By John Tabin on 6.4.08 @ 12:08AM
Obama's coeval has him right where she wants him.
"We may be through with the past, but the past ain't through
with us."
-- Bergen Evans
Is it really over? Did Barack Obama really "clinch the nomination"
last night, as every news outlet has been reporting?
The answer is yes -- if you believe the promises of
superdelegates, i.e. politicians and party hacks. If everyone who
has promised to vote for Obama at the Democratic Convention in
Denver this August can be trusted, he can't lose.
Bill and Hillary Clinton, of course, are well versed in the fine
art of equivocation and mendacity, and they know full well that
promises can be broken when political expediency demands it. That's
why Hillary didn't concede to Obama in her post-election speech
last night, instead saying she wouldn't decide what to do next
without consulting with supporters and party leaders.
In other words, before giving up, Team Clinton wants to check
with the superdelegates one more time. At least.
IN THEORY, Hillary could heed the advice of her most fervent
supporters, who greeted her speech by chanting "Den-ver! Den-ver!
Den-ver!"
She could take this fight all the way to the convention. She
could fight the decision that Democratic National Committee's Rules
& Bylaws Committee made over the weekend, which gave Florida
and Michigan each a half-delegation, by appealing to the full
Credential Committee.
She could loudly pronounce that superdelegates' promises mean
nothing until they've actually voted on the floor, keep making the
case that she's the stronger candidate against John McCain, and
wait for Obama to stumble enough to convince superdelegates that he
can't win.
Would she really do that? The question has to be weighing on
Barack Obama's mind. There's an easy way for him to fend off this
nightmare: Pick up the phone and offer Hillary the vice
presidential nomination.
The case for an Obama-Clinton "unity ticket" is fairly
straightforward. Half of Democratic primary voters -- perhaps more
than half, depending on how you count -- prefer Hill to Barry.
Obama's loss to Clinton in South Dakota last night put an
exclamation point on his inability to consolidate Democratic
support. For that, he needs the Clintons' help. Even if Hillary
decides against a convention fight, she can do some damage by
sitting still and not campaigning much on Obama's behalf. Offering
her a place on the ticket is a sure way to get her out on the
stump.
THE CASE AGAINST an Obama-Clinton ticket is equally
straightforward. If you bring the Clintons along for the ride,
you've got to make room in the trunk for their baggage.
Obama's campaign is built around a nebulous narrative of
"change." He promises a break with the past. To Obama's most
enthusiastic supporters, Hillary Clinton is emblematic of the past
they'd like to leave behind.
The Obama Democrats are through with the Clintons. But that
doesn't mean the Clintons are through with them.
topics:
John McCain, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Law