Victory Within Grasp, Obama Faces A New Choice

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

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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.

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"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...
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- gregrocker I'm a Fan of gregrocker 7 fans permalink

He should fight for the middle class tax cut, even insisting that the rich who made millions off of their tax cuts, should now pay more to reduce the deficit AND give the money back to the middle class which they were handed by Bush.

When the rich complain, remind them what the top rates were in the past and how JFK cut them so much, saying that we should put them back to the JFK level, which would go a long way to cover the deficit AND enable a middle class tax cut.

He loses nothing by fighting for a middle class tax cut, and gains everything since that is the one lie that everyone is ready to claim that he told to get elected. He will put the middle class onto his side and can continue to battle on their behalf against the corporations, rich and rightwing economics with the people on his side.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 PM on 10/09/2008
- CitizenE I'm a Fan of CitizenE 17 fans permalink

Look, Obama's numbers could very well go down yet. There is an edginess in our society, that could turn ugly, and McCain, in his latest MEMEME is feeding fat to the fire. There is no point in getting ahead of ourselves. First there's an election to win, the hearts and minds of a nation to win. Then, there will be a couple months to do the work spoken of in this post.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 PM on 10/09/2008
- Synnerman I'm a Fan of Synnerman 10 fans permalink

Victory is not victory until he is victorious. You do NOT skip out on your plan because you think you're going to win. This article is a bit bass ackwards in what it assumes Obama can do in the middle of a political flame war. It is still an election and Obama cannot afford to try to wage a multi-sided PR war.

The decision to mentally prepare the country for bootstrapping will come after McCain appeals the election results to the U.S. Supreme Court and hopes that they just let him in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 PM on 10/09/2008
- lynjs I'm a Fan of lynjs 34 fans permalink
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Has it occurred to everyone that the current administration and some in Congress are making a bigger mess than necessary in order to set Senator Obama up for a fall?

Basically if anyone has a brain in their head, the various messes that we're in are not going to get better in a year or two.

If it is McCain don't look for it to get better for lower middle class and the poor. It won't. We're expendable.

But we need to be patient and give the guy time if he is elected. One good thing is that we'll get some truth telling for once.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 PM on 10/09/2008
- Wingit I'm a Fan of Wingit 8 fans permalink

Scourched earth theory. The right wing Republicans realize that this election is lost so the next best strategy to keep "liberal" programs from being implemented is to create a scenario that will take the country years to recover from and a long delay in implementing anything new. Just a theory, but there can be plenty of evidence produced to support that theory.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:25 PM on 10/09/2008
- Salz08 I'm a Fan of Salz08 4 fans permalink

BINGO!

I think they (Republican national committee and Bush/Cheney administration) have known for some time that there was no way they could legitimately win and that a 3rd obviously tampered with election was not feasible. John McCain was their sacrificial old goat of a candidate and Sarah Palin was considered an expendable loss as well. That done, they set out to make certain this would be a one term presidency and that no social policy changes could possibly take place. The sub-prime and housing market crisis were just the ticket they needed to ignite the flames.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 PM on 10/09/2008
- pattio66 I'm a Fan of pattio66 9 fans permalink

pray for us now and at the hour of our death

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 PM on 10/09/2008
- Rescisco I'm a Fan of Rescisco 80 fans permalink

"...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."

This is a false choice. Everyone knows we are in for very tough times. His approach has not been "politically contrived optimism" but, rather, it has been calm and control combined with an innate faith (optimism) in the proposition that Americans can overcome the challenges etc. FDR's optimism was the right politics and the ultimate faith in country. He calmed fear and was persistent about moving forward with new ideas and new energy. That's exactly what we need now and what Obama is projecting. We know there will be fiery trials ahead, but we must approach them with the belief that we can work together and do so with a degree of honor and grace under pressure. That is where success begins and history gets made. This will be the supreme test of a generation, and I for one do not believe we can fail if we keep the faith and pull together. That's what Americans do in a crisis, and it is time to be Americans again. That's why McCain-Palin will lose, because this time we really are ready to put country first!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 PM on 10/09/2008
- Wingit I'm a Fan of Wingit 8 fans permalink

FDR pointed to the light at the end of the tunnel and gave the people the courage to keep going. The famous line, "The only thing we have to fear, is fear itself" was true then and it is very true now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 PM on 10/09/2008
- MTJD I'm a Fan of MTJD permalink

Everything you need to know about Thomas Edsall is crystalized in his phrase "poltically contrived optimism". With victory nearly at hand, he suggests, maybe we should change course and embrace and sell something a little more realistically pessimistic. Right! That's the ticket! Forget Hope or Change. Let's start running on Despair and Stagnation. How about "We're All Going To Die!" I am constantly amazed at the ability, almost the desire, of Democrats to find a way to lose. Selling pessimism sounds like a really good way to achieve that goal. Thanks, Tom.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 10/09/2008
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This is pretty silly. The election is not until Nov 4th he wouldn't take office until Jan - he can't be held responsible for anything that takes place unless and until he becomes president.

Let's not count our chickens here, this is not a done deal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 PM on 10/09/2008
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look, we all know what's up. It's no secret that Bush, and wall street have hamstrung whichever administration wins... it's time for some bold new directions, we are in for a rough few years no doubt... Obama is the best we have right now for this... I hope he will be able to work with our dimwitted congress and senate to really make a change, a viable and sustainable change in the workings of our government.

Senator Obama, you can start by scrapping the IRS and instituting a 10% flat tax on all income over twenty thousand per year per individual with no deductions and no exemptions.
Thank you,

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 PM on 10/09/2008
- jse17 I'm a Fan of jse17 8 fans permalink
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Of course the correct path is to continue passing out the Kool-Aid until November 5th. The country is saturated with dim wits that believe the foundation of voting rights is to oppose Roe v. Wade and favor any wacko politician (see Republican) holding that owning an AK-47 is a god given right.

In a society where the new, locale Wal-Mart was forced to delay its opening because of a failure to establish a workforce capable of passing the required drug test, you tell the populous whatever they wish to hear. Moreover, 72% of good Americans believe that Noah’s Ark existed! We live in a land where reverse evolution is the rule rather than the exception e.g., dumb people producing more dumb people in abundance!

Democracy has reached its defining crossroad on November 4th. If a Harvard magna cum laud lawyer cannot defeat an impaired caricature of a viable candidate associated with a documented ill-equipped Dragon Lady (lady used generically) it is time to hit the road exactly as our predecessors did! Paraphrasing, our early relatives got on little, bitty, boats to get away from lunatics that just under 50% of the population embraces and will vote for!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 PM on 10/09/2008
- GrkAm I'm a Fan of GrkAm 21 fans permalink
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We need honesty and transparency from our next POTUS. I believe that Obama will follow through with his promises. What I appreciate in him as well is the multi-dimensional reasoning. When he analyzes a situation, he looks at the different and multiple outcomes vs. a knee jerk response. He is calm, steady and methodical about his decisions.

We need his leadership.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 PM on 10/09/2008

When he makes a decision on what? What tough decisions has he made in his life? I am really trying to put my finger on something and I must be an idiot...oh no thats you

Also tell me what he has been honest about?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 PM on 10/09/2008
- Krankil I'm a Fan of Krankil 9 fans permalink

Obama must respond forcefully to the Ayers none sense, shows his outrage and accuse the right wing AM radio, pundits to conduct a racist campaign. He needs to attack the MEDIA the same way the Rethughs who own all the airtime in AM radio (accessing 50 millions people a day), papers and TV keep attacking the media.

Obama may win the election even if he doesn't put these smear stories to bed once and for all. But if he doesn't, his presidency will be a nightmare for him. Limbaugh, Hannity, Savage and the lunatics on AM radio and Fixed news will be undermining his job by constantly lying about his connections creating a perception on people's minds of second guessing his loyality to the country. Pressure like that is impossible for even a President to handle.
He must hit McCain hard on these allegations NOW and he needs to counter attack and start attacking McCain character: RACIST

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:38 PM on 10/09/2008
- serena1313 I'm a Fan of serena1313 46 fans permalink

Everyone hears what they want to hear. Obama has warned all along this situation is not going to change overnight.

Before the $700 Billion dollar bill was voted through Obama set down 4-principles that had to be included that looked after citizens' best interests. They were.

Obama has further stressed the seriousness of this matter, even explained in-depth why things went wrong wrt the sub-prime lending: predatory lending practices, speculation, appraisers inflating numbers, rating agencies rating bundled loans as low risk, borrowers claiming income they did not have. Obama is educating the public.

Meanwhile McCain has neither explained to his constituents (probably since he is in-part responsible) nor has he offered a viable plan that actually helps people. The mortgage buy-out he proposes is a rouse. Under his plan the government buys bad mortgages at 100 % so banks won't suffer any losses because the tax payers will be stuck with the bill!

While there is no rosy scenario, Obama is at least educating the voters and is fighting for the people's best interests.

In contrast McCain, who claims to put country first, is fighting for the banks best interests and taking undue advantage of low-information voters simultaneously.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 10/09/2008
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What a BS article. Who cares? What's important is that Obama finds solutions and implements them. He can work behind the scenes now, do analysis and be as prepared as possible to deal with various scenarios which may unfold after he takes office. Then he gets in office and gets to work. If I was him, I would also use the public as leverage against the congress, like Reagan did, and articulate clearly what he wants to do and why. One step at a time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 PM on 10/09/2008
- GrainOSand I'm a Fan of GrainOSand 269 fans permalink
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How about the truthful optimism and rallying call to service that would be,

“I call on all American’s to begin now to organize at the local level to insure that their communities are strong. Check your neighbor and neighborhood and manifest the best in us as Americans. At the government level, we will use every tool available to achieve the only acceptable goal, which is an America that works for any American that is willing to roll up their sleeves and work hard to achieve. If you are on the ground, get up and claim your right to be an American…your pride to be an American. If you are prospering, share the wealth of your prosperity not just in terms of dollars, but also, most importantly, in terms of real and actual concern, which is accessible to any human no matter their status. Start to do the work to strengthen the sinews that join states within a Republic. May we emerge from this election one nation, bound and determined to realize the best in ourselves, in our time, not some other time. Should we face dark days it will be together. Mine will not be Bush’s response to a catastrophic storm. It will be different, it will be uplifting, and it will do all it can to serve rather than hurt, to restore rather than abandon. Martin saw the Promise Land let us march on now for the hour of our time gets late and better days await.”

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 PM on 10/09/2008

Obama is going to win with CLASS! Barack the Vote!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 PM on 10/09/2008

And he is fortunate to have Paul Begala to add his voice in the eradication of nonsense that's being fueled by the MSM.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 PM on 10/09/2008
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Thank God for Paul Begala. He truly sets those other pundits straight when he calls them on their obvious bias. Truly refreshing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 PM on 10/09/2008
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