Drew Westen

Drew Westen

Posted: August 6, 2008 10:19 AM

Why Voters Say they Don't Really Know Barack Obama (and Why They Don't Really Know Much about John McCain, Either)

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A New York Times report this week described the frustration and perplexity of the Obama team as to why they are having trouble "getting their message out" in the face of GOP "distractions."

Sound familiar?

The economy is tanking, and McCain's chief economic adviser, Phil Gramm, made one of the most disastrous gaffes a high-ranking campaign official could have made when a nation is facing bank closings, record foreclosures, skyrocketing prices, spiraling unemployment, and an angry electorate: belittling the public for their distress and telling them to stop whining. It would have fit right into a story about a presidential candidate who has as many homes as most people have fingers, and whose first response to the mortgage crisis was to blame the lack of "personal responsibility" of young families buying their first one. It would have fit right into a story of a presidential candidate whose wife complained that the only way to get around Arizona is on a personal jet.

But the Obama campaign chose not to tell that story--or any of its supporting details. When Obama was standing on a world stage last week illustrating for anyone to see precisely what he would do for American respect again around the world--in a world where respect translates into help fighting the terrorists without borders who constitute the greatest threat to our national security--where were his surrogates reminding voters that McCain's whining about Obama's popularity was nothing but sour grapes, and preventing the media from turning Obama's extraordinary success into an example of empty "celebrity" and "arrogance"? (Last I looked, television news producers didn't take their own high ratings as signs of arrogance when they make a strong showing.) And when they finally put a surrogate on television this weekend--John Kerry to face off against Joe Lieberman doing his best Zell Miller impersonation--why did they pick a surrogate associated in every American's mind with the one thing you wouldn't want associated with a candidate who'd had a rough week: losing?

When a campaign has to ask why it is having trouble getting its message out, the campaign is usually the problem. Obama has a voice, and he has the microphone to say anything he wants anytime he wants to say it. But as his opponent "distracts" the media--and hence the public--daily with a relentless drumbeat about what's wrong with Obama--that he isn't strong, that he isn't American, that he isn't patriotic, that he doesn't have the judgment or experience to be president, that he didn't have the balls to serve in the military, that he eats arugula, that he is the most liberal member of the United States Senate, that he isn't "one of us"--what story has Barack Obama told that could possibly catch the public attention? That he has a slightly amended plan for dealing with the energy crisis? And what story is his campaign telling about why voters should worry as much about John McCain as they are beginning to worry about Barack Obama?

McCain has made abundantly clear since infesting his campaign with Rove protégées a few weeks ago that he intends to run a relentlessly negative campaign. For many of us, it was a relief this week to see Obama starting to run an occasional offense this week, instead of running a prevent defense with too few players on the field. What is not as clear is what the Obama campaign learned from the relentlessly negative campaign Hillary Clinton ran against him in the last half of the primary season. They clearly remember that he won. But what is not so clear is whether his campaign took away anything from the fact that he lost two-thirds of the primaries after Hillary turned to her slash-and-burn strategy and that many voters came away with an uneasy feeling about him.

His campaign needs to understand why that happened, because it's the same thing that happened to Al Gore and John Kerry. It's about narratives.

There is a simple fact about elections that has eluded Democrats in every presidential campaign they have lost in the last 40 years: that as a candidate, you have to focus first and foremost not on a litany of "issues" but on four stories: the story you tell about yourself, the story your opponent is telling about himself, the story your opponent is telling about you, and the story you are telling about your opponent. Candidates who offer compelling stories in all four quadrants of this "message grid" win, and those who leave any of them to chance generally lose.

Al Gore didn't tell any of the four. He didn't want to be associated with Bill Clinton (a fatal flaw Obama should not repeat), so he had nothing to say about what his administration had accomplished over eight years of extraordinary peace and prosperity. Even his chief strategist, Bob Shrum, now admits that the campaign suffered from its relentless focus on "issue" positions and policies without weaving them into any coherent story about why Al Gore should be president.

John Kerry told one story--the story of his military bona fides--and left the others to fate (and Karl Rove). He lost when he failed to respond to the two major stories told about him: that he was a flipflopper (a story that started the day he became the presumptive nominee and his campaign never deigned to answer) and the story that he was a fake war hero (a direct contradiction to his only story, which his team thought best to let fester). Neither campaign thought to tell a coherent story about George W. Bush. Try recalling the master narrative either one of them told about their opponent, and see if you can get past the first sentence.

