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26 Aug 2008 11:36 am
Carville's Short Memory
A reader notes:
There's rich irony in listening to Carville and Begala assert that the
convention ought to be devoted to tearing McCain down. After all, if
there's a model for the convention that Obama is running this year,
it's the 1992 gathering overseen by, well, Carville and Begala.
Then, as now, a candidate new to the national stage was seen by many as
an elitist, identified with privilege, and regarded with suspicion as a
radical.
Conventions present a unique opportunity to define a
candidate, share his biography, and ground his policy message in a
personal narrative. Candidates who are already well-defined -
incumbents and prominent pols - tend to use their conventions instead
to redefine their opponents in negative terms. I suspect that's what
Carville and Begala remember - the 1996 convention, when instead of
passing the torch, Ted Kennedy used his nominating speech to inveigh
against the "Republican trio of reaction," repeating "Dole, Kemp and
Gingrich" five times.
There's also a regrettable tendency at work here to define politics in
gendered terms, as if an election were merely an exercise in assertive
masculinity. That's a losing proposition. If strength is recast as
bellicosity, how can Obama hope to measure up against McCain, a man
perfectly willing to fight any war, at any time, for any reason? If the
fitness of a candidate is measured by the viciousness of his attacks,
how can Obama win a race to the bottom against McCain?
It's as if the pundits learned nothing from watching the primary
campaign. Obama wins on the strength of his judgment, his maturity, and
the strength of his conviction that our best days lie ahead. And his
most effective attacks have been those that tie his opponents to the
past, and which point to their faulty judgment. Obama won't win this
fall because he's more manly than John McCain; this is a campaign, not
a pissing contest. He'll win because McCain is embracing the past, and
Americans always look to the future.
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