Victory Within Grasp, Obama Faces A New Choice

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Victory Within Grasp, Obama Faces A New Choice stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS


First Posted: 10- 9-08 03:12 PM   |   Updated: 11- 9-08 05:12 AM

I Like ItI Don’t Like It
Obama

As two major developments become increasingly likely - a Democratic presidential victory on November 4 and a sustained economic crisis - Barack Obama faces a difficult choice: does he begin now to prepare the electorate for tough times, or does he continue to maintain a politically contrived optimism on the assumption that he can shift gears after election day.

The short-term incentives are all on the side of maintaining a happy face: As things stand, Obama keeps moving ahead in the polls, winning debates and expanding his hold on battleground states. Why junk a winner?

Conversely, Obama and his aides have to calculate how the rhetoric of his campaign will influence his ability to govern. On this score, there is wide disagreement, with political scientists, strategists and political analysts - in responses given to the Huffington Post - all over the map.

Pew Center pollster Andy Kohut notes that both Obama and McCain "are caught in a bind. If they say we are in for a tough run, they run the risk of being seen as unconfident and pessimistic. However this opens them up for being seen as wrong and letting down the public once elected."

One argument is that a failure to prepare voters for what's coming can have disastrous results. Both George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton promised either tax cuts or no new taxes and ended up reneging on their commitments. Bush lost in 1992 and Clinton lost his Democratic majorities in both the House and Senate in 1994. Conversely, Ronald Reagan, who was explicit in promoting his conservative agenda during the 1980 campaign, took office with the legitimate claim that he had a mandate to seek tax and domestic spending cuts.

"It simply is not credible to suggest that the policies to be offered in response to the credit crisis make up exactly the same laundry list as [Senator Obama] offered a year ago. But that is all [he] offered in his second debate with Senator McCain," says Michael Malbin, professor of political science at the University at Albany, SUNY. "Sen. Obama owes it to the American public to be telling us more. The financial crisis is not business as usual."

Looking at the question from a more strategic vantage point, political scientist David Brady, of the Hoover Institution and Stanford, says Obama should prepare voters by telling them now that it's "'too early to know how well the bailout will work.' Otherwise he could be like Bill Clinton in 1992, having to raise taxes because the deficit was too high."

The opposite argument is that the political costs of voicing pessimism are prohibitive, that there is plenty of opportunity to prepare voters for drastic action after election day, and that a candidate risks worsening conditions by sounding strong warnings. The classic example to support this case is the 1932 Depression-era campaign of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who said little or nothing while campaigning in 1932 to indicate the contours of his New Deal program.

Story continues below
advertisement

"Obama can downplay the economic crisis now in order not to scare voters too much. But if he wins he should immediately do what Franklin Roosevelt did 70 years ago, which is provide himself a warrant for dramatic, status quo-altering changes by creating a narrative that demands a new, disruptive type of politics and a realigning set of policies to go with it," argues University of Maryland political scientist Tom Schaller.

Along similar lines, Sam Popkin of the University of California-San Diego warns against explicit statements of potential danger: "Anything you reveal now gives McCain a chance to Mau-Mau you... Anything Obama would say now would undermine the flexibility to change course. As they say in diplomacy, 'strategic ambiguity.'"

Brookings scholar Tom Mann suggests that "If Obama can win a comfortable victory based on his current platform, he will be in a position to size up the economic situation he faces and go to the country with the proposals he deems necessary. Remember that in the midst of the Great Depression, FDR ran on the promise to balance the budget. His bold leadership came after he was elected and inaugurated."

From another point of view altogether, political blogger Chris Bowers of Open Left argues to the Huffington Post that Obama has already inflicted significant damage on himself: "In regards to the economic crisis, Obama already undermined his ability to set the agenda and govern when he, like pretty much all leading Democrats, accepted Paulson's argument that $700 billion needed to be dispersed immediately. Not only was that clearly an example of Paulson setting the agenda, rather than Obama or Democrats, but spending of that size this year has reduced the amount of governing Obama could do next year as President."

