Barack Obama: Egghead?

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First Posted: 08-20-08 12:29 AM   |   Updated: 09-19-08 05:12 AM

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Barack Obama begins most of his speeches with the claim that voters will have a crucial choice to make on November 4: "We meet at a moment when this country is facing a set of challenges unlike any we've ever known."

During debates Obama - the former University of Chicago professor of constitutional law -- keeps his head tilted thoughtfully, as if in a seminar. His answers weave in and out, sometimes incisively, sometimes evasively. When pastor Rick Warren of Saddleback Church asked Obama last Saturday if life begins at conception, Obama's 210 word response, or perhaps, non-response ran as follows:

From a theological perspective or scientific perspective, answering that question with specificity, you know, is above my pay grade. But let me speak more generally about this issue because this is something obviously the country wrestles with. One thing that I'm absolutely convinced of is there is a moral and ethical content to this issue. So I think that anybody who tries to deny the moral difficulties and gravity of the abortion issue I think is not paying attention. So that would be point number one.


But point number two, I am pro-choice. I believe in Roe v. Wade and come to that conclusion not because I'm pro-abortion, but because ultimately I don't think women make these decisions casually. They wrestle with these things in profound ways, in consultation with their pastors or spouses or their doctors or the family members.

And so, for me, the goal right now should be - and this is where I think we can find common ground, and by the way I have now inserted this into the Democratic Party platform - is how do we reduce the number of abortions, because the fact is that although we've had a president who is opposed to abortions over the last eight years, abortions have not gone down.

There are legions of voters who clearly thrive on the considered intellectual approach that has characterized Obama's presidential bid, finding it his core appeal. There are potential costs, however, according to a number of political observers. Obama's cerebral style and anti-war stance can be seen as detached, condescending, or even worse "effete" in the opinion of some -- potentially evoking the diminishing enthusiasm that undermined the Democratic campaigns of Adlai Stevenson, Hubert Humphrey, McGovern, Mondale, Dukakis, Bradley, Gore, and Kerry.

The McCain campaign has aggressively capitalized on this perceived vulnerability in Obama's performance, portraying him as disengaged from the high-pressure concerns central to the working and middle class. In the commercial "Family" the McCain campaign asks, "Is the biggest celebrity in the world ready to help your family?"

More recently, McCain has escalated his attack to suggest that Obama as an intellectual cannot grasp the military concept of victory.

Not content to merely predict failure in Iraq, my opponent tried to legislate failure. This was back when supporting America's efforts in Iraq entailed serious political risk. It was a clarifying moment. It was a moment when political self-interest and the national interest parted ways....
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Thanks to the courage and sacrifice of our soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines and to brave Iraqi fighters, the surge has succeeded. And yet Senator Obama still cannot quite bring himself to admit his own failure in judgment....Even in retrospect, he would choose the path of retreat and failure for America over the path of success and victory. In short, both candidates in this election pledge to end this war and bring our troops home. The great difference is that I intend to win it first.

There are a number of analysts who see Obama as vulnerable on this front:

Derek Shearer, Occidental College Professor of Diplomacy and World Affairs and Ambassador to Finland in the Clinton administration said, succinctly, "He is way too 'Harvard'."

Professor Caroline Heldman, also a political scientist at Occidental, said she is "concerned that Obama may be increasingly framed as 'not manly enough' by the Republican Party/ McCain Camp." The presidency, she said, "is conflated with masculinity in the minds of most Americans. In short, a great way to weaken a presidential opponent is to subtly 'feminize' him."

Democratic lobbyist Lawrence F. Obrien, III said: "People like to say he is a black Jack Kennedy. Fine, up to a point. Kennedy was smart, elegant, very well spoken, slim, handsome -- but, he also was Irish. Sharp, quick and abundant sense of humor, able to make contact with people."

"Obama's fundamental problem with voters is that he sometimes comes across as an elitist who talks down to them, dismissing their worries and telling them what they really should be concerned about. Voters don't like being addressed in this manner," said Emory political scientist Merle Black, an expert on the Republican realignment of the South.

