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02 Nov 2008 08:44 pm
A President, Not A Messiah
I have a pre-election essay in the Sunday Times of London today that contemplates the enormous expectations a president Obama would face if he is elected president next Tuesday. Money quote:
The reason for the wave of optimism behind Obama – just look at the
massive crowds across the country this past year – is almost entirely due to
the profound national demoralisation of the recent past. Iraq and
Afghanistan, Katrina and the financial meltdown, torture and religious
extremism: all these have led many Americans to the brink of despair about
their own country. A historically unprecedented number of Americans believe
their country is on the wrong track and view Obama as the vehicle to repair
it.
Among the most enthusiastic Obama supporters, there are tinges of hero worship
and aspirations beyond anything any human being can deliver. And the
hostility born of dashed expectations is always the worst. People expecting
a messiah will at some point be forced to realise they have merely elected a
president.
No president will be able to wave the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan away with
some kind of magic wand – there are few good options in either conflict, and
many potential perils. No president will be able to end a recession with
deep roots or alter market confidence in a single speech.
No president can change the Earth’s climate in four or eight years. And when
Obama’s limitations emerge, as they will, there is a danger that the
powerful expectations of his young base may turn to tears. This is always
the risk with political “movements”. They conjure up utopias that can simply
never happen.
Between the roiling and increasingly bitter rapids on the right and the left,
can Obama maintain a steady course? We cannot know, of course. But the
evidence of the past year is encouraging.
What has been truly amazing is the
preternatural calm and moderation Obama has shown throughout this volatile
and emotional campaign. He has managed to get to the brink of the White
House by beating some of the most formidable political machines in America –
the Clintons and the Roves – without intensifying the conflict or polarising
the country himself.
He seems able to absorb these currents without further disturbing them. Of
course, this is much harder in office than in opposition. In office, you
have to make decisions that delineate winners and losers rather than make
speeches onto which everyone can project their interests. But Obama seems
unafraid of his enemies, undeterred by his rivals, and able somehow to stay
healthy and cheerful.
His temperamental edge is complemented by his organisational and managerial
skills. The most seasoned political observers have been struck by the
meticulous professionalism of his campaign; and there has never been a
fundraising machine as innovative or as successful as his in the history of
American politics.
The whole thing here.
(Photo: Joe Raedle/Getty.)
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