John McCain is telling a story about himself--that he's a man of courage and conviction who loves his country. He is telling a story about Obama--that he's a man of none of those things. Virtually everyone in the country is receiving a barrage of email from anonymous sources detailing this message about Obama without constraints of truth. After watching Hillary Clinton lose to Obama's charisma and after watching Obama enthrall the rest of the world and the troops McCain claims Obama doesn't support last week, he is now in full attack mode, trying to tell a story about his opponent's greatest strength (that Obama is someone who can inspire people, and can even do so on a world stage, where McCain's master narrative had claimed a decided advantage). So now he is telling the story of Obama as an arrogant, uppity, empty celebrity.

That story may well backfire, but it wouldn't hurt if the Obama team put a team on the field, emphasized the desperation underlying McCain's message, turned McCain into a grumpy old man who's just angry that no one seems to find him compelling, and threw something other than an occasional weak arm-punch against McCain for his having nothing to say about himself other than that he doesn't like to talk about the years he spent in Hanoi that he talks about incessantly. Nor would it had hurt if the Obama campaign showed signs of a functioning rapid response team when McCain starting trumpeting the story that Obama only wanted to visit injured troops in Germany if he had camera crews with him, which turned out to be fabricated out of whole cloth. But days of negative press passed before the Obama team had even got their stories straight on that mini-story, leaving the impression that was, as McCain suggested, a dishonorable grandstander. The elapsed time between a charge like that and a powerful count-attack, as any veteran of the Clinton War Room will tell you, should be no more than one hour, so there is never a news cycle--let alone four or five days--during which the primary voices are the opposition and the pundits, who will echo the opposition unless they hear a clear, forceful counter-response.

Barack Obama has told one story: that he will bring change and hope. Many have argued, from early in the Democratic primary season, that his was a campaign of soaring rhetoric and words without substance. That charge has "stuck" in the minds of many voters, who say they don't really know who Obama is and where he stands. It's a peculiar charge for a candidate who has laid out detailed plans for every issue of our time. Try going to his website or listening to his wonkish policy addresses.

But whereas the standard Democratic response is to throw more plans and positions against the wall and hope that they'll stick, that's missing the point: that Obama hasn't yet told a coherent, consistent narrative of who he is that weaves together the themes of his campaign with his own life history. The result is that he has left his race, his exotic history, and the smear campaigns aimed at defining him as "not one of us" to resonate with voters. When I work with candidates, one of the first things I do is to spend a day with them walking through their life history and listening for the salient events, the values that mean something to them, and the stories from their lives or from the people they have met in their lifetimes or on the campaign trail that make those values vivid and come alive and illustrate where their heart is, so that when they go on the road, they have a coherent story to tell about who they are, what they stand for, and how their life story connects with the lives and concerns of their constituents.

Obama began to tell the story of who he is and what his values are in his first biographical ad of the general election, although the ad ran briefly and he did not reinforce it on the stump. I suspect he will attempt to develop that story at the Democratic Convention, but if his team understands how networks work in the brain, they will begin laying the neural tracks now so they have neural traction. And if they understand what it means that Karl Rove and his protégés are now at the helm in McCainland, they will be ready for and inoculate against the counter-narratives designed to derail that message--counter-narratives they have already begun to offer--that he's a black man who readily cries racism (something he has done everything possible to avoid, knowing that that "race card" just activates latent white resentment), that he's exotic in a way that makes him so far from the lives and experiences of everyday Americans that he can't connect with them (all the while drawing record crowds that contradict that story), and do forth.

The average American actually doesn't know Barack Obama, despite all the media attention. They know that he's a gifted, charismatic man with a winning smile, a keen mind, and a tendency to alternative between RFK on the stump and Michael Dukakis in interviews and debates. Most people haven't read Dreams from my Father or The Audacity of Hope, and their only exposure to either will be in Republican attack ads using his words against him. Most white people who worry that he doesn't share their values don't know that he grew up in a family much like theirs, with a white mother and blue collar white grandparents. Most people don't know that he cares so much about the absence of black fathers from the lives of their children not only because he understands the destructiveness, particularly to boys, but that he understands it firsthand, and was only saved from its more destructive impact by the presence of a loving (if sometimes overly fun-loving) maternal grandfather.

