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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- Heaphy I'm a Fan of Heaphy 17 fans permalink
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Don't worry - Barack Obama is very, very bold. He is also out to win, not to be the leftest of the left. Snipe at Tom Daschle all you want, but he is a very close and useful advisor to Obama. He led the delegate persuasion effort that helped secure the nomination for Obama. Mocking Daschle for the narrow loss of his Senate seat in the far different political environment of four years ago seems unkind at best. He has much to offer our country in the future.
- Jim Heaphy

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 06/29/2008
- AuntSally I'm a Fan of AuntSally 25 fans permalink
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Tom Daschle is a good and decent man.

He was also an utterly ineffective Majority leader.

Obama played his heart out, played with abandon to get to center court. No that he's there, he's completely tightened up. If this is Daschle's doing, I will be forced to use harsh language.

Bold is right.
Goddammit Obama, get back into your game!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 PM on 06/29/2008

The issue is not about Daschele and it is deversion to blame him. Daschele has his role and it is a valuable one. It's Obams game. He ran as a progressive who would unite the country. It is not even about Democrat or Republican. Obama took a stand on the war and the economy. He took a stand on the rule of law and integrity of the constitution. These are basic principles which you do not abandon to strategy but adjust your strategy to advance these principles. Those stands made Obama but as he tries to play it safe, he is now poised to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.i don;t know why he thinks that a different campaign will be more affective in the general election.
Jim

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 AM on 06/30/2008
- bbbear I'm a Fan of bbbear 23 fans permalink
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I don't blame Daschle. If Obama is that pliable, and it seems he is, then he has merely mislead we the gullible. In that regard, I blame myself for being so damned naive. Still, with all of his opportunistic faults, Obama is a saint compared to the mythic old war monger, John McCain...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 AM on 06/30/2008
- theone718 I'm a Fan of theone718 23 fans permalink
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Tom's point was that in politics progress is progress. NO politician gets exactly what he wants so ironing out a compromise to get ahead instead of standing still will help inch towards better days. This snail like progress won't help the american people so things in washington really have to change.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:48 PM on 06/29/2008
- blueshield I'm a Fan of blueshield 79 fans permalink

Jason, I think you're good, but not a politician, and you've missed a key piece of the puzzle here.

Politicians lose. They lose every day, somewhere, somehow - because you can never get everything you want, the way you want it. There are formidable competing interests; and the way things get done, as they do in any polarized and disparate group, is by leadership, compromise and dealmaking. It's not pretty, but that's what Tom was alluding to. Go back and look at what Lyndon Johnson had to do to get civil rights legislation passed. Would you rather he'd stood high on his principles, and boldly lost?

And you're repeating a half-truth: a close reading of O's positions indicates he, in fact, has NOT tacked significantly. And as you note, the areas he's showing flexibility are NOT key or decisive to the nation's wellbeing; and certainly causes that can be reversed when the political winds have come round favorably. O has to pick his battles, and I think he's demonstrating he has a good head on his shoulders in the heat of battle.

I think your fear here is unwarranted, and does a disservice to BO, his courage, and his steadfast vision and boldness. Let's not undercut him because we're disappointed over our own expectations of some illusory "perfection".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 PM on 06/29/2008
- Raven I'm a Fan of Raven 5 fans permalink

Blueshield, it's interesting that what you see in Jason's post is fear.

Because his whole point is just the opposite - that fear is what's causing Obama to back down on this battle simply because he thinks it can't be won.

If that's his criteria for voting one way or another, why on Earth did he vote against Iraq to begin with?

Surely he didn't think he was on the winning side of that battle. That is, if you define winning by being on the side that's mostly wrong but, you know, there's already so much corruption, whatever.

This is no small issue. This is not trivial. This is fundamental to who we are. And that is damn well worth fighting for - even if his colleagues don't follow.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 AM on 06/30/2008
- bbbear I'm a Fan of bbbear 23 fans permalink
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"This is no small issue. This is not trivial. This is fundamental to who we are. And that is damn well worth fighting for - even if his colleagues don't follow."

