Michael Rowan

Michael Rowan

Posted October 6, 2008 | 05:37 PM (EST)

Barack is Not a Tiger

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Barack Obama is not a tiger, so he may lose the presidential election like so many non-tigers before him -- George McGovern, Walter Mondale, Michael Dukakis, Al Gore and John Kerry come to mind. American voters want a strong president, a man of action, and not an intellectual who hesitates about values before he acts. The same goes for women: Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin are tigers.

The Republicans have won 7 of the last 10 presidential elections by nominating tigers who communicated strong values with ease. Getting the right balance in communicating values is more important than getting on the right side of the issues in a presidential election. This is why John McCain is such a strong values candidate even though the Republican performance in economic affairs and foreign affairs has cratered for 80% or more of the American voters.

In a 1992 content analysis of presidential TV ads from Eisenhower to Clinton, I found that the candidate who more reflected Abraham Maslow's three basic values -- economy, family and security -- always defeated the candidate who appeared light on those values but heavily into esteem values -- the utopian dream. By identifying tigers, the basic values analysis is a more accurate predictor of election outcomes than political polls, of which I have conducted more than 1,000 since 1968.

The candidates who hammered on "strong economy, strong families, and strong defense" won every time, even while their esteem values, dreams, ideals and ideologies differed wildly from one to the other. Test this thesis from your own knowledge of tigers defeating non-tigers: Ike Eisenhower over Adlai Stevenson, JFK over Richard Nixon; but Nixon over George McGovern; Ronald Reagan over Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale; Bill Clinton over papa George Bush and Bob Dole; and son George Bush over Al Gore and John Kerry. In each case the tiger resonates with easily recognized, strong basic values.

Bill Clinton was the only Democrat to learn the language of strong values. He got on and stayed on that message so stubbornly that some liberal Democrats believed he had sold out to the right and conservative Republicans anguished about his stealing their thunder. While Clinton's governance was way left of Reagan's right-wing drift, those two presidents are virtually identical in resonating at the values level. And that's the level where voters give their trust.

Because of Clinton's scandalous sexual misconduct, Gore, Kerry and now Obama have abandoned Clinton's values language in favor of the dreams, ideals and hope that make liberal Democrats swoon but independent voters worry about values. This is the real tragedy of Clinton for the Democrats: he had the solution for election and governance which was abandoned because of a sex scandal.

As I watch the presidential campaign communications in 2008, John McCain, against all domestic and foreign policy odds, appears electable over Barack Obama, which would reverse the modern electoral rule of punishing the party in power for failure at war, recession or both.

Obama's stunningly beautiful rhetoric rises grandly to the heights of hope, harmony, peace and justice. He, like many liberal Democrats before him, is imbued with the esteem value. But unlike John Fitzgerald Kennedy, who balanced utopian dreams -- let's go to the moon, let's end poverty -- with powerful doses of economic, family and security messages, Obama soars above mundane values and takes his audience into orbit. When he comes back to earth to address kitchen table worries -- mortgages, jobs, health care and foreign threats -- he is obviously not as passionate about it, and this translates into a delivered feeling that Obama doesn't care, he's aloof, he can't be trusted, he's not one of us.

Complicating the perceived values imbalance, Obama is black, so whites judge him by a higher standard anyhow. Race is a turf and family value historically dividing America. Race is a filter that pervades political relationships as an unseen backdrop or undetected undercurrent. For whites to accept a black leader in a trust relationship, the black has to go a long distance. To break through that unconscious resistance to relate, Obama has to talk colloquially and continuously about basic values close to the heart of the white Democrat and independent voter.

In one speech, Sarah Palin can achieve what it might take Barack Obama 100 speeches to do, if at all. The country was fully prepared for an alpha-female tiger after Hillary Clinton's campaign, and Sarah Palin was pretty, sharp-tongued, and a lip-glossed Alaskan to boot. For those freaked out about her unpreparedness, the history of the other tigers we have voted into the Oval Office stares us in the face.

