By George Neumayr on 7.9.08 @ 12:08AM
Obama's latest exercises in meaningless throat-clearing.
Whenever Obama moves "to the middle," it is not to stay there,
but to collect new voters and bring them back with him to the left.
Toward this end, he engages in a constant stream of throat-clearing
rhetoric heavy with slow and solemn qualifiers, lest his liberalism
appear too stark and off-putting.
The windier Obama gets, the more obvious it becomes that he is
trying to triangulate liberal positions without changing them. He
likes to load his statements with something for everyone, but
insert just enough liberal substance in them to make sure that his
base knows where his true position lies.
The pattern so far seems to be: He makes an ostensibly bold and
new statement, suggesting to moderates and conservatives that he is
a "post-partisan" Democrat open to compromise, followed by a day or
two of mop-up work designed to reassure anxious liberals that he
hasn't moved to the middle at all.
This style of misdirection works in his favor for the most part.
Many voters aren't interested in unscrambling tedious,
what-exactly-did-he-say? controversies, and they are likely to take
away from the first day's headlines the impression that he is a
less unyielding liberal than previous Democratic nominees.
Moreover, the "Obamacons" are so eager to catch whatever
moderate morsel falls from his lips that they help him advance the
best possible construction on his position. To take one example, in
Obama's speech to Planned Parenthood last July, he said baldly,
"The first thing I'd do as president is sign the Freedom of Choice
Act." "Obamacon" Doug Kmiec read the speech and thought it
irenic.
Some of the "values voters" that Obama hopes to poach from the
Republicans are probably still under the impression that he wants
to "expand [the] role of religious groups," as one fatuous headline
put it last week after he appeared to endorse President Bush's
faith-based initiatives program. The truth is that he wants to
strangle and secularize them in government tape.
The headlines suggested that he was not only endorsing the
program uncritically but planned to bolster it, and one early story
managed to garble his position on the hiring practices of these
groups, suggesting that he would respect their religious precepts.
He had said the exact opposite. (In his faux-magnanimous style, he
did say that it is "important" to let groups hire for mission when
not on the government dole, a grand concession from the state for
which they should apparently be deeply grateful.)
This "move to the middle" was convincing enough to get cranky
secularists grumbling. So Obama had to begin the repair work and
remind them to look at the fine print of his position: that
faith-based groups would only receive funds from his administration
if they in effect suspended their faith, nixed any moral concerns
in hiring, and restricted their mission to "secular" purposes. The
real headlines should have been: "Obama seeks to dismantle Bush's
faith-based initiatives program."
Now this week Obama finds himself in another controversy useful
to softening up the religious vote, but also confusing enough to
leave a few liberals dismayed. The media reported that he gave an interview last week to
a Christian magazine, objecting to mental-health exceptions to the
ban on late-term abortions.
At first blush it appears to signal a slight tightening in the
party's position. But Obama quickly told pro-choicers that he
wasn't trying to break any new ground, that he still believed in
"well-defined" mental-health exceptions. In his back-pedaling,
quasi-retraction, he emphasized that pro-choicers have always
interpreted the mental-health exception under Roe v. Wade
and related rulings in his interpretive light.
The only notable dimension to this controversy is that a few
feminists see in it not a new position but an old personality
trait: Obama's condescension and mild strain of sexism in their
eyes. They don't care for his dismissive phrase "feeling blue" as a
description of a reason for late-term abortion. But as one of them
noted, what do you expect from a candidate who calls female
reporters "sweetie"?
topics:
Abortion