A Reminder For Senator Obama: Fortune Favors The Bold

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First Posted: 06-29-08 03:43 PM   |   Updated: 07- 7-08 05:12 AM

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Waltereed

I was a little disturbed to read this in Saturday's Washington Post.

"Those who accomplish the most are those who don't make the perfect the enemy of the good," said former Senate majority leader Thomas A. Daschle, a key Obama supporter. "Barack is a pragmatist. In that sense, he has a larger vision but oftentimes knows that we can't get there with one legislative effort. When these occasions arise, he is willing to accept progress, even marginal gain, as a step toward that vision."


Key in on that little bit of maxim that Daschle quotes in that first sentence: "Don't make perfect the enemy of the good." See, Daschle's got that twisted. My father taught it to me differently: "The worst enemy of the best idea is a good idea."

Now, have to say, I think that the distinction there is critical! I hate to detract from Mr. Daschle's accomplishments or go too far or be too cute in making myself out to be some astounding success that I'm not, but let's compare. A little less than four years ago, I decided to start blogging. I heeded my version of that advice amd worked hard at it every day and soon it went from hobby to avocation to freelance occupation to writing full time for the Huffington Post. People tell me that's not bad! Meanwhile, Tom Daschle was one of those in the Congress who played go-along-to-get-along with the Bush White House, staking out safe positions, not throwing any major static Bush's way. It wasn't the perfect way to run a campaign, but Daschle felt it would be good enough to get him elected. I had my dad's advice to work with, and Daschle had his own. So how'd that work out for everyone involved?

Like I said, I hate to be cute, but Daschle arrives on the scene here suddenly played up as a "key Obama supporter" around the same time that the supposedly wise old heads in the media are starting to take note of, and further recommend, an Obama "shift to the center." Now, I've been hearing the phrase "shift to the center" over and over again for the past decade or so, and I have two observations for you. First, it is always the Democrat who seems to need to "tack to the center." And second, those Democrats typically lose. So, outside of defeat, I don't know exactly what's to be found at "the center." To me, "the center" seems to a euphemism for "the place where one stakes out the safest possible position." Well, I imagine you'll live a long life without ever hearing the rallying cry:

What do we want?!
To stake out the safest possible position!
And when do we want it??
Oh, you know...whenever it's convenient!


For too long, there has been an assumption that there's a Cracker Jack prize somewhere at this magical "center" - that playing it safe nets you the fifty percent-plus-one you need to win. In the first place: playing for a one point win is virtually the same as playing to not lose. In the second place, the prize is nothing but a MacGuffin - there's no intersecting sweet spot among the voting public that you can get to playing it safe. Some people are indifferent about many issues, but virtually all people are passionate about something. So ask yourself, do you think glory is more likely to be obtained by appealing to people's passion, or by appealing to their indifference? If you answered the latter, you are Tom Daschle, and I'll remind you that the last time I checked, YOU LOST.

Fortune favors the bold. And that doesn't necessarily mean that bold equals running hard into the far-left hinterland. It just means that if there's a position worth having, it's worth taking. Take the issue of telecom immunity. It's very clear that whether Obama is for it or against it, he's going to present himself in opposition to some significant group of Democratic allies. Any decisive move will have its negative impacts. But the game Obama is playing - in which he's trying to get through the matter without having to stick his neck out - is worse. Obama has injected such a strong undertone of boldness into this race - its funding mechanism, the thousands who have been rallied behind it, the daring insistence that competing in all fifty states is critical to success - that Obama's attempt to be the invisible man on this issue is fundamentally at odds with the guiding principles of his campaign.

But that's what happens when a get-along-to-go-along guy like Daschle is in your ear, telling you that perfect is the enemy of good, and that it's time to start racking up marginal gains. Pretty soon, "good" becomes "good enough", and "good enough" becomes "enough."

