George McGovern in the Age of the Internet?
Every time a fellow opens his mouth he tells you something about himself – though politicians try harder than most folks to fool you.
Senator John McCain spoke for a solid hour on Fox News Primary Night – and it was tough sledding. He read his speech from a teleprompter – and it was not an old war hero’s finest hour. Sadly, listening to McCain’s speech was like listening to a seventy-two year-old
Next Hillary spoke. After she won
Translation: Senator Obama, put me on the ticket or disrespect those eighteen million people.
Finally Senator Obama spoke. And McCain and Hillary would have done better not to show up. When it comes to the spoken word it’s hard to do justice to Obama’s power. His speech had melody and harmony and ended with a full symphony orchestra overture.
I used to think when Barack Obama talked about change he meant cleaning up corruption in
What made Obama’s speech fascinating was that he spoke directly to John McCain, and through McCain, I suspect, to older white males who might have their qualms about what his idea of historical progress means for them.
He started out simply by telling his own supporters that Senator McCain is a war hero. A genuine American hero. Then he spoke directly to McCain, saying, Senator McCain, we honor your service. We honor your sacrifice. But it is time for a change. This is our moment. This is our time.
Obama sees this election not as a shift of power but a changing of the guard. It’s time, he’s saying, respectfully, for a new generation (and a new coalition) to have its turn at solving Americans’ problems.
All this leaves Republicans wrestling with a fundamental question that’s hard for a lot of us ‘white males’ to get our arms around. Is Obama right? Is he the voice of a historic change that alters the natural order of things? Are we – inevitably – about to lose our place at the head of the political table? Or is Obama an incredibly talented demagogue who’s created a short-term firestorm – but in time the natural order will reassert itself, the ship will right itself and political life will return to normal?
That’s a question the ‘best and brightest’ minds in the Republican Party need to answer – only to do it they have to stop playing by (and suspend belief in) the political rules they’ve lived with for a generation. And worse, beyond that, the answers are confusing. The signs point in both directions.
For instance – as should have happened according to the old rules – the Wright videos took their toll on Obama. He dropped in the polls. And started losing primaries to Hillary left and right. But, on the other hand, the videos only slowed him down. They didn’t stop him. He marched straight on to the nomination.
And, then, they’re those rallies every night. We Republicans keep telling ourselves – under the old rules – the number of volunteers a campaign has doesn’t mean much. Historically, in race after race, legions of volunteers have meant an intense, but narrow, base. More often than not the candidate with armies of vocal and vociferous volunteers lost. Ron Paul is an example. He had legions of small donors giving over the internet – but hardly ever broke into double digits in votes.
But, then again, whoever heard of a candidate filling arenas with twenty or thirty thousand people a night? Obama’s given the term ‘legions of volunteers’ a whole new meaning.
Is that a sign he’s riding a wave of historic change?
Or George McGovern in the Age of the Internet?
Click Here to discuss and comment on this and other articles.
George McGovern in the Age of the Internet?
Every time a fellow opens his mouth he tells you something about himself – though politicians try harder than most folks to fool you.
Senator John McCain spoke for a solid hour on Fox News Primary Night – and it was tough sledding. He read his speech from a teleprompter – and it was not an old war hero’s finest hour. Sadly, listening to McCain’s speech was like listening to a seventy-two year-old
Next Hillary spoke. After she won
Translation: Senator Obama, put me on the ticket or disrespect those eighteen million people.
Finally Senator Obama spoke. And McCain and Hillary would have done better not to show up. When it comes to the spoken word it’s hard to do justice to Obama’s power. His speech had melody and harmony and ended with a full symphony orchestra overture.
I used to think when Barack Obama talked about change he meant cleaning up corruption in
What made Obama’s speech fascinating was that he spoke directly to John McCain, and through McCain, I suspect, to older white males who might have their qualms about what his idea of historical progress means for them.
He started out simply by telling his own supporters that Senator McCain is a war hero. A genuine American hero. Then he spoke directly to McCain, saying, Senator McCain, we honor your service. We honor your sacrifice. But it is time for a change. This is our moment. This is our time.
Obama sees this election not as a shift of power but a changing of the guard. It’s time, he’s saying, respectfully, for a new generation (and a new coalition) to have its turn at solving Americans’ problems.
All this leaves Republicans wrestling with a fundamental question that’s hard for a lot of us ‘white males’ to get our arms around. Is Obama right? Is he the voice of a historic change that alters the natural order of things? Are we – inevitably – about to lose our place at the head of the political table? Or is Obama an incredibly talented demagogue who’s created a short-term firestorm – but in time the natural order will reassert itself, the ship will right itself and political life will return to normal?
That’s a question the ‘best and brightest’ minds in the Republican Party need to answer – only to do it they have to stop playing by (and suspend belief in) the political rules they’ve lived with for a generation. And worse, beyond that, the answers are confusing. The signs point in both directions.
For instance – as should have happened according to the old rules – the Wright videos took their toll on Obama. He dropped in the polls. And started losing primaries to Hillary left and right. But, on the other hand, the videos only slowed him down. They didn’t stop him. He marched straight on to the nomination.
And, then, they’re those rallies every night. We Republicans keep telling ourselves – under the old rules – the number of volunteers a campaign has doesn’t mean much. Historically, in race after race, legions of volunteers have meant an intense, but narrow, base. More often than not the candidate with armies of vocal and vociferous volunteers lost. Ron Paul is an example. He had legions of small donors giving over the internet – but hardly ever broke into double digits in votes.
But, then again, whoever heard of a candidate filling arenas with twenty or thirty thousand people a night? Obama’s given the term ‘legions of volunteers’ a whole new meaning.
Is that a sign he’s riding a wave of historic change?
Or George McGovern in the Age of the Internet?
Click Here to discuss and comment on this and other articles.