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"Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment by the corrupt few."
-- George Bernard Shaw, Man and Superman, "The Revolutionist's Handbook"

The New Hampshire Primary, the primary Primary, takes place today. An estimated half-million mostly white independent-minded maple syrup enthusiasts are expected to trudge to the voting booths and burn them for warmth -- but not before they have cast their votes for the leaders of the Democratic and Republican parties.

No estimates are in yet, but based on the state motto ("Live Free or Die") I would guess that John McCain will be the big winner, since I'm pretty sure that is his campaign slogan. He will narrowly edge out Ron Paul ("Live Tax-Free or Die"), Rudy Giuliani ("Live Free or Die from 9/11"), Mike Huckabee ("Live Free, Beginning at the Moment of Conception") and Mitt Romney ("Live Free or Die or Don't and Keep Living, Depending on What Time It Is.").

On the Democratic side, I foresee Hillary Clinton finishing neck-and-neck with Barack Obama, although the image is a little fuzzy; it may be hands-around-neck. John Edwards will concede this race and focus on South Carolina, while Bill Richardson enjoys a hot dog.

With a few exceptions I have tried not to be overtly political in this space, for fear of alienating potential readers. Well, readers, prepare to be alienated. (If a Republican ultimately wins the White House, illegally alienated readers should prepare to be deported.)

Barack Obama for President, 2008

It is admittedly difficult for me to endorse a candidate[1] who so lacks depth and breadth of policy experience. His proposals to address some key issues have lacked both detail and nuance, and his performance in debate and other extemporaneous question-and-answer sessions have done little to fill in the blanks. In another year -- under different circumstances and against different opponents -- he would be a weak candidate.

But this campaign requires me to ask myself what a president should be. Should the President be a detail-oriented political general like Clinton? Should he be gentle-souled diplomat like Richardson? Should he be an incendiary reformer like Edwards? I don't think so. Not right now. I think we need a president who will lead by his example and ideals, who will make us proud to be Americans again, and I think Barack Obama is that person.

There is an temptation to make the easy comparison of Obama to John F. Kennedy. Both were legislative lightweights, shadowed by bigotry (Obama with his African-Americanism, Kennedy with his Catholicism) and casually (if somewhat untraditionally) attractive. Both rose to prominence with their charm in one-one-one interactions and their ability to rally the young and disaffected, reshaping the Democratic party after a decade of turmoil. Most acutely, both men were posessed of an inspirational message that moved people to believe in their ideals and act on them.

Kennedy's presidency is not well-regarded in history books; his successes (Cuban Missle Crisis, the space program) were largely mitigated by his failures (Bay of Pigs, Vietnam), and the manifestation of his most noble effort, the Civil Rights Act, did not become reality until after his death. Still, he retains a prominent place in the nation's consciousness for the inspiration he provided to so many people and the martyrdom that transformed it into canon. He was a figurehead president, at a time when America needed one. Obama could be that kind of national symbol.

But I think another comparison is equally valid: there was another man, initially considered a political naif, who reshaped his party and forged a bond with the American people using the power of rhetoric and optimism, whose policy objectives were embryonic but who stayed true to his fiercely held convictions and surrounded himself with gifted experts to implement his greater vision. Ronald Reagan reenergized a flagging nation and renewed confidence in the free world. His policies may have been out of whack or out of touch with the American people -- I'm in no position to debate that -- but he was successful at implementing them.

Obama can be that kind of leader as well, reinvigorating the American people this time with Democratic principles of transparent government, available health care and public education, and global community.

While his broad, perhaps even callow approach to policy is a flaw in his campaign, and may in fact be whittled down as the election season wears on, I see it as a kind of strength. What the Bush Administration has illustrated is that slavish, unilateral commitment to specific policy solutions is an uneducated and unnecessarily adversarial method of government. Obama's focus on broader principles rather than mandates and fiats allows him to be flexible and nimble within the confines of executive power. The important thing is that I believe in him.

I don't believe in Bill Richardson, though no other Democrat is as "qualified" to be President as he is. His terms as legislator and governor notwithstanding, his greatest skill and his most impressive achievements are as a foreign diplomat. America could use a diplomat who understands the delicate art of statesmanship, after years of Condoleezza Rice's "al dente" strategy. But I am troubled by his casual, matter-of-fact approach to foreign and domestic policy, which seems to substitute obviousness for substance. Obama's reform proposals may be protoplasmic but they are governed by overarching goals and principles. Richardson sounds like he has the answers but hasn't thought them all the way through, and he isn't enough of a gifted speaker to sell "I don't know" to the American people.