I suspect the Blueshields of this world, like most politicians, will just never "get it.+

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 AM on 06/30/2008
- harriscrl3 I'm a Fan of harriscrl3 191 fans permalink

This is the drawback to running to unfiy a country you are NEVER going to please everyone and no matter what you do some group or demographic is going to be upset and feel they've been decieved or lied to. Thankfully Obama said once that he has the capacity to make strong decision even when its not popular I think I see now what he means. But the poor guy is going to have a rough Presidency the funny thing is I think if anyone can take it its him. Something that the media isnt mentioning is that while the left is upset indepdents are starting to come on board he is leading by double digits over McCain in indepdents particlarly in swing states

Carol

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 PM on 06/29/2008
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If he doesn't support the FISA filibuster - That would be "Strike Two!" Strike on was the flip on campaign finance. Obama appears to be just another corporate lackey - to bad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:12 PM on 06/29/2008
- Ides I'm a Fan of Ides 21 fans permalink

You're not serious on campaign finance. Even John McCain said in 2005 that online fundraising through small donors was a BETTER alternative to public financing. Then again, he's possibly facing 5 years in prison....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:33 PM on 06/29/2008
- boogygran I'm a Fan of boogygran 3 fans permalink

For Pete's sake, how about worrying about some really valid points? Your "strike on" issue above regarding his supposed flip on campaign finance for instance - why the sam hill make a big deal about irrelevant issues that have no bearing on what is at stake for our country for at least the next 4 years? Where was the moral issue in his opting for the more logical way to pay for a winning campaign, anyway? Any candidate would have opted the same way if that had been a viable choice for him or her.

And the FISA filibuster is certainly not an earth-shaking issue either, compared to the Iraq war, the economy, the energy crisis, the war on terror, global warming, etc, etc. So instead of nit-picking the small stuff, try focusing on the big picture and what we must do to start picking ourselves up after being dragged down for the last 8 years.

Boogy-hussein-gran for Obama

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 AM on 06/30/2008
- bbbear I'm a Fan of bbbear 23 fans permalink
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My one and only strike against Obama is his cowardly stand on the FISA bill... Even then, he still has my vote... And if Obama gets into financial trouble, I'll reconnect and once again give until it hurts, because the notion that the mythic old warmonger John McCain could become POTUS makes me want to vomit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:55 AM on 06/30/2008
- Mayoyo I'm a Fan of Mayoyo 5 fans permalink

Great Post.
I have been telling my friends the same thing that you only win elections by running to the center....
But you make a good point..
HE needs to sick to his Anti washington rethoric and also take leadership when needs be.
Again it is always a pleasure to read you....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:54 PM on 06/29/2008
- zull2 I'm a Fan of zull2 37 fans permalink
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Fortune favors the bold...as long as the bold are completely in the majority. As in, a 60% majority. Otherwise, the bold get nothing at all until the bold takes over. If you can help some people now by compromising, maybe you can help more later if the bold take control, get it? Otherwise, you help no one and you come away looking completely incompetent.

Which was the only hope the Republicans have had since the 2006 election. IF they stonewall enough, enough wild-eyed Democrats would turn on their own party in a furor and prevent that majority from really taking hold. So far, it's worked pretty well, unfortunately.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:03 PM on 06/29/2008
- presto I'm a Fan of presto 18 fans permalink

The point was pretty clear: Fortune favors the bold. In other words, they win. The cautious and the timid may cruise along for a while but in the end they are left by the side of the road. Ask Gore and Kerry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:32 PM on 06/29/2008
- syllepsis I'm a Fan of syllepsis 24 fans permalink

"Fortune favors the bold...as long as the bold are completely in the majority." Hmmm.... if you are "completely in the majority," what do you need boldness for?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 PM on 06/29/2008
- bbbear I'm a Fan of bbbear 23 fans permalink
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LOL, true.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 06/30/2008
- paragrafH I'm a Fan of paragrafH 5 fans permalink

Jason, I'm glad you posted this. While one does get an idea of your pov around the edges of your reporting -- and especially the Sunday talking heads blog -- to come out like this in an "editorial" is a welcome addition, particularly since I agree with what you're saying. More (often), please! We need more rational voices on this and so many other issues.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:33 PM on 06/29/2008
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