Ron Kaufman, former political aide to George H. W. Bush, acknowledged that Obama "clearly connects with a ton of folks, but so did almost-President Howard Dean. The polls continue to say that this is tied. Obama should be 15-20 points ahead. The fact that he is not should worry them . . . . I honestly believe Obama may have a glass jaw."

On the other side, a substantial number of political specialists contend that Obama does not have a significant problem on this front.

"Barack Obama needs to work hard to win white working class voters. But, thankfully, he's not Adlai Stevenson; John McCain is not Dwight Eisenhower; and today's America is not the America of the 1950's," said David Kusnet, former chief speechwriter in the Clinton administration and author of the new book Love the Work, Hate the Job: Why America's Best Workers are Unhappier than Ever (Wiley, 2008).

"Obama was a community organizer in a neighborhood where the steel mills had shut down. Obama does know how to address economic grievances and also how to connect these complaints with the sense that our democracy is as broken as our economy. Obama needs to continue fleshing out his economic agenda and contrast it with McCain's halfhearted embrace of Bush's failed policies. But his elevated rhetoric and down-to-earth policy prescriptions can reinforce each other, as they did with FDR and JFK," Kusnet said.

Another Clinton speechwriter, Michael Cohen, author of Live From the Campaign Trail: The Greatest Presidential Campaign Speeches of the Twentieth Century and How They Shaped Modern America (Bloomsbury, June 2008), contended: "The kind of rhetoric that Obama is employing below is really not that out of kilter in a change election. In fact it's pretty standard. I think this call for more specifics is hugely overrated and unnecessary. On the issues Obama is favored, particularly domestic issues, the big questions are really about personality and intangibles, like experience."

Princeton political scientist Nolan McCarty noted the he has had "friends and colleagues comment on the possibility that Obama could become the egghead candidate," but, McCarthy countered, "the current administration has given anti-intellectualism a bad name....With the outcomes of that kind of know-nothingism on display, the Republicans may find it harder to criticize Obama for being an intellectual (though they may find other ways to paint him as an elitist)."

Political scientist Jennifer Lawless of Brown said that in 2002, she found "that stereotyping about candidate competence to govern in a political context dominated by the 'war on terrorism' may work to the detriment of women candidates, at least at the presidential level. It wasn't that candidates have to be 'manly,' but rather, that traditional conceptions of strong leaders tend to be more consistent with images of male, as opposed to female, politicians."

Now, however, Lawless is not sure the same finding would hold:

Considering that public opinion regarding the war [has become] so negative, it is possible that a more 'unconventional leadership,' at least in terms of stereotypes, might be appealing to the average voter. In this way, a candidate like Obama might have an edge over McCain, if for no reason other than the fact that Obama represents something very different from George Bush and his rhetoric regarding war -- i.e., 'looking the terrorists in the eye' and 'smoking them out of their caves' didn't turn out the way most Americans would have liked.

Obama recently responded to McCain's assaults: "We've got work to do," he told supporters in Albuquerque on August 18. "[C]ontrary to what John McCain's advisers will say, we are not a bunch of whiners. We will suck it up."

On television, Obama has begun to directly counter-attack McCain on the issue of who is in touch with the middle class.

One of the more recent Obama commercials, Book, begin with the announcer saying "Economics by John McCain. Support George Bush 95 percent of the time. Keep spending $10 billion a month for the war in Iraq while the Iraqis sell oil for record prices giving Iraq a $79 billion oil surplus and hurting our economy. Barack Obama's plan: end the war responsibly, better schools, no more tax breaks for oil companies. Barack Obama: the middle class first."


Barack Obama begins most of his speeches with the claim that voters will have a crucial choice to make on November 4: "We meet at a moment when this country is facing a set of challenges unlike any we...
Barack Obama begins most of his speeches with the claim that voters will have a crucial choice to make on November 4: "We meet at a moment when this country is facing a set of challenges unlike any we...
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This is your last chance, America. Another four years of know-nothing, do-nothing Republican rule will render us a Third World plantation with no way back for the middle class that makes America the world's last best hope for a decent present and a bright future.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 AM on 08/20/2008
- Freakpower I'm a Fan of Freakpower 20 fans permalink
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I agree, and this time a whole generation of young people and vast numbers minorities, and dissatisfied White middle class folks will simply Abandon the "Government System" good luck with that!

