THE SEDUCTIVE BUT EMPTY CAMPAIGN OF BARACK OBAMA
This bit from Kathy Lopez at The Corner speaks to at least some of us who view Obama’s historic candidacy through a slightly different prism than other conservatives:
I tell you, he almost had me tonight until he talked about the war that shouldn’t have been authorized and reminded me there are real policy issues at stake in this election! But listening to his inspirational, rallying speech tonight it’s clear and obvious that if he’s the nominee, he will be tough to beat.
I too have felt the pull of the man’s personality. And despite the fact that there is an element of media creation in his candidacy, no amount of glowing press coverage can obscure the fact that Barack Obama is a special person with special gifts and it is my belief he is destined to achieve special things - some day.
James Antle at AmSpec Blog:
I also think Barack Obama is a good and decent and honorable man. I think he represents liberalism at its best, rather than its worst. To a certain extent, I would view his triumph over the awful Clinton machine as a triumph of all Americans of good will. I am as proud of him as I am ashamed of the Clintons. Nevertheless, I think Obama’s candidacy is a threat to conservatives in a way that the nauseating Clintons are not. He has the potential to revive liberalism that is as strong as the Clintons’ ability to discredit it entirely. He is every bit as wrong on the issues as they are, if not worse. Should he somehow slay the giant and win the Democratic nomination, conservatives must oppose him with all their might.
Antle is talking about an ineffable quality found in Obama that has not been seen in a liberal since perhaps Hubert Humphrey - a joy and pride in being American and a liberal. Those of us who inhabit the internet know full well that a happy liberal is largely a misnomer. Indeed, in Congress and elsewhere, happiness and liberalism appear to be mutually exclusive concepts.
But as Dave over at Race42008 points out, Obama’s kind of liberalism - he refers to it as Liberalism 2.0 - is seductive to independents and even some Republicans because it speaks to what people think they need in their own lives:
Just when liberalism was thought dead and buried, it appears to be rising like a phoenix from the ashes. The new version is not your father’s liberalism, to be sure. It’s post-racial, optimistic, and it’s not ashamed of America nor her greatness. Like I said before, Obama is liberal, but he’s not angry about it.
So why are millions of disaffected Independents and Republicans, as well as millions of new voters, embracing a liberal candidate, even one of a Liberalism 2.0, given the failures of liberalism in the past? The answer can’t be fully described in a single paragraph. A changing world combined with neither a Republican nor a Democratic establishment capable of addressing those changes effectively has much to do with it. On foreign policy, the failures of Iraq, combined with the fact that the failures of Vietnam have been all but forgotten by now, have leveled the playing field between the two parties for the first time in forty years. On economics, the center of gravity in the U.S. and throughout the Western world has shifted leftward over the past few years due to middle class economic angst caused by globalization, which requires up to a decade of post-K-12 education in order to remain economically competitive as an individual, as well as to the rising costs of health care and declining fertility rates that threaten entitlements and retirement security. And culturally, while most people just want their government to implement practical policies that help families, such as making sure marriage isn’t punished in the tax code, the fact that many “pro-family†social conservatives continue to rail against gays and Hollywood has left many families thinking that these folks are concerned more about their own pathologies than about the actual concerns of most families. And, thus, the search begins for a new approach to governance.
A “new approach to governance” is Obama’s biggest weakness.
Andrew Sullivan once referred to Obama as a liberal version of Ronald Reagan. While there are some immediate and obvious similarities between the two, Reagan spent 25 years thinking, talking, and writing about the nature and role of government in society. They both might share a superior ability to communicate optimism and hope, but in the end, it is crystal clear that Obama simply isn’t ready to be president because he hasn’t thought about “governance” very long or very hard.
I have often referred to Obama as an empty suit. The analogy is apt because despite his obvious gifts, Obama has not fleshed out many of his basic, fundamental principles and how they would play a role in his presidency. Just what exactly does he stand for besides the vague platitudes about “hope” and “change” that pepper his speeches like little dollops of whipped cream? Where is the rock to which he tethers his beliefs?
I don’t think this is a question of intellectual laziness but rather it is a matter of not having spent enough time confronting, questioning, strengthening, and ultimately adopting in his own mind the bedrock foundation of a political philosophy. This is especially true because Obama, more than any other liberal politician in a couple of generations, really does want to re-define liberalism.
But to this point, there simply isn’t any “there” there. There are position papers. There is a nebulous appeal to some idealistic “crusade” to remake politics in America. But there is nothing behind the curtain of campaign platitudes that would lead one to believe that Obama has given any serious thought about how these concepts play into an overall framework of beliefs that he can call his own.
For this reason, at the present time, Obama would make a terrible president - beyond the fact that I believe his policies to be wrongheaded and even dangerous. And given the perilousness of the times, it is very possible that an Obama Administration - like the Bush Administration - would find itself eventually crashing on the shoals of history; battered and bruised by the inconstancy and contradictions that would afflict a basically rudderless chief executive.
Another term in the Senate or perhaps a turn as governor will give Barack Obama the kind of experience in government that would be beneficial to deepening his understanding of what I sense is his biggest deficiency - a better comprehension of the relationship between the government and the governed and how that fits into his own personal political belief system.