Like Kerry, Obama has offered the American voter one story when he should have offered four, and that one story can be summarized in one sentence. Regardless of how detailed your policy positions, that isn't enough. It isn't memorable. It doesn't capture the imagination of a brain wired over the long years of our species' evolution for a particular kind of narrative structure, when the only way to pass knowledge and values down across generations prior to the rise of literacy--and when our children have not yet learned to read--was through stories.

Obama infrequently answers the stories told about him by telling a story about the attacker (the most effective strategy for addressing attacks, and very different from the nuanced answers he often gives responding to attacks that are smokescreens for deeper attacks on his character). Like Kerry, he has made no sustained attempt to define McCain, except on-again off-again efforts to brand McCain as Bush's third term. While getting smacked repeatedly with the charge of elitism, the candidate with the humble roots hasn't mentioned that perhaps McCain is so out of touch with the concerns of everyday Americans because he was born with a silver spoon in his hand, is a poster child for affirmative action for the wealthy and well connected (having both gained admittance to and barely survived the Naval Academy at the bottom of his class as the son and grandson of four-star admirals), and that maybe he should speak more with the servants in his eight homes if he wants to know what the energy crisis or health insurance crisis or mortgage crisis he's been part of the problem in creating in the Senate for three decades actually feels like to everyday Americans.

Is that dirty politics? Is it the dreaded "negativity" (dreaded only by Democrats, who confuse negative statements about their opponent with low-road politics)? It all depends on whether you think telling people the truth in a way that catches their interest, gets them to feel something, and leads them to remember it is unethical. There need be no contradiction between Obama's high-road message and a realistic campaign that addresses all four quadrants of the message grid. If he wants to retain the high road, the least he can do is to counterpunch every time McCain tries to tell a story about Obama or undermine Obama's own story, with a simple, "There you go again--that's exactly the politics of division that has led us to where we are in Washington."

From a neurological standpoint, positive and emotions play different functions, arise in different ways, and even have largely distinct neural circuitry. If McCain creates enough ambivalence about Obama, Obama will need to create enough ambivalence about McCain to cancel it out. No one has ever won an election by saying what a great guy he is, letting his opponent pummel away at his character, and refusing to define his opponent or derail the glorious narrative his opponent is telling about himself.

Perhaps Obama will be the first. But he should study the stump speeches and convention addresses of the only Democrats to win an election when Republicans controlled the White House since FDR: JFK in 1960, Jimmy Carter in 1976, and Bill Clinton in 1992. All three ran positive, forward-thinking campaigns, but all three ran against the incumbent and his party with a strong story that resonated with the American people. None was afraid to mince words about his opponent.

Obama needs to remember that one of the most "negative" political documents ever written was the Declaration of Independence.

Drew Westen, Ph.D., is Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry at Emory University, founder of Westen Strategies, and author of "The Political Brain: The Role of Emotion in Deciding the Fate of the Nation," recently released in paperback with a new postscript on the 2008 primaries.

A New York Times report this week described the frustration and perplexity of the Obama team as to why they are having trouble "getting their message out" in the face of GOP "distractions." Sound fa...
A New York Times report this week described the frustration and perplexity of the Obama team as to why they are having trouble "getting their message out" in the face of GOP "distractions." Sound fa...
 
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- tel8034 I'm a Fan of tel8034 89 fans permalink

The MSM and the McCain campaign have been the ones to reinforce the MYTH that Obama is the UNKNOWN and leave that FALSE impression out there.

BUT ..........­..... the MSM and the McCain camp NEVER say what is there that they STILL want to know about Obama ..........­.......... AND NO PUNDIT WHO SUPPORTS OBAMA HAS EVER ASKED THE NAYSAYERS TO LIST THE ITEMS THEY "STILL" NEED TO KNOW ..........­..........

I'm sure if the question was asked directly (without allowing any side stepping) all that would be heard in the room is CRICKETS, because the naysayers know full well that the "OBAMA IS UNKNOWN", spin is just another chapter in the saga of Republican POLITRICKS.

On the flip side the MSM and the McCain camp have reinforced the MYTH that McCain is the KNOWN ENTITY.

BUT ..........­...... What do we really know about him? anyone who turned 18 after the 2000 elections, couldn't tell you anything about McCain and his history...­..........­. the good, the bad and the ugly ...... The POW years are but a mere 5 years in McCains 72 year life......­..........­.... WHAT HAS HE DONE (GOOD, BAD AND UGLY) since he returned home a hero?

McCain claims he is the SEASONED EXPERT on everything, but I am STILL waiting for someone to press him for a DIRECT answer on how he will deal with the issues of the day ..........­.... McCAIN IS THE REAL UNKNOWN ..........­..... NOT OBAMA.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 AM on 08/08/2008

People NEED to go to the website http://www.politicalcompare.org to review the candidates' stances, with their plans, statements, and records.

It may not be a conclusive site for their personal lives, but it does a great job educating people. I for one had my doubts with Obama seeing how scattered he is with so many plans, making you wonder how much he'll be able to achieve as President.

McCain is more focused on specific objectives, but then again has less ideas and drive. We really do need to spread the facts more on the candidates before making our decisions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:42 AM on 08/08/2008
- daddysboy I'm a Fan of daddysboy 24 fans permalink

Isn't it just possible that there is no comparison whatsoever and everything the mccain campaign says is a lie just like everything bush claimed he was all about right before he proceeded to begin destroying our government? Not everything is point - counter point; sometimes it is just an obvious choice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 08/08/2008

David Broder has written an interesting column on this topic in which he says people can't get comfortable with Obama because he isn't from anywhere or any group, he has never really participated in any group, he never became an active member of the faculty at Univ of Chicago, he never got deeply involved in the senate, he's always been an outsider or observer. it's an interesting idea. every past president has been from some section of the country or some small town or big city and you could kind of identify who he is by his affliations and his history. Obama's history is so vague and diverse it's hard to catagorize him and reach that point where you say, oh yea, Ok, I understand who he is. i figure that's both an asset and a liability.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 08/07/2008
- researcher I'm a Fan of researcher 105 fans permalink

tell it like it is.

the demos are spineless

and will most likely be beat again

even in these terrible times

got to give them credit they know how to lose

but then we voted for them in 2006 to stop t his illegal war

and the spineless demos came thru with nothing

vote demo is a vote for spineless

vote repub is a vote for wars

take your pick

must change the system not the politicans

capitalism is self destructing finally

with communism man exploits man with capitalism it is the other way around

how few americans understand this axiom.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 08/07/2008
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 64 fans permalink

Please run for political office.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 08/07/2008
- SMP I'm a Fan of SMP 17 fans permalink
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Dont count out the Obama team......­..........­.....I have a strong feeling that after the convention­..........­......we will see some zinger of ads against McCain....­including all his and his teams gaffes....­..........­....Obama team is honed in on calculatio­n.........­.....all good things come in due time......­.........I can't wait

McCains going down!!!!!!

We are a smarter America!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:30 PM on 08/07/2008
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 64 fans permalink

But if Obama waits too long, his zingers won't have an effect. He should have responded to the Mac's passing out tire gauges by thanking him. O's suggestion is a realistic action that everyone can respond to the oil crisis and, more importantly, it allows people to become actively involved in trying to solve problems that affect us all. If you, also, think this doesn't work, research what Roosevelt did with the March of Dimes. Mac is a puppet for those who want to convince people that small actions can't make a difference.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:18 PM on 08/07/2008
- wdw101 I'm a Fan of wdw101 20 fans permalink

drill now

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 AM on 08/08/2008
- Karl I'm a Fan of Karl permalink

There are just two kinds of people in the world: those who swerve to avoid a small animal in the road when they're driving, and those that swerve to hit them. We all know which group is best represented by which presidential candidates by the manner of their attacks. Obama is trying to stay professional and calm, far better character traits in our nuclear age than exhibited by McCain's hotheaded and arrogant attitude (i.e. 'bomb Iran') and his propensity to fabricate his stories at least in part. For example he allows the public perception to exist that he withstood his Viet Cong torturers when in fact he totally spilled his guts to them. Not that any of the rest of us wouldn't do the same thing but among the differences between the first and second kinds of people on this earth is that the second kind is more likely to lie about it afterward. If John McCain was an honest man he would publicly correct this misperception in his next TV ad. Or set the truth straight at the next televised debate. Or have a press conference. Anything to be the "straight talker" he is claiming to be, because until he does correct this public lie about himself he is speaking with forked tongue. And if there's anything I hate, it's a liar. After eight years of George Bush's lies the time is indeed ready for change. But is Obama being entirely straight with us too, I sometimes wonder?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 PM on 08/07/2008
- wdw101 I'm a Fan of wdw101 20 fans permalink

if they have an r,d or I by their name they lie

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:41 AM on 08/08/2008
- Karl I'm a Fan of Karl permalink