Have fun governing, I mean stealing other people's money.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 AM on 08/20/2008
- muffler I'm a Fan of muffler 15 fans permalink

The funny thing here is if McCain wins and the country tanks they will blame it on someone else. If Obama wins and the country tanks they will blame it on Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 AM on 08/20/2008

If McCain wins and the country tanks they'll find some way to blame Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 AM on 08/21/2008
- Meggie I'm a Fan of Meggie 99 fans permalink
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I'm COUNTING on him being smart! the USA NEEDS someone who is smart for a change.

Look at what 8 years of a mediocre alcoholic have gotten us, and now the republicans have nominated someone for the next 4 years who is even less intellectually engaged and has spent time on the campaign trail bragging of his drunken escapades while on the taxpayer tab in the NAVY.
someone who has already been passed over for top leadership by the NAVY when he was not selected to advance to Admiral. That MUST tell voters something!

Obama's answer about abortion explained his position and told how the people of the US can work together to come to an outcome agreeable to all. McCain pandered to the fools in the audience.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 AM on 08/20/2008
- chronic I'm a Fan of chronic 71 fans permalink
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America NEEDS a smart President.


America almost always FAILS to vote for the smart candidate.


The past 2 elections proves it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 08/20/2008
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Amen!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:10 AM on 08/20/2008
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Ironically, Americans worship athletes who excel in sports. They pay them well. Why don't they expect the same of politicians?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 AM on 08/20/2008
- Dave24 I'm a Fan of Dave24 14 fans permalink
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Whenever you hear someone call Obama (or anyone for that matter) "elitist," it's often a quick attempt to hide one's own ignorance or lack of intelligence. I want a leader who inspires people to think - not some layman on the same level of the masses. I'd rather have an intelligent "Harvard" man running the friggin country than a 26-year, ineffective senator who does what Bush does: listen to a closed bubble of advisors and then make decisions based on those oft unfounded, opaque opinions.

When a well-informed, intelligent person speaks, people should look up to him. But the Republicans, who taste an ever-increasing defeat by the day, try to spin it to make it sound like Obama is instead talking down.

McCain spends his time talking down to Obama instead of talking up his own policy.

It's like the time Hillary claimed that Obama was patronizing, and then she downed a shot in some local bar. That to me was even more patronizing, because she was pretending to "fit in." So too with McCain and his minions.

The smartest, most rational person possible should be president; not some religious robot who reads the bible more than the Constitution.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 AM on 08/20/2008

Dave, do you actually think McCain has read either one?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 AM on 08/21/2008

This is the point I have been making to my friends. Obama needs to learn how to reply simply and in a straightforward manner. The general public of the US is not intellectually inclined and cannot relate to someone who is.

Gore made this mistake and so did Kerry. W's "boy howdy" attitude resonated with the middle of the road swing vote. You can call it dumbing the message down and it probably is, but making it short and simple is something that Obama will have to learn how to do if he is going to win.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 AM on 08/20/2008
- andyg I'm a Fan of andyg 5 fans permalink

No they just don't being talk down to.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 AM on 08/20/2008

That's hard to do when talking to Republicans, most of them have the reasoning skills of a 5 year old.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 AM on 08/20/2008
- RRK70 I'm a Fan of RRK70 16 fans permalink

Why are there no articles discussing McCain's academic credentials?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 AM on 08/20/2008

or an index card

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 AM on 08/20/2008
- 6bd I'm a Fan of 6bd 10 fans permalink

lol. Lou Dobbs repeatedly says of Senator McCain...."in his own words" as he reads from his index card. Integrity and intellect........what a wonderful combination we have in Senator Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 AM on 08/20/2008
- Meggie I'm a Fan of Meggie 99 fans permalink
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because he has none!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 AM on 08/20/2008

Yeah, I'm pretty sure that guy finished high school.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 AM on 08/20/2008
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Not enough in there for a postcard, let alone an article.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 AM on 08/20/2008
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