Democratic lobbyist Larry O'Brien, whose father was a legendary chairman of the Democratic Party, contends that Obama is right on course:

"I believe the economic crisis speaks for itself to a large extent. Senator Obama certainly has acknowledged and discussed it... If the rescue plan proves not to be quite the cure, a President Obama obviously would need to lead the effort to identify additional measures... Not speculating during the campaign about that with any great clarity or precision does not strike me as untoward or fraught. The time to begin to come to grips with ramifications will present itself in the effort to assemble and present the new President's first budget proposal, armed with a somewhat more clinically informed sense of just what the situation is."

Political analyst Charlie Cook, publisher of the Cook Political Report, tells the Huffington Post he expects "that if Obama wins, he immediately takes out the garbage -- they push out all the problems, that the country, the financial situation is far worse than anyone ever suspected, forcing big policy changes far greater than anyone anticipated. Get the problems out there quick, while President Bush still owns them, then position yourself as having to clean up the mess."

A number of scholars suggest that Obama should not view the issue as an either/or question, but take a more nuanced approach.

"In terms of governing, Obama has to walk a fine line on what he says," comments Princeton political scientist Nolan McCarty. "On one hand, he has to make the crisis seems serious enough that citizens are willing to accept sacrifice and legislators are willing to take political risks. But on the other, no set of economic policies will be successful unless the basic confidence of investors and consumers returns. Using too many Great Depression analogues will undermine any policies he undertakes, and he and his party will suffer badly if the economy does not improve by 2010."

In another response, Columbia's Robert Erikson argues that "while Obama should not give the impression that he is ignoring the economic crisis, the greatest risk would be to enter the fray the wrong way. From a political standpoint, Obama only needs to remind the voters that he will bring a new team into office to work on the problem."

Media message maven Howard Wolfson, communications director of Hillary Clinton's bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, outlines the strategy that in many respects describes the way Obama will likely deal with the situation:

"Obama needs to be clear about the challenges we face and the real pain people are feeling while conveying optimism about our ability to get out of this mess."

Whatever the strategic choice, the Obama campaign has been premised on the claim of restoring a degree of integrity to the political process. If his own private assessment is that the country appears to be headed toward dire times, any attempt to gloss that over risks the danger that voters will detect a politically expedient masking of his own beliefs - a sure way to undermine both his campaign and, if he wins, his presidency.

As two major developments become increasingly likely - a Democratic presidential victory on November 4 and a sustained economic crisis - Barack Obama faces a difficult choice: does he begin now to pre...
As two major developments become increasingly likely - a Democratic presidential victory on November 4 and a sustained economic crisis - Barack Obama faces a difficult choice: does he begin now to pre...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
536
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next › Last » (16 pages total)

Obama will take office when the Depression begins. I'm afraid the neo-libs will be blamed for decades for the darkest days of the 21st century!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 AM on 10/10/2008
- heartsick I'm a Fan of heartsick 20 fans permalink

So you want history to ignore what the Neo-con Republicans did to create the Depression (if it happens) before Obama is sworn in, if he is? It won't happen! You forget that we have the Internet and more information sources than the single history book on which you probably grew up! History will assign the blame where it belongs, with the Neo-con Republicans!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:59 AM on 10/10/2008
- FatherWolf I'm a Fan of FatherWolf 21 fans permalink

First things first.

08ama/B!den has to win.

This is the most dangerous part of the election. The campaign must push hard to the very end. Ignore advice from the pundits and continue to push their winning strategy.

THEN they can start talking about what has to be done next.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:29 AM on 10/10/2008
- BCubedReg I'm a Fan of BCubedReg 6 fans permalink

Amen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 AM on 10/10/2008

He needs to continue being everything that John McCain is not and he will do just fine.
http://grantlingel.blogspot.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 AM on 10/10/2008

One thing we cannot do is assume Obama will win. He needs to keep pushing, and everyone else needs to help him.

