. For the first time in the
mainstream press, Obama was being accused of being a
cult of personality, a charismatic candidate with no
substance. The "cult-like" nature of his followers was no
longer "electrifying," but rather eerie. But reporters were
confronted with a problem when attempting to describe the
inexperience of a candidate -- that "nothing" is kind of hard to
talk about.
Worse, Obama's words now have him flip-flopping on an issue
about integrity -- something that's not hard to hold as an
advantage over Hillary Clinton. Having promised to take
public-funds for his campaign should his Republican opponent do the
same, McCain's willingness to call his bluff has left him in a
lurch. As an excuse, the Washington Post noted that "The
candidate's advisers said yesterday that his pledge came before
anyone realized how explosive his fundraising effort would become."
Of course it did -- even Obama didn't expect to be crowned Jesus
Christ, Redeemer of Politics. But the crown he received has its
thorns.
THE BIGGEST thorn is not Hillary Clinton, but John McCain. It was
an unexpected twist. At the end of the Bush administration, weren't
the Democrats supposed to have this down? Their candidate was
supposed to be, well, the Messiah, come to bury the failures of the
Republicans' supposedly false one. It didn't happen. Instead,
they're arguing about which candidate is the least likely to
get buried. With the nomination for the Republican Party
decided, the Democratic contest is eclipsed by McCain. McCain who
was always a maverick. McCain who has his
own cult of personality, but also war experience, foreign
policy expertise, and, most important, time to gather his base.
This was never supposed to happen.
Which is why Obama's campaign is so fascinating to watch as it
unravels. Even if he doesn't admit it, he has taken huge hits. His
personality, and the integrity that seems so engrained in it, is
open to debate. While he has lived up to his promise of running a
clean campaign, it seems just as much politically expedient as it
does seem honorable. And his campaign contribution flap has placed
serious doubt in whether he is a man of his word anyway. And
Obama's use
of funds to effectively bribe super-delegates is hardly
reassuring when considering the "new" politics about which he's so
excited.
Additionally, his speeches are now being derided as empty. A
stumped reader writes
in to WaPo:
...The Cult of Obama is one of the most disturbing
things I have ever seen. When I hear things like "We are the ones
we have been waiting for" and "We are the change we seek," I want
to scream.
And David Brooks
picks up that thread, asking with laser-point accuracy, "If we
are the change we have been waiting for then why have we been
waiting since we've been here all along?"
Hasn't every politician promised "Change" and "Hope"? Hasn't
every politician used rhetoric that sounded Biblical, with varying
degrees of success? How has Obama gone for so long without being
called out as an articulate cliche? In an alternative universe in
which there was never a Hillary Clinton, how would Obama be framed
without the greatest threat of the 21st Century: the baby
boomers?
IT'S HARD TO BLAME the Clintons (a rarity, in fact). As a political
adolescence goes, Obama's rite of passage (his 2004 Democratic
convention speech) was certainly awash with silver spoons. CNN
correspondent Candy Crowley even exclaimed in her interview
following a speech, "You're a star!" But the speech he gave, even
then, was a clever misappropriation of conservative rhetoric to
liberal ends. He described the plight of his parents who had to
work hard to get where they were, which perked up ears. Then he
went on to outline a philosophy that would ensure that no one else
would ever have to work that hard again.
Hillary couldn't do a thing without being heavily scrutinized.
Even her "inevitability" was always a bit of a slam. She finds
herself now playing John Kerry to Obama's Howard Dean -- not the
nominee that everyone wants, but the one they may have to settle
for once the Obama bubble bursts. That is, if Obama ever has his
"scream" moment, or his "tank" moment. But it is hard to believe
that "Just Words" (the speech he supposedly stole) could be the
turning point, considering it was still a moment of eloquence, even
if borrowed.
That eloquence, though, is overstated. Barack Obama is not a
good speaker. He can read speeches better than George W. Bush --
but that is a very low bar. As he continually refuses Hillary's
demands that he debate her (as here), he is being
rightly accused of a problem he has: an inability to engage, an
inability to speak on issues. Hillary Clinton is defined
by her willingness to engage. Her husband is a reminder of how bad
that willingness can be.
Liberals may be tired of that willingness right now, in the
midst of the Democratic primaries. However, when Democrats see
Barack Obama standing at a podium, not across from a sympathetic
audience chanting "Si se puede," but across from John McCain, they
will wonder whether it was wise to simply hope for a good
candidate.
topics:
John McCain, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton