The
Christian Science Monitor lavishes praise on Team
Obama honcho David Axelrod:
As political scientists dissect just what happened
between last fall and this spring, and how a junior senator with a
funny name and little experience on the national stage was able to
dethrone the Clintons, much of the credit will likely go to Axelrod
- and to what is a pairing of candidate and adviser who are
unusually well suited to each other.
He's Obama's answer to Karl Rove, the big-picture architect of the
campaign who always seems to have his pulse on what will resonate
with voters. But he's also, say colleagues, a rarity among
political advisers: someone who still carries the idealism that got
him started in the business.
Two minor quibbles:
- What happened in the Democratic primary campaign has already
been thoroughly dissected by journalists and bloggers, without
assistance from "political scientists." The fact that Hillary was
sailing along fine until Tim Russert tripped her up
on Elliot Spitzer's plan to give driver's licenses to illegal
aliens is conveniently omitted from the CSM
tongue-bath testimonial to Axelrod's brilliance.
- Obama is still merely the Democratic nominee, and Axelrod is
thus so far proven a genius only equal to the masterminds behind
the campaigns of George McGovern, Walter Mondale, Mike Dukakis,
et al.
If hubris had a scent, the Obama campaign would be reeking of
it, and you know it's getting bad when even such an enthusiastic
Obamaphile as
Andrew Sullivan has begun to complain of the aroma. Media
adulation like the CSM profile of Axelrod is unlikely to
deflate the supernova egos at Hope HQ. If their man ever slips a
few points behind McCain in the
Gallup poll, Axelrod will likely be surprised at how quickly
he's demoted to the rank of ex-genius.
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