Barack Obama has never been under
the illusion that winning the nomination would take a single primary victory.
He never thought that it would be over by February 2nd, unlike
Hillary Clinton, nor, it seems certain, did he think it would be over when
Texas and Ohio voted on March 17th.
Obama was never going to win
states where Hillary had long ago established a large lead, among them
Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, and Texas. They voted too early for his momentum
to crest against a “super” candidate (or should we call her “automatic”) like
Hillary Clinton. The Clinton machine, the inevitability of her candidacy, and
the yearning on the part of the electorate for a sure victory made it
impossible for even a natural like Barack Obama, in his year (in the
sense that he is truly the candidate of the moment) to win these states.
But nonetheless, it would be a
mistake to underestimate Obama’s long term strategy that we may now be seeing
unfold. First of all, Obama may have realized about the Clintons and himself that
the rest of the public did not. The Clintons fatal flaws are impatience,
confabulation, and a sense of entitlement. Obama’s gifts are the opposite –
patience, honesty, and equanimity. He has used these traits again and again
against his opponents.
As an aside, equanimity is a rare
but important facet for a leader. It was something people saw in George W. Bush
that allowed him to lose sufficiently close to Gore to gain the White House.
Bush was fine with losing. He did not see it as his right to win. He has had a
steady hand in the White House during the past eight years of scandal,
incompetence, and absent leadership. These kinds of crises could destroy an
ordinary person. Bush is no ordinary incompetent.
Senator Obama’s campaign has
slogged it through the winter. Now that spring is here he seems ready to expend
the political capital that he has built up over through the past three months
of hand to hand combat with the Clintons. It’s worth re-emphasizing what he has
done by taking on both Clintons single handedly while at the same time batting
away Senator McCain, who has yet to attack Senator Clinton. Obama has
essentially defeated the most popular Democratic president since Kennedy, who
has run by proxy through his political partner for life, Ms. Clinton.
But what Obama has not been able
to do until now is completely and totally define Senator Clinton, or rather,
let her define herself negatively for the electorate, to see her she would be
in a general election. These primaries have us shown two things. Firstly, that
Senator Clinton and the former president are experts at a politics that is
distinctly of the past.
That is to say, a politics of
attack ads, cynicism and confabulation. This kind of politics can dominate when
the media is in the hands of a select few. The age of the internet changed all
of that and has made everyone a potential pundit. It has put the truth online
on a never ending loop. This in turn has emboldened the official punditry on
the mainstream networks and has injected a level of accountability into
reporting that was not present in the last three or four presidential contests.
It also bears noting that the
stakes now higher as well. Iraq, the economy, and the failed presidency of
George W. Bush has given the media has a heightened sense of responsibility.
They cannot fail the public in their role as the fifth estate and have tacitly
agreed to subject candidates to a more thorough vetting of their character and
their claims.
All of which leads us to the
second thing the primaries have shown us. Senator Clinton’s (and her husband)
have not yet made the transition to the new political reality imposed by the
Internet. They still will do and say anything to win. They both lie with
impunity whenever it suits their needs. They cannot stop it, either – it is the
only way they know how to win. They are truly victims of a newly recognized
condition – Democratic Republican Stockholm Syndrome.
Democratic Republican Stockholm
Syndrome is a disease that strikes democratic candidates who have been
conditioned to believe through being witness to seemingly countless Democratic
defeats that the only way to win in politics is through lying, sliming, and
attacking your opponent. This is its own kind of elitism – a belief in the
noble lie, that one cannot trust the public by conducting an optimistic and
honest campaign (unless you want to lose – hence their mantra, “Obama can’t
win”). It is a belief that the public only responds to a veneer that covers the
truth. Hence, any lie is excusable (“you gotta do what you gotta do”) and any
political tactic allowable given the stakes at hand.
Getting back to the moment in the
campaign in which we find ourselves right now, in the past three months we have
seen the Clintons exhibit all of the symptoms of this condition but it would
have been a major misstep for Senator Obama to accuse the Clintons of this
style of politics without the evidence and the political capital of his own to
make that argument. Now, given the tipping point of recent events, he can go
press this in the final week of the Pennsylvania primary.
To accuse Senator Clinton
outright of being a congenital liar in the pursuit of power for it’s own sake
would of course engage in just the kind of tear down that Obama stands against.
To let it go, though, when all of the evidence is in would be the mark of a
loser. Not only does Obama want to win but he needs to show that he can win to
convince democratic voters. Thus, it is necessary at some point for him to go
after Clinton’s major weakness.
Senator Obama is now able to
fully engage Senator Clinton on this issue without seeming to do so in bad
taste. When Clinton’s Bosnia lie finally fluoresced into an all out media
backlash (after weeks in which she stood by the “fairy tale”), Obama stood silent.
He did the honorable thing in doing so and letting her explain what happened.
Was he rewarded when he made a bad choice of words while seeking to explain why
a natural constituency for democrats, small town folks who are down on their
luck, votes republican and “cling” to guns and religion (and making a point
Bill Clinton himself made to Charlie Rose in December)?
The Clinton campaign rushed into
what it saw as a media bloodletting (no doubt ready to attack the media as
biased if they too did not rip into Obama) and called him an elitist and
accused him of being out of touch. In doing so, out trotted congenital liar
Hillary Clinton’s confabulations, this time talking about her long time love of
guns and going duck hunting with her father. Now, it may be that she did this.
But who is going to believe her? Senator Obama gave a sharp answer, calling
Senator Clinton on both her attacks and her strange sounding claims:
I expected this out of John McCain. But I’ve got to
say, I’m a little disappointed when I start hearing the exact same talking
points coming out of my Democratic colleague Hillary Clinton. She knows better.
She knows better, shame on her. Shame on her. She knows better!
Hillary Clinton’s out there like
she's on the duck blind every Sunday. She’s packin’ a six shooter! Come on! She
knows better. That’s some politics being played by Hillary Clinton. I want to
see that picture of her out there in the duck blinds.
No-one should predict what is
going to be a close call next week. But personally, I think that not only will
Pennsylvania be close, it may be Clinton’s Waterloo, or her Stalingrad,
whatever you want to call it. The moment that Senator Obama feels comfortable
calling her directly on the fact that she has campaigned like Karl Rove (stealing
her “shame on you” lines) and earned a deserved reputation as a congenital
liar, this campaign has now, finally, turned its last decisive corner.