I don't believe in Hillary Clinton, though her experience and her platform are appealing and I believe she has done well by her constituents in my native New York. And while I find her to be excessively calculating, stubborn and confrontational, I don't necessarily believe that her "likeability," or lack thereof, would necessarly doom her in a general election (unless she opposes McCain). My overriding fear is that she is too polarizing a figure within the political and policy world to achieve her goals, reasonable as they may be. To wit: I work in a field where the animosity and distrust is so deeply entrenched that her proposed plan for expanding retirement savings -- which, on its face, is not unreasonable -- was met by industry representatives with the kind of vitriol usually reserved for sex offenders. If you think the country is divided now -- between red states/blue states, rich/poor, religious/secular, etc. -- a President Hillary Clinton would only deepen the fault lines.

Speaking of "two Americas," I don't believe in John Edwards, even though his sparkly blue eyes make me melt. He's a lawyer, which is bad enough, but he's a lawyer who loves litigation -- who got rich from it -- and for whom every discussion is a toothy rhetorical battle. His message is as divisive as Clinton's personality, and his incessant campaign invective about lobbyists and special interests is as misguided as it is misleading. If you're going to vote for Edwards, you might as well vote for Ron Paul -- at least with Paul, everyone would be on the same side of anarchy.

I don't believe in John McCain, though I would probably vote for him before Edwards. His commitment to the country is unquestionable. His approach to the immigration issue was rational, his authoritative condemnation of torture has been crucial and his outspoken defense of the Iraq troop surge was admirable. Still, there are things beyond his mere Republicanism that trouble me, such as: his domestic policy. He doesn't seem to have one. Will he just make it up as he goes along? Also, while I defensively supported his iconoclastic run for president in 2000, thinking him a man of principle, his backpedaling on the "agents of intolerance" statement leaves me wondering how many of his ideals he would compromise for the sake of power. And finally, the guy is 71 years old, most of those years rough. Can he stand up to the increasingly physical rigors of the job? Will his cranky, stubborn side trump his reputation as a consensus builder? Will state dinners be moved up to 4:00 p.m.?

As for the rest of the lineup: Romney is a cardboard cutout. Paul is a cartoon character. Giuliani's campaign is a disaster, just like the rest of his life. Thompson has nothing to offer except mystery. Huckabee's abiding simplicity scares me, mostly because I think he can win. That's it for "viable" candidates.

This is probably the most important election of my lifetime. (Well, sort of. It turns out that 2000 was the most important election of my lifetime, but nobody knew it then. O hindsight, you fair-weather friend.) As a person with a voice and a pulpit, I feel compelled to use them. I am supporting Barack Obama in 2008.

May the best president win.

[1]

Date: 2008-01-08 11:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] enchanted-pants.livejournal.com
A week ago I would have most preferred Joe Biden, but he crapped out in Iowa. In a year of great leaps forward, Biden was just too white, too male and too old. But as chair of the Senate Foreign Policy committee he has the foreign policy bona fides, and his domestic policy agenda, centered on education reform, was both ambitious and realistic. Though his tact and temperment are questionable, and he lacked Obama's charisma and gravitas, he could also be an eloquent and passionate orator. With the kleig lights firmly affixed on Obama-Clinton-Edwards, maybe Biden was a lost cause. But for his inability to become a part of the discussion, I blame the Biden campaign's lack of imagination and determination.

Re: [1]

Date: 2008-01-09 07:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jatchwa.livejournal.com
Biden was victimized by timing. He might have been a fine 2004 candidate, but it's hard to imagine how he could have won the nomination in 2008, harder still now that it didn't happen. (Everything seems inevitable in retrospect.)

Turning to JFK -- and I say this as an Obama supporter -- but JFK in 1960 had a good deal more experience than does Obama in 2008. He had been elected to the Massachusetts state house from 1947 to 1953 after returning from heroic service in World War II. He had served a full term in the U.S. Senate, and been reelected. I'm not sure if it matters, but his loathsome father's insider status suggests, to me, that he was prepared for the Presidency from birth, a la Al Gore. (JFK's legislative accomplishments were probably thin. The U.S. Senate in the late 50s -- dominated as it was by committee chairmen and majority leadership -- was not a place for a Senator to do much of anything until he had been in office for 40 years or so.)

Also, JFK's defeat of Henry Cabot Lodge in the 1952 Senate race is a significantly more impressive accomplishment than Obama's defeat of Alan Keyes.

As for me: after the Iraq War, I couldn't care less about so-called experience. No one had more of it than Cheney.

Re: [1]

Date: 2008-01-09 09:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] enchanted-pants.livejournal.com
Thank you for the historical context, JRR.

Re: [1] Hillary=Sears

Date: 2008-01-10 02:45 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Hillary reminds me of the Sears marketing strategies from past and present. She presents this TOUGH image similar to the "old" Sears which heavily marketed TOOLS and MACHINERY. Now, Hillary wants to present a softer image, as in the "softer side of Sears".

Re: [1] Hillary=Sears

Date: 2008-01-10 02:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] village-twins.livejournal.com
Gimbels is gone, Marge, long gone. You're Gimbels.

(This has nothing to do with the presidential race, but I've been to Sears about as recently as I've been to Gimbels.)

Re: [1] Hillary=Sears

Date: 2008-01-10 07:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jatchwa.livejournal.com
It amazes me.

Not that politicians craft an image, or that voters respond to that image. But that we have (or at least anonymous has) become so meta-analytical so as to analyze the images they portray and think there's anything to be gleaned therein. If I cared about labels like post-modern or post-post modern, I'm sure one would apply to this nonsense.

It is our job, as voters, to decided which person would make the best president. To imagine, as does anonymous, that watching CNN's sound-bite snippets of slices of those images that a candidate chooses to project -- as if they are the true judge of character -- is the way in which to answer that vital question is preposterous.

Anonymous, I assume you hate Hillary. Just admit that you hate her because she'd raise taxes on rich people or expand access to health care or make smoking-cessation products covered by Medicare or whatever it is that you find so loathsome about her.

But please don't pretend that you dislike her because she reminds you of a Sears socket wrench or lawnmower. Because, let me tell you, either of those items would be an excellent place to start if you were trying to repair a house on the inside or out.

Re: [1] Hillary=Sears

Date: 2008-01-10 09:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] enchanted-pants.livejournal.com
I am not a homeowner. But if I were, and my house needed repair, I don't know if I'd ever start the process by buying a lawnmower.

Re: [1] Hillary=Sears

Date: 2008-01-11 05:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jatchwa.livejournal.com
How far do I have to run with the lawnmower metaphor?

Here goes: the outside of our house is the face we give to the world. Keeping the lawn neat and trimmed is a nice alternative to building a giant moat stocked with electric eels, and a fence so high G-d Himself can't see over it. (Or whatever the current solution to illegal immigration they're debating in the Republican primaries.)

Maybe we should stop acting, as a country, like schmucks.

Re: [1]

Date: 2008-01-10 09:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] enchanted-pants.livejournal.com
I'm still not sure how much weight to give the fact that JFK was "prepared for the presidency from birth." What does this mean, exactly? Was he directing anti-communist maneuvers with his G.I. Joe figures? Was he taught how to exercise diplomacy at tea parties with his stuffed animals? Did he give "State of the Nursery" addresses?

Alas, to the dismay of dl004d, I have never seen "Li'l Bush."

Re: [1]

Date: 2008-01-11 12:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] village-twins.livejournal.com
I'm gonna call you Non-Watchy. Because you don't watch. Heh heh.

Re: [1]

Date: 2008-01-11 05:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jatchwa.livejournal.com
Me, I'd rather elect a person of more average background than someone who has been connected to insider Washington-and-Wall Street for generations. Being "prepared" for the presidency generally means meeting and befriending the Andover-and-Harvard educated WASP patriarchy that runs this country. It means never having to wait for a table at the Palm.

I don't think it's a good thing. But it is "experience."

Re: [1]

Date: 2008-01-11 11:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] village-twins.livejournal.com
Well, Obama went to Harvard.

Re: [1]

Date: 2008-01-13 10:54 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Did his dad get him in?
-- jatchwa

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