Last Friday afternoon, Matt Yglesias broke out some numbers from USA Today/Gallup that indicated that on a host of domestic issues - especially ones related to the economy - Obama was the clear choice of voters. But those numbers painted a different picture on Iraq and terrorism: the two candidates were tied on the former, and McCain was well-ahead on the latter. Based upon Matt's take of the situation, I'm guessing that Daschle quote got him a little worried:

The conventional Democratic strategy would be to try to duck the debate and hope the economy will carry him through. That kind of thinking is, however, one of the reasons Democrats have had their Heads in the Sand for many years. It's relatively likely that events in the world will lead to a renewed focus on national security at some point in the coming months, and it's also relatively easy for the McCain campaign to change subjects in this direction at a time of their choosing since security issues are, by their nature, visceral and frightening.


I have to agree. The media might not want to cover the Iraq war right now and the American people may tell pollsters that they're more worried about their wallets at the moment than about terrorists. The Democrats, however, know that the war in Iraq is the wrench in the gears as far as improving the lives of Americans are concerned because it's the very issue they won on in 2006. And not only should they refuse to countenance the idea that they'll escape the election season without having to face a debate on those issues, they should be forcing that debate right now. I do not believe Obama can win this election by hitting McCain where he is already quite weak. He has to run right at his strength.

And look, right now, Obama is out there in the weeds on a number of trivial issues, such as telecom immunity, gun rights in the District of Columbia, and this expansion of the death penalty for child rapists. None of these matters are pivotal, and all of them seem only to invite internecine sparring between Obama's nominal allies. They're all issues that only demand the candidate be good enough. But the Iraq War is an issue that's going to demand that Obama set his sights on perfection. And running hard at the Iraq issue is going to change the conversation, allow Obama to get out of those weeds, and give him a platform to elucidate the flaws in the strategy that McCain is pimping - and that three-quarters of the electorate already feels uneasy about.

Tom Daschle believes some "progress" is enough. He believes "marginal gains" are enough. He believes that a single "step toward that vision" is enough. And he's of the belief that the easy approach is the best approach. But in February of 2008 the students of Prairie View A&M left their campus en masse to go to where they could vote early in the Texas primary. They did not raise a cheer for marginal gains and they were not content with a single step toward progress, and fittingly, they did not take the easy route toward their destination. Their march is the clearest way I know to visually represent the reward that's waiting out there for Obama. But it cannot be won by default. It must be taken.

I was a little disturbed to read this in Saturday's Washington Post. "Those who accomplish the most are those who don't make the perfect the enemy of the good," said former Senate majority leader Th...
I was a little disturbed to read this in Saturday's Washington Post. "Those who accomplish the most are those who don't make the perfect the enemy of the good," said former Senate majority leader Th...
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- bija I'm a Fan of bija 6 fans permalink

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The liberties of a people never were, nor ever will be, secure when the transactions of their rulers may be concealed from them. -Patrick Henry, revolutionary (1736-1799)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 06/30/2008

I recently wrote Barack and told him my view. I told him in an email, which I KNOW he will get- that I will no longer fund your campaign if you cannot show some guts and support the ideas and ideals that you stated previous to becoming the Democratic Nominee apparent. I WANT CHANGE! Not a bunch of meandering maybes that take me nowhere. I am so sick of the SPINELESSNESS that so many Dems in the House and Senate represent, that I could vomit!
WIll it help. Doubt it. Will I feel better.... maybe.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 06/30/2008

Newsflash: Obama IS the middle-of-the-road conservative.

Obama's role models are: JFK ( he apes JFK's suits and dark glasses) and Reagan ( he apes Ronnie's campaign themes and gushed admiration for RR ).

I find it laughable when Obama's agitprop makes him into a leftist.

Some of the bloggers here remind me of a wise McLuhan's saying:" You see it, when you believe it."
Well stop believing images and slogans and start seeing.

LIVE GREEN VOTE GREEN

WWW.GP.ORG

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 06/30/2008
- RENREVARD I'm a Fan of RENREVARD 2 fans permalink

To Quote Obama during the primary :Washington is where good ideas go to die!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:12 PM on 06/30/2008

OBama, a rich U.S. Senator is positioning himself as an outsider. Ridiculous.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 06/30/2008
- johnie2xs I'm a Fan of johnie2xs 61 fans permalink
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Jason, I couldn't agree with you more. A friend of mine, and a fellow blogger of yours here on the Huff, Joey Palermo seems to have bought the Daschle tact you mapped out. I obviously disagree with him and i understand his reasoning, but it isn't very fulfilling nor does it show the strength of convictions that Obama first showed. I'd rather go down in flames with my beliefs, than be defeated and singed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 06/30/2008
- zann I'm a Fan of zann 11 fans permalink

Like the song says, "I've been down so long it looks like up to me". Except in congress, its more like "I've been swimming in favors so long they look like water to me."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 PM on 06/30/2008
- Cay I'm a Fan of Cay 8 fans permalink

Do you notice the difference between the two maxims? "The worst enemy of the best idea is a good idea." is talking about *ideas*, not actions. Perfect ideas are possible, perfect actions are not. Let's stop being purists here.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 AM on 06/30/2008

Perhaps, but when did standing up for basic 4th Amendment protections and the rule of law equate to perfection? I don't believe Obama gains anything politically for selling out on the Constitution.

People have supported Republicans for years because they portray strength. Even when people disagree with them, they respect them because they think they stand on principle. Obama had that going for him (mostly), but he's on the verge of losing it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 PM on 06/30/2008

What worries me... How much control does the DNC have over Obama now that we're in the general election phase? Does he have to cow-tow to them according to what they say is going to be the democratic "platform"? If that is the case, it is so sad that they are willing to dismantle everything he has stood for, in order to put forth what they think works, that now the campaign belongs to them and him. If he's the candidate, he should be setting the platform as the party leader, and not the DNC. Just another case I have against the two-party system. Just another reason for me to hate Washington. Let the leader lead for Pete's sake!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 AM on 06/30/2008
- Mogamboguru I'm a Fan of Mogamboguru 316 fans permalink
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I suppose he is now paying the prize for the Superdelegates rallying around HIM, rather than around Clinton, after June 5th.

In the end, the Superdel's didn't pick their nominee according to what he or she stood for - but who had a greater chance to get elected November 6th. But the AGENDAS of the Superdelegates haven't changed at all.

So now, rather than getting their agendas pushed through by Clinton, they are just forcing OBAMA, to carry their agendas on.

The only thing I can hope for is, that Obama's heart is bleeding, while he is selling such crap to his supporters on behalf of other people.

I am starting to feel that, the real enemy of the people may be - the Democratic Party.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 PM on 06/30/2008

What worries me... How much control does the DNC have over Obama now that we're in the general election phase? Does he have to cow-tow to them according to what they say is going to be the democratic "platform"? If that is the case, it is so sad that they are willing to dismantle everything he has stood for, in order to put forth what they think works. If he's the candidate, he should be setting the platform as the party leader, and not the other way around. Just another case I have against the two-party system. Just another reason for me to hate Washington. Let the leader lead for Pete's sake!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 AM on 06/30/2008
- Cay I'm a Fan of Cay 8 fans permalink

What's really bugging me with all this "Obama turning towards the middle" talk is that based on his statements regarding the recent Supreme Court decisions is that Obama has spoken and written in the the past with a pretty middle of the line position on the death penalty and guns rights. So the people convinced he is abandoning his positions and calling him into question for abandoning his brand etc. are just wrong on this. He may be "abandoning" their positions, but not his own.

As far as FISA and public financing goes these are not just simple statements about a court ruling, for Obama they are real life events he is involved with as a Senator and as a candidate. That means if we characterize them superficially we run the risk of doing exactly what we decry of the MSM - not taking the time and thought to really explore and understand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 AM on 06/30/2008

I respect your perspective, however in my 49 years on this planet, fortune hasn't favored anyone who looks like Obaman not without a helluva fight.

Donate today. Help BO's June number$ grow.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:12 AM on 06/30/2008

Does anyone know his June numbers? Has this statement on FISA hurt his fundraising? I know I am not going to donate again until I see how this plays out.

During the Primary, he said this election was all about US, the people. He said he could not do it alone, that he had to have us with him. Hence, Yes We Can! But now, it seems to be about him and what he has to do to win. But it seems to me that his IDEA about what he has to do to win is flawed. This tack to the center is a bad idea. His entire appeal is about CHANGE. "We are who we've been waiting for" seems to have changed to "We have to do what we have to do to win". It doesn't have quite the same ring to it, does it?