Save the world.
http://www.fightmccain.com
Pass it on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:14 AM on 10/10/2008
- gadfly55 I'm a Fan of gadfly55 3 fans permalink

People voting for Obama already know how bad things are, that's why they are so motivated to throw the Republicans out, and with a mandate for change get down to the business of healing the country. What pundits and academics don't understand is the nature of political action in which each person is actively thinking, feeling, and doing and helping to make the changes to the way people think, act, spend their time and their money. Obama has created his movement from the ground up, from the hopes and aspirations of the people for a better society, more balanced, harmonious, fair, sustainable, tolerant, helpful and caring. These are the values capable of moving Americans in a direction where dogma and ideology and insider politics is replaced by the will of the majority, where there is political power proceeding from the voters and the voters are part of the solution, not a client base to be bought off and placated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 AM on 10/10/2008

Never, ever assume you are going to win the election!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:36 AM on 10/10/2008
- MarcInCA I'm a Fan of MarcInCA 31 fans permalink

Agreed, but a great leader is always thinking several steps ahead. If McCain isn't thinking about this too, then we're in huge trouble if he wins......well we're in trouble if he wins regardless...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 AM on 10/10/2008
- Academic I'm a Fan of Academic 239 fans permalink

I agree. The first priority of Barack Obama is to win the election. Once that has been accomplished then he should get on with dealing with the country's problems. We all know what these are and who brought them about. And Obama shouldn't be put off from talking the tough decisions that are necessary to put these problems right. But in doing so, he must level with the American people and tell them from the outset what the true economic situation is that he inherited when he took over the office of President. Then he should put the country's financial plight fully on line and in the objective media so that everyone can see firsthand what the mess is that he inherited. Keep things transparent, and I don't see how any objective or fair minded person could blame him for the stringent measures he might have to take to rectify the unholy mess that the Republicans, including John Mccain, have plunged the country into.

Professor Dr. Stanley Collymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 AM on 10/10/2008
- smoo I'm a Fan of smoo 2 fans permalink

I like your approach Dr. Collymore. My only concern is what happens afer he puts the full mess on the table. People will see what he inherited, but they we then begin to squabble over what the priorities should be. I agree with being transparency with what is negotiable, but parts of his agenda should not be negotiable and he should begin immediatly with implimentation. Obama has done a fantastic job of keeping his implementation plans under the radar, which is what I like most about him. He plans are prepares for end game, so when the end game arrives, victory is all be assured.

Regarding tough times, I have a somewhat counterintuitive veiw. If americans are laid off they will begin to develop skills such as TV repair etc and provide services to one another. Which is good because then economic activity will become local and not shipped oversees. The multinational stand to loose much more in this crises than us small folk. This will erase the hugh income disparities we now see.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 AM on 10/10/2008
- gadfly55 I'm a Fan of gadfly55 3 fans permalink

As General Petraeus operates, so will President Obama, "First with the truth".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 AM on 10/10/2008
- MountPanic I'm a Fan of MountPanic 29 fans permalink
photo

It was easy for Reagan to deliver on tax cuts, since he had a complete disregard for the effect that it would have, and could turn around and blame Congress for his own failure to deliver a balanced budget. Ditto Dubya who could deliver public relations tax rebates while burying this nation in reckless debt.

Since Obama actually cares about the future of the United States beyond securing his own feel-good agenda (a la Reagan), he actually has a man's job ahead of him.

They like to throw around the term "tax and spend" since we actually care how we pay for what we deliver, but a more realistic term would be "spend and spend" Republicans, since they'll throw money down any black hole, as long as they're dead and/or gone before the debt comes due.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:58 AM on 10/10/2008
- HansB I'm a Fan of HansB 17 fans permalink

There's a few months between Election Day and the end of the Bush Administration. Enough time to see whether the economy is really going to tank, and if so, to make clear where the blame belongs. Things are moving really fast now. We can't even remember accurately how they were two months ago. It will be the same in January. So Obama is doing the right thing tactically.