If Barack Obama talked and played like Tiger Woods, he'd be in another place with the American people. He can concentrate like Woods but not act and talk so we feel we really know him. It's not a question of getting angry or showing emotion but of revealing values he can be trusted to hold dear. Woods never hesitates; he acts with grace and talks with ease about it. For Barack to be a tiger -- or to be like Tiger -- is asking a lot this late in the game. But that's what he has to do to win.

Michael Rowan is a democratic political consultant with experience in 14 nations since 1968. He is the author with Douglas Schoen of Chavez: The Threat Closer to Home [Simon & Schuster, January, 2009].

Barack Obama is not a tiger, so he may lose the presidential election like so many non-tigers before him -- George McGovern, Walter Mondale, Michael Dukakis, Al Gore and John Kerry come to mind. Ameri...
Barack Obama is not a tiger, so he may lose the presidential election like so many non-tigers before him -- George McGovern, Walter Mondale, Michael Dukakis, Al Gore and John Kerry come to mind. Ameri...
 
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What a bogus article.

Obama IS strong and a man of action. He DOES talk and act more like Tiger Woods, the other "tigers" you mention are more hotheads like John McEnroe or Bobby Knight.

He just doesn't resort to the cheap shots of his opponents. And based on how the polls are going, it looks like he won't have to lower himself to their level. Seriously, McCain is "electable"? Only if the guy gets a miracle and I don't see that happening.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 10/07/2008

A provocative analysis, particularly on the question of racial filters and altered expectations, but perhaps a mistake to characterize Obama as weak. Peggy Noonan describes him as 'languid'--a reassuring contrast to McCain's erratic caroming. Senator Obama has countered McCain's cheap and deeply cynical tricks with strength and dignity. Tigers often appear languid; as William Blake observed, it's a 'fearful symmetry'.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:04 PM on 10/07/2008

Americans want a "strong president." However I don't think that whichever candidate appears as the "man of action" or one who does not hesistate when making far reaching decisions always ends up on top. When the country is fearful of a threat that does not directly confront them in everyday life (i.e. terrorism) then your definition of a "man of action" has much potency. However, take a look at today's economic situation, a situation in which voters from a wide range of society are faced with an in your face threat: financial security. Most Americans believe that the cause of this financial crisis is knee-jerk, "man of action" decision-making that did not properly assess the consequences of policy decisions directly affecting American families. Futhermore, while I tend to agree that "economy, family, and security" are 3 values that require effective communication attention by the candidate, I disagree with your posit that Barack Obama has failed to appear strong on these issues. Obama has confidently connected his vision for America will bring economic security, strengthen families, and rebuild our military with smart, principled decisions. He is not by nature a fiery, hot-tomale, fireball, he is smart, tough, and determined to surround himself with the best minds to effect the best decisions that will fulfill each one of your 3 values. Once the American electorate sees the results of his policies, they'll give him some wiggle room for not being much of a "Tiger."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 AM on 10/07/2008

Obama has less backbone than George McGovern, Walter Mondale, Michael Dukakis, Al Gore and John Kerry. He's more like an octopus who changes color to suit the occasion and background.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:58 PM on 10/06/2008

keep to yourself....from the sounds of it...you aren't either...Obama/Biden ''08
McCain/Palin= Inconstinent/Incomptent

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 10/06/2008
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Blah, blah, blah....Not a tiger but beat Hillary Clinton. He is not Dukakis, Gore, or Kerry. I'm proud to say he isn't Bill Clinton either. Give the man some credit. You bolster Hillary as tiger in your article but she lost to him. Ironic? Maybe. Possible Obama is a better fighter than you give him credit for. That's almost a given.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:06 PM on 10/06/2008

The problem with these so-called analysts is they are too busy comparing. 'he is like this...he is like that....' he should do this' he should do that!.
Thank God he is not a tiger, because as you can see what the tigers are inciting right about now.
NO class and dignity whatsoever.
P.S Instead of sitting on your little throne writing irritating comparisons how's about something positive and productive to help as opposed to hinder.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 10/07/2008

One word about your analyses: Lazy

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:03 PM on 10/06/2008
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Don't forget, Bush actually lost twice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:57 PM on 10/06/2008
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