This is a very insightful article. I especially liked the unifying wisdom: "four stories: the story you tell about yourself, the story your opponent is telling about himself, the story your opponent is telling about you, and the story you are telling about your opponent. Candidates who offer compelling stories in all four quadrants of this "message grid" win, and those who leave any of them to chance generally lose." You got me thinking about other stories not told, which are not part of the national discussion at this crucial time in our history although they should be.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 PM on 08/07/2008
- mjtaylor22 I'm a Fan of mjtaylor22 39 fans permalink
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Yes this is so true, dude where you been. Obama and the Dems need to go on offense. The old dogs want to run a high minded campaign, as if the opposition has any integrity. This high minded strategy is best kept for the candidate, but the surrogates need to be out there simply repeating exactly what Mccain says, the kicker is that his flaws are so blatant that all one has to do is a commercial showing him contradicting himself, there are tons of them on youtube...­..........­.
STAND UP AND BE MEN AND WOMEN AMERICA NEED NEW LEADERSHIP WHO STAND ONTHEIR PRINCIPLES AND ARE NOT AFRAID TO RUFFLE SOME FEATHERS.. Man the opposition has never given any concessions tot he Dems and these suckers fall for it everytime.­..high moral ground is only good if someone is listening and by not being aggressive the DEMS as a whole have allowed Mccain to shift focus form this GREAT visit to Berlin Germany--the same former Nazi Germany as an African American and 200,000 came to see him in the former Nazi Germany...­..IT IS SO AMAZING HOW NO ONE HAS MENTIONED HOW SIGNIFICANTE THIS IS...ITS AMAZING MAN---BUT ONLY MCCAIN HAS MENTIONED THIS VISIT BUT HIS SPIN IS COMPLETELY NEGATIVE

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:04 PM on 08/07/2008
- mcole I'm a Fan of mcole 5 fans permalink

oh please

obama is treating the public like ADULTS

its not like he doesnt give them pertinent information

why should he have to tar his opponent?

americans are not stupid

they should be able to judge each candidate by their words and actions, not by what the are spoon fed by either opponent

its silly to expect obama to be..helpin­g people along like old ladies trying to cross the road

of everyone else in the world can see through john mccain and the american voters cannot, isnt that on the american people??

not the democratic candidate??

someone you can have a beer with indeed

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 AM on 08/07/2008

I wish I could agree with you. I really do, with all my heart. But remember that 59 million Americans voted for Bush for a second term. The sad truth is that millions of people are actually listening to these negative ads and reading and passing on the lies through email. Many Americans, even in 2008, are dim, ignorant, provincial, ethnocentric and arrogant. Bad combination when we spend more money than all other nations combined on our military, don't you think? But don't mind me, I'm just going through a phase of disgust and revulsion with the American body politic. Maybe it will get better. Maybe Americans will finally realize these bums in DC govern at our sufferance, and should fear us, not the other way around. Maybe we can begin a bold new century of light, and become the beacon of freedom once again....

Nah....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 AM on 08/08/2008

americans are not stupid? ha ha ha! thanks for laugh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:05 AM on 08/08/2008
- Taan I'm a Fan of Taan 7 fans permalink

Bush had nothing going for him when he got to the Oval Office. To say Obama lacks experience in any area required of the president is saying half the country voted for a man who had no experience at all that counted. Bush has soft-shoed his way for the past eight years and can't move forward because he keeps trodding on his own feet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 AM on 08/07/2008
- mike53 I'm a Fan of mike53 8 fans permalink

Bush did have more experience then BO. Even so I think it was smart for Bush to have Cheney as a running mate. Its to bad it was not the other way around. Bush could be the republican candidate now instead of McCain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 AM on 08/07/2008
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 64 fans permalink

Cheney would not have been able to weild as much power as president. Better to be a puppeteer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 08/07/2008
- WillCooney I'm a Fan of WillCooney 9 fans permalink
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Where are the Democratic attack dogs? One weak ad from Move-On about how John McCain disappointed a voter and his family. This is going to change people's minds? Let's get down in the mud and expose McCain for being the Bush heir apparent including every thing that didn't work for the past eight years under Republican rule.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:54 AM on 08/07/2008
- BigBen I'm a Fan of BigBen 4 fans permalink

The democratic left wingers (Kennedys)and losers(Tom Daschel) jumped on the Obama band wagon to stop Hillary. However they have no interest in having to support a black candidate for President. They would rather one of their own (McCain)be president than Obama. So where are the big wigs now? They expect Hillary and Bill to do the dirty work after treating them like s**t . But Bill and Hillary are not buying into it. So let the Kerry and Kennedy axis of the party and the Richardson jumpers support the black candidate. Because the regular democrat candidates who need the blue collar workers and the women to get reelected are not going out on a limb for a black candidate who would throw them under the bus first chance he gets.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:53 AM on 08/07/2008

We've had an oil spill in the Mississippi River, a radiation leak in a nuclear submarine (for years) and Obama has not used these horrible acts of man (in conjunction with God's timing) against the policies of McCain. McCain wants offshore drilling along our pristine beaches and nuclear facilities accross America. Do you want these things in your backyard when there are more reasonable alternatives. The Obama campaign must use what is given to them to open the eyes of the people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 AM on 08/07/2008

People, I know things don't seem so positive today because the MSM doesn't want it to. They want to keep presenting McCain's attacks and no support for Obama because otherwise there would be no news. Keep doing your homework on their positions and the MSM will not be successful. If you want to know the true facts, listen to Keith Olberman and Rachel Maddow because they report and comment on what is fact not made up stories. The Huffington Post is very informative and gives you true stories that the MSM does not want you to know. Fasten your seatbelts and hold on tight because Obama is going to take you on a ride. Remember Obama is very intelligent and will succeed. I know you're getting weary, but keep the faith! McCain's campaign thinks they're smarter than Obama's, but just you watch the ball drop on McCain. In due time, we shall prevail. Yes We Can and Yes We Will!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 AM on 08/07/2008

The problem is that the Obama camp has been running a very ineffective campaign. If that does not change Obama is likely to lose.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:14 AM on 08/07/2008

I agree totally. If you are in a gunfight a knife doesn't really help you. Especially if it is a butter knife.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:23 AM on 08/07/2008
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 64 fans permalink

The entire Democratic party is running an ineffective campaign. In fact, it is an invisible campaign.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 AM on 08/07/2008

One of Obama's problems right now is that he is perceived to be the riskier choice. What the Obama campaign needs to do is to make it clear to voters that McCain is the riskier choice. It is McCain that wants to privatize social security. It is McCain who wants to tax the contributions businesses make to their health insurance plans. This will cause more businesses to drop such plans, which will create a lot more uninsured. McCain's plans for more tax cuts for the rich will make the Bush deficits skyrocket. And most important, McCain is a dangerous war monger who believes in bomb, bomb, bombing first and asking questions later and who will get us into a totally ruinous war with Iran.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:21 AM on 08/07/2008

An example showing the validity of the argument in this article is the ineffective response of the Obama camp to McCain's celebrity ads.

Obama's surrogates should have immediately responded by shouting SOUR GRAPES, SOUR GRAPES! from the rooftops.

They should have pointed out that the reason that Obama can draw such huge enthusiastic crowds is because he is offering voters what they want: change from the failed, abusive, and even illegal policies of the Bush adminstration.

And the reason McCain has trouble filling a high school gym is because he is offering voters what they absolutely don't want, 4 more years of the failed, abusive, and even illegal policies of the Bush administration.

They should have reminded that the ability of a leader to inspire people is a great strenght, not a weakness.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:12 AM on 08/07/2008
- galinha I'm a Fan of galinha 3 fans permalink

Well said.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 AM on 08/07/2008
- allonfla I'm a Fan of allonfla 34 fans permalink

Well said by Obama many times in general, but his critics keep saying that's not enough.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:00 AM on 08/07/2008
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