I will NEVER vote for John McCain. And I will probably vote for Obama, even if he takes this new approach, but I will not donate to anyone who is willing to sacrifice my rights. EVER.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 06/30/2008
- jeanrenoir I'm a Fan of jeanrenoir 94 fans permalink

Nothing could be bolder than for Obama to choose Jim Webb as VP, thereby signaling his desire to save the Democratic Party for generations to come by turning the Republican Southern Strategy upside down by showing the country how the economic interests of poor blacks and poor Apppalachian whites are identical. This would also turn Tom Franks' What's Wrong With Kansas Upside down, as both Obama and Webb would focus on the common economic interests of Americans on the lower rungs of the economic ladder, regardless of race or ethnicity. Obama and Webb could create a "Popular Front" for America in which both attacked the way that Republicans since '68 have divided poor blacks from poor whites in order to rule the country, the same way that segregationists used to rule the South by diverting poor whites from their economic interests by firing up their racism. Obama/Webb would give new, powerful, meaning to King's ideal of "black and white together."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 AM on 06/30/2008
- strifeknot I'm a Fan of strifeknot 14 fans permalink

Webb is conservative Democrat. How the hell would he be a bold choice?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:08 PM on 06/30/2008
- larry278 I'm a Fan of larry278 44 fans permalink

Jason is growing into a folksy pundit./critic. He isn't a clone of Will Rogers since he encounters people that he will never learn to like. There are policies & actions which Jason doesn't like. Jason clearly tells who & what he doesn't like. We get a review & analysis when we read Jason since he compares what he doesn't like with what he likes. Not bad for a writer who broke into the big time when he began blogging for HUFFINGTON POST, HP has become an incubator for new talent. I assume that Ms Huffington & her backers planned to do that when they started HP. It's interesting to see HP & its bloggers grow as exponents of progressive views.
President Obama will be faced with Jason's thoughtful criticisms & comments as long as he holds office. BHO may feel the fire of Jason's words on the soles of his feet often.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:31 AM on 06/30/2008
- Billie I'm a Fan of Billie 22 fans permalink

I agree that Obama needs to get back on his game. His primary campaign was brilliant and he rose above much projection and slime. There are a lot of angry baby boomers out there on both sides of the aisle who fear losing control to the younger generation and I think that is the source of so much hysteria—more even than covert racism. Especially within the democratic party! Well, baby boomers brought us to this shameful place, so I am going to go ahead and keep hoping that Obama's strategizing will pay off in end.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 AM on 06/30/2008
- Lemeritus I'm a Fan of Lemeritus 107 fans permalink
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Over the weekend, there was a short discussion of the "gun lovin', God-fearin', death penalty promotin' sombitch" center. But, I wonder, is this really the center or just some monolithic demographic construct, utterly without guiding nuance? Running to the center has really become the Democrats way of abandoning the undermanned ramparts of change, and change is what this country wants. My dad was the "center" to a T, an old Okie roustabout who took his politics and his bourbon straight up. This nominee tip-toeing through the issues, toward the center (or what his college "edgy-cated" advisors describe as the center), would have been branded just another "lyin' thievin' SOB" -- pretty much my dad's description of all politicians. The center, I'll wager, like the rest of us, wants someone who says what they mean and does what they promise -- and that's what the Democrats just don't seem to grasp.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 AM on 06/30/2008
- paragrafH I'm a Fan of paragrafH 5 fans permalink

Amen, brother. Or should I say, Yippie-i-a..

"undermanned ramparts of change" Nice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 AM on 06/30/2008
- JimR I'm a Fan of JimR 36 fans permalink

My 2 cents... most Americans lie close to the center in their positions on issues. They don't like extremes. That means they are not comfortable with the neo-con tilt this country has taken. HOWEVER, that does NOT mean they are ready to embrace a liberal agenda. That's the other extreme. What they want is "Not Bush" and closer to the center.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:37 PM on 06/30/2008
- Lemeritus I'm a Fan of Lemeritus 107 fans permalink
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Jim, I generally have great regard for your comments and so I don't want to seem sharp or unnecessarily challenging when I ask: Where is the center? And what "liberal agenda" is such an anathema?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 06/30/2008
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