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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- DeloresT I'm a Fan of DeloresT 24 fans permalink

We already KNOW that the selection of Bush/Cheney made total fools of us. From the start Obama said that "we" needed to do this together....not "he" can do it. Hopefully together we can start to dig ourselves out of the crap that we are in. I pray that when he leaves office, we will be at least half as well off as we were when Clinton left office.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 10/09/2008

FDR did not immediately move to address the crisis of the Depression once he was elected. He had to wait out a worsening situation for four long months due to an outdated constitutionally mandated interregnum which placed the inauguration in March as opposed to January 20 (the switch was made in 1936). Herbert Hoover begged him to endorse a proposal to address the bank crisis and Roosevelt demurred, feeling that he had no constitutional authority to do so. Obama would be in a similar situation, although I think the pressures to assume some ownership of the problem would be greater, given the 24/7 news cycle and the constant second-guessing on the part of the media. It took nerves of steel for Roosevelt to watch the situation deteriorate as it did, but he was right. Hoover had all the power to act and Roosevelt would be tied to whatever was enacted, with no authority to make changes or alterations. It made the change of administrations a psychologically jarring event and established a clear and clean break between what had gone before and the New Deal to follow. Hoover never forgave FDR., a price Roosevelt was willing to pay.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 10/09/2008
- Lefty08 I'm a Fan of Lefty08 8 fans permalink

Good history lesson Fivetree.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 PM on 10/09/2008
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 454 fans permalink
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Roosevelt was going against the British Empire, against colonialization, toward nation states. Truman reversed course and embraced Churchill. The rest, as they say, is history. And where does Obama stand vis a vis London and its financial and oil cartels? He is backed by Soros, as we know. This is a question I would really like to have answered.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 AM on 10/10/2008
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I think you are over analyzing. One thing at a time. Campaign for hope and change.

The sooner we can make the conservatives and the neo-cons go back home and hate their government from there, the better we'll all be.

After the election handle the problems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 10/09/2008
- rejoyce5 I'm a Fan of rejoyce5 14 fans permalink

Its not over yet!!! Don't discount the silent majority. All the people I talk to are voting for McCain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 PM on 10/09/2008
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Yes, in your parallel universe!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 PM on 10/09/2008
- loria I'm a Fan of loria 163 fans permalink
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Where do you live? That probably explains it. When you live in a red neighborhood, in a red city, in a red state, you have no real perception of the country.


Who do you think has the best ground game? That would not be McCain.

BTW, apparently you don't live in West Virginia where Obama has taken a lead. For God's Sakes, WEST VIRGINIA!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 PM on 10/09/2008
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You should talk to different people. People who have a different color of skin than you. Young people with Asian roots. People who live in big cities, or on the coasts. People who don't look like Norman Rockwell models.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 10/09/2008
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I like those kinds of statements..."All the people I talk to...." Then you find out that you talk to about 12 people.
What kind of person votes for a campaign spokespeople admit that if they talk about the economy - the #1 issue - they'll lose,so they're going to start assassinating Obama's character?
Why would you vote for a man who is obviously setting fires on his way out of the forest?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 AM on 10/10/2008
- supervoter I'm a Fan of supervoter 3 fans permalink

You know what depresses me most about this piece and a lot of the comments on it? It's the inference that we, the voters, are so lacking in intelligence that we'll run from the truth if one or both of the candidates dare to speak it out loud.

What depresses me even more is that you all may be right about that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:06 PM on 10/09/2008
- loria I'm a Fan of loria 163 fans permalink
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What depresses me more is that so many voters seem to suffer from Attention Deficeit Disorder. We often seem to have the attentio span of a 24 hour news cycle.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 PM on 10/09/2008

You dems crack me up. If Obama is such a sure thing why does he have to buy 1/2 hour in prime time on 4 networks? Hmmmmmm? You aren't sure are you? And what exactly are the tough times Obama is talking about. He has already said that Americans are hurting so I'm sure his next move is to say that the Govt. needs to tax us more. I guess they haven't hurt us enough.

You know the Income tax was supposed to be temporary? FDR sold it as a fix for the depression (it wasn't WWII was) ; but guess what we are still stuck with it. How did this country survive from the founding till FDR without an income tax? I wonder what kind of temporary fix Obama has in store for us? We'll probably never know; because I think we all know he won't win.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 10/09/2008
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1) Stick Knife In
2) Twist

3) Repeat steps 1 and 2 for 30 minutes




ps.
I always wondered what my hamster would sound like if he could speak in English..... Thanks for solving that mystery

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

That's like asking: if the US is a technology leader, for what reason do we continue investing it R&D. He's winning because he's ahead of the curve and does things like this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 PM on 10/09/2008
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whats your opinion on the videos of mccain-palin supports sayin kill him, he's a terrorist, hes a muslim, hes a sleeper cell..

and i havent heard mccains' proposals.. have u

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:17 PM on 10/09/2008
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You Rethu gs never cease to amaze me with you convoluted logic.

FDR gave us income tax as a temporary fix for the Depression but all the Rethu g administrations that came after him refused to get rid of it. Could it be that, despite the rhetoric, your guys love to 'tax and spend' as much (if not more) than Dems?

You wonder what temporary fix O ba ma has in store(?) but refuse to articulate the Magic that your McSavage will perform if (and that's a big "if") he gets to be president. I'm sure he knows how to fix the economy because he spent 51/2 years in Viet nam as P O W!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:20 PM on 10/09/2008
- sandrarita I'm a Fan of sandrarita 9 fans permalink

You neocons hold on to your delusional ring of power like Gollum holding on to the ring as he burns to death while sinking into the molten lava on Mt. Doom.

Get used to it. President Obama for eight years. Or do you have plans of disappearing into the forest with your canned goods and rifle waiting for the rapture?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:20 PM on 10/09/2008

I'll Manage just fine. Don't forget my guns and religion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 PM on 10/09/2008
- ebanks84 I'm a Fan of ebanks84 129 fans permalink

Obama has done an excellent job making his OWN decisions up to now so I don't believe we need to be telling him what to do. I will rely on his great judgment as I have before and will do whatever is necessary to help him help all Americans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 PM on 10/09/2008
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 243 fans permalink

Amen!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 PM on 10/09/2008
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My sentiments exactly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 PM on 10/09/2008
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whoa whoa whoa...hold the boat there, Tom. Let's not get ahead of ourselves here. O bama hasn't won anything yet. You and everybody else on here needs to dial down the "victory" talk a notch or two until after November 4th. Don't forget that there is still almost a month left until election day, which translates into about 6 or 7 months in political time. Also remember that the GOP machine is now launching the kitchen sink and are going straight into the gutter with their attacks, which they are masters at. With all these Rezko and Ayers attacks now all over the airwaves, expect pundits and the public to be duped into believing it. This race is FAR from over. McCain is down, but certainly not out.

Let's make sure Obama gets into office first, then we'll talk more about this.

Complacency is NOT AN OPTION!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 PM on 10/09/2008
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Obama is now in the lead in West Virginia...... WEST VIRGINIA.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 PM on 10/09/2008
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Lead, schmead. Polls are as useless as a screen door on a submarine. You know it, and I know it. I've posted this many times before, and I'll say it again - I wouldn't even care if Obama was ahead 99 to 1 in every poll of every state on November 3rd...what counts is election day, nothing else. A few things for you to keep in mind:

- Remember how everybody thought Kerry would mop the floor with B ush? Yeah, how did that turn out?

- Remember last summer when Mc Cain's campaign was on life support and everybody was basically counting the days until he dropped out of the primaries? Yeah, look where he is now.

Mad Mac plays his best game when he is behind, especially way behind. One slip by Obama and it's lights out for his campaign. You also underestimate the gullibility of the average American voter. They can very easily swallow up the kool-aid that the GOP machine is serving.

Overconfidence is the LAST thing we need.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 10/09/2008
- loria I'm a Fan of loria 163 fans permalink
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I agree with you. I am sickened by the direction the McCain Campaign has gone. I am confident Obama will win. But, I am not willing to stop doing everything I can to help get him elected. Volunteer, donate, phone, knock on doors, Get Out The Vote. Don't stop until the polls close in your state. Then the world can l have one huge party!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 PM on 10/09/2008
- payos I'm a Fan of payos 7 fans permalink

yes, let us not let complacency lull us into inaction and smugness, we need to be vigilant... remamber 2000, even 2004...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 PM on 10/09/2008
- brocko I'm a Fan of brocko 4 fans permalink
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DRUDGE REPORT:

WASH TIMES Friday: Obama secretly tried to sway Iraqi government to ignore Bush deal on keeping troops in Iraq... Developing...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 PM on 10/09/2008
- kasinca I'm a Fan of kasinca 168 fans permalink
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We have one president at a time. Right now it is Dubya. Drudge is not a worthy source and neither is Reverend Moonie's rag.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 PM on 10/09/2008
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 243 fans permalink

Debunked ... pay attention .... keep up!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 PM on 10/09/2008
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Yeah, right. More likely you read it on the Onion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:37 PM on 10/09/2008
- payos I'm a Fan of payos 7 fans permalink

Drudge! oh come on! Wash Times! give me a break..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 PM on 10/09/2008
- Tim303 I'm a Fan of Tim303 102 fans permalink
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"Bush and the Republicans have taken a big old poop on our country and the entire world. And we're here to clear it up, and make our lives bearable again."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 PM on 10/09/2008
- exit116 I'm a Fan of exit116 2 fans permalink

I don't think it would be a bad idea for Obama to take a page out of FDR's playbook and propose a "brain trust" of people to come up with ideas about how to deal with this crisis. Assemble a group of the brightest minds in business, labor, and economics and invite them to Washington for a brain storming session to come up with solutions. People like Gates, Buffett, Jobs, Turner, Hoffa Jr. etc. These are tough times, we need smart people to get us out of it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 PM on 10/09/2008
- BillyT I'm a Fan of BillyT 3 fans permalink

President-about-to-be-elected Obama has already started talking about how this economic crunch means everyone will have to pitch in, today in his speech.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:49 PM on 10/09/2008
- 01202009 I'm a Fan of 01202009 55 fans permalink
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It’s hard to write about this with the bad taste of Palin/McCain in one’s mouth, but President Obama is going to have to spell it on inauguration day! I’m going to be wearing a Happy Face because we will at last be free of the Bush/Cheney/McCain/Palin tyranny! But President Obama is going to have to spell it out. How bad are things? What do we do now?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 PM on 10/09/2008

Anybody will do better than Bush, McCain and Palin. Can you imagine McCain and Palin's hand on the red button? They have shown us who they really are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 PM on 10/09/2008
- Coyote2 I'm a Fan of Coyote2 85 fans permalink
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Neo seen at a Pallin/McCain rally

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjxzmaXAg9E

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 10/09/2008
- Coyote2 I'm a Fan of Coyote2 85 fans permalink
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oops sorry wrong thread

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 PM on 10/09/2008
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