It would also negatively affect market confidence if both presidential candidates were to speak of doom and gloom. So quite aside from campaign strategy, acknowledging the problems but staying upbeat is best for the public interest.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 AM on 10/10/2008
- AtheistUS I'm a Fan of AtheistUS 80 fans permalink
photo

First thing first: to win. We Obama supporters understand everything: what can be said now and what cannot. It is fact: the more educated a voter, the more probable he/she voted consistently for democrats, against Bush, against Iraq war etc.

First task is finally to win. Many people are unhappy about present crisis, but I actually thought long ago that end of Bush regime will end by complete destruction of the country. Hopefully, not sure yet, but hopefully we will survive.

Obama/Biden 2008

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:39 AM on 10/10/2008
- BillCarson I'm a Fan of BillCarson 5 fans permalink
photo

>First thing first: to win

Case in point. The republicans are trying to steal the election with massive voter purges in the swing states. Article today on BradBlog and the NY Times on republican voter purges.

http://www.bradblog.com/?p=6490http://www.bradblog.com/?p=6490
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/09/us/politics/09voting.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&pagewanted=all&oref=slogin

Why isn't the republican voter purges getting more coverage by Huffington Post? This should be front page stuff. Starting coverage on Nov. 5th is too late!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 AM on 10/10/2008
- BillCarson I'm a Fan of BillCarson 5 fans permalink
photo

Link fix to BradBlog...
http://www.bradblog.com/?p=6490

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 AM on 10/10/2008
- heartsick I'm a Fan of heartsick 20 fans permalink

Very true! It is insane to believe that only Democratic registrants are suspect, but nobody seems to have looked for any anomolies with Republican registrants. On its face, this smells to "high Heaven"!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 AM on 10/10/2008
- JustLynn I'm a Fan of JustLynn 9 fans permalink

Here's what you don't seem to understand...the people who are voting for Obama are not ST*UPID...Obama has not scraped the under-belly of the US for his votes, unlike his opponent who seems to revel in idio*cy. I can say with confidence that the majority of the Obama supporters are a few IQ points ahead of the McCain group... having said that, we KNOW it's going to be bad, and we have chosen Obama as the one we have the greatest confidence in to lead us through those tough times to emerge in a better place than we are in now.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 AM on 10/10/2008
- JeremyO I'm a Fan of JeremyO 3 fans permalink

Your putting the cart before the horse. Obama is leading now, but there are no gaurantees he'll win. Let him win first before he worries about how to govern.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 AM on 10/10/2008
- Dayahka I'm a Fan of Dayahka 33 fans permalink

Keep doing what got you here. Leave governing until after you take office in late January.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 AM on 10/10/2008
- Freesia2 I'm a Fan of Freesia2 338 fans permalink

Agreed. Anyone with a brain knows the wreckage he'll be walking into. But if anybody has a shot at cleaning it up it's Obama (never McCain).

People are smarter than we're given credit for, and all but his enemies or the most strident of Democrats who want immediate action will understand that he's been handed a nightmare. I'm just so darned grateful that he's willing to take it on. I believe he'll do well, better than circumstances are promising, but if we can't get him into the White House he won't even get the chance. Let him get elected. He's not lying, he's actually been pretty honest about what we face.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 AM on 10/10/2008
photo

Stick with the optimism. I believe that President Obama, merely by being elected, will have a positive effect on the economy. His plan to put people to work on green technology is a winner and will make a huge difference in the short term. His healthcare plan will do the same for the long term.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 AM on 10/10/2008
- research I'm a Fan of research 283 fans permalink

agreed, stay optimistic. With the right new laws and programs the USA and the world can look forward to unprecedented prosperity and peace.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:03 AM on 10/10/2008
- Territc I'm a Fan of Territc 2 fans permalink

We are on the last stretch, but this is not the time for complacency. We need to continue campaigning for Obama and keep his momentum going. People are finicky and we need to remind them that Obama is our man.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 AM on 10/10/2008
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next › Last » (16 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect