Media Misses Story: Obedwards Won New Hampshire

Posted January 10, 2008 | 02:25 PM (EST)



stumbleupon :Media Misses Story: Obedwards Won New Hampshire   digg: Media Misses Story: Obedwards Won New Hampshire   reddit: Media Misses Story: Obedwards Won New Hampshire   del.icio.us: Media Misses Story: Obedwards Won New Hampshire

As media commentators proclaim Hillary Clinton's rebirth from the ashes of defeat, they miss a critical story -- Obama and Edwards won the New Hampshire primary. Add together Obama's 36 percent and Edwards's 17, and they beat Clinton's 39 percent by 14 points. And because the Democratic primaries have proportionate representation, they'll in fact come out with more combined delegates -- 13 to Clinton's 9. Though polls are elusive, I've talked or corresponded with hundreds of supporters of both of them, pored through hundreds of blog responses, and from everything I can tell, those backing Obama or Edwards solidly pick the other as their second choice. So if only one were running, they'd be opening up an unambiguous lead. But because Clinton's two main opponents have effectively split the vote, her three-point victory over Obama has revived a campaign that seemed on the verge of meltdown just a few days ago, and left her again the media favorite.

So what are Obama and Edwards or their supporters to do about this? First, remind those covering the race that although Clinton got a split-vote plurality, most Democrats still don't prefer her as their nominee. Some serious polling could help to verify the convergences between the Obama and Edwards supporters and their shared discontents, and maybe we could encourage that.

Real political differences separate Clinton from both Edwards and Obama, and we need to at least try and get the media to talk about them. All of these candidates have their flaws and strengths -- on global warming, for instance, they all have excellent plans. But John Edwards wasn't just being rhetorical when he said that both he and Obama represent voices for change, versus Clinton's embodiment of a Washington status quo joining money and power -- albeit a far saner status quo than the crazed Bush version. Clinton recently held a massive fundraising dinner with homeland security lobbyists, and has taken money from Rupert Murdoch. Her chief campaign strategist, Mark Penn, is CEO of a PR firm that prepped the Blackwater CEO for his recent congressional testimony, is aggressively involved in anti-union efforts, and has represented everyone from the Argentine military junta and Philip Morris to Union Carbide after the 1984 Bhopal disaster. Clinton supported an Iran vote so reckless that Jim Webb called it "Dick Cheney's fondest Pipe Dream," and did so, according to her campaign insiders, because she was covering herself for the general election. She's still not apologized for her Iraq vote, and her hoarding of scarce 2006 campaign dollars may well have cost the Democrats an even larger Congressional victory.

Those who make up the Obedwards constituencies recognize the problems with so many of Clinton's approaches and stands. That's part of what's driving them, along with a genuine passion for Obama and Edwards, and a sense, confirmed by the polls, that either of the two has a better shot at beating the leading Republicans than does Clinton. If we look just at delegates, both Iowa and New Hampshire advanced the Obedwards combined cause. But because the coverage has focused so exclusively on the Obama/Clinton match-up, they've missed that a solid majority of Democrats in both New Hampshire and Iowa rejected a candidate who a short while back was proclaiming her nomination as nearly inevitable.

If all those wary of Clinton coalesced around Obama, he'd become the odds-on favorite to become the Democratic standard-bearer. But at least for now, Edwards is staying in. I think he genuinely wants to keep raising fundamental issues about how divisions of wealth and power have damaged our democracy -- and the people left behind without health care, jobs, or hope. He's also hanging in there in case his message belatedly catches fire, or both Clinton and Obama unexpectedly melt down. So at least for the moment, the Obedwards constituency may keep amassing a majority of elected delegates, while making it more difficult for Obama (or a far longer-shot Edwards) to become the clear front-runner and clinch the nomination.

There are some partial solutions, though, even with both in the race. Beyond reminding the media of their convergences, Obama and Edwards could also keep using their speeches, debates, and ads to highlight the real differences they have with Clinton and her approach, while minimizing their attacks on each other. Of course their main message needs to focus on their own strengths and visions, and the issues about which they feel passionately, but they also need to draw some clear political lines.

Edwards has begun doing this. Obama needs to do it more, and respond more forcefully to the Clinton campaign's attacks and distortions, like their misstatements of his record on Iraq and abortion choice. I think he can do this while continuing to flesh out a more specific vision of what he stands for, in stories that people can understand.

It's a tricky dance, since Hillary, Bill, and their surrogates will continue to dismiss any criticisms as "the boys" ganging up on the woman. This narrative indeed seemed to work when Clinton's tears set off a wave of sympathy and female solidarity that most likely swung New Hampshire. But so long as Obama and Edwards keep talking about real issues, and do so in a civil way, I think Hillary's complaints about being picked on will yield a diminishing return, especially if they highlight the Clinton campaign's own history of attack dog politics--like their successfully killing a major negative story in the men's magazine GQ by threatening to deny the publication future access to Bill Clinton for a separate cover story they were writing.


But the fundamental fault lines in this campaign are about whose interests the candidates are likely to heed, and they need to be articulated. Think back to Clinton's six years on the Wal-Mart board, during which she said nothing to protest the company's relentless union-busting and destruction of small-town businesses. Obama, meanwhile, was working as a community organizer, and then at a law firm that represented local organizers. Edwards pursued and won lawsuits on corporate malfeasance. The two of them need to highlight the links between their past history and their joint refusal to take donations from lobbyists, and their strong and early stands for fundamental campaign finance reform: Obama pushed a major bill while still in the Illinois legislature -- Clinton signed on only after Common Cause ran a full-page Iowa ad. They should also challenge Clinton's argument that the way to make change is to reduce our expectations and hopes.

Obama and Edwards could also make an even more explicit alliance. Each could pledge, for instance, to nominate the other for Vice President, or publicly state that if no candidate got an absolute majority going into the Democratic convention, whichever of the two trailed would throw their support to the other. Given the rules on proportionate representation, this would allow both to keep campaigning as passionately as possible without falling into the trap of political spoiler.

This last might be particularly attractive to Edwards, since otherwise, those who feel he'd still be the best candidate really do face the choice between risking helping Clinton defeat Obama, or eroding their support for Edwards so much he'd have little choice but to leave the race. Edwards might not even have to make a formal pledge, but just to keep reminding voters -- and the media -- that if no candidate gets an absolute majority before the convention, he'd encourage his delegates and those of Obama to join together at that point. The approach is probably less likely for Obama, because he still has a major shot without it, but he might consider it if the votes continue to divide and we end up with gridlock.

Most likely, all three candidates are going to stay in the race, at least for a while. Even if Obama does not prevail outright, if he and Edwards keep gaining delegates at their current rate and can convince the uncommitted Super-Delegates to respect the will of the voters, they should go into the convention with enough combined votes for one or the other to win. The more they can keep reminding us all how much their supporters want a politics no longer ruled by money and fear, the more they'll increase their odds.

Paul Rogat Loeb is the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, named the #3 political book of 2004 by the History Channel and the American Book Association. His previous books include Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time. See www.paulloeb.org To receive his articles directly email sympa@lists.onenw.org with the subject line: subscribe paulloeb-articles

Comments for this post are now closed

 

Comments
160
Pending Comments
0

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

Hint sample
View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next › Last » (6 pages total)

But you failed to compare Hillary's views to those of Obama and Edwards. You'll be in for surprise. Hillary's are slightly more liberal.
If there's such a small difference between the three leading candidates, you'd have to explain why you're so opposed to Hillary's campaign. I'll bet you can't do that, without our finding out some embarrrassing things about you, Mr. Loeb.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 PM on 01/12/2008

After carefully reading through ALL the postings - Back & Forth, Pro & Con, Hype, Barbs & ad hominum attacks on the sanity, sincerity &/or veracity of others' opinions, I've just one final thing to offer ALL of you and your pet rationales for whomever you may be supporting, for however long or strongly:

ENOUGH VOTING JUST FOR CELEBRITY, "CHARISMA" & SCHMALTZ dispensing capability! "SUBSTANCE OVER FORM" SHOULD BE OUR NEW BATTLE CRY!

It'll be very, very nice to shed the worldwide embarrassment, & finally have a "Pres" that can string 2 sentences together coherently (& do it sans teleprompter or stage manager pulling the jaw strings, or masking the frequent foot-in-mouth gaffe guffaws!). But ALL our present candidates - & many, many other very experienced & capable Dem's - from BOTH Genders, and nearly ALL Ethnic backgrounds, can do that; to the Cube value of what we've suffered through for 2 terms now! We really need now is someone that combines Statesmanship with Leadership; shows some Spine & Courage Under Fire; Won't cave to the special interests, & in NO ONE'S POCKET!
"NO MORE AIR-HEAD PUPPETS!", must be our new
"Mantra"!! Time to stop peeing on ourselves, & "rally 'round the flag", gang.



But just keep up the petty bickering, vs serious thinking & dialog, & you - AGAIN! - "open the barn door"; for the Thoroughbred to escape, & the Jackasses to take over, for another miserable 4-to-8.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 AM on 01/12/2008

It was not missed, it was intentional.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:05 PM on 01/11/2008

Electibility is paramount in Nov. to begin righting the many wrongs of BushCo. Edwards is better positioned to win the general election due to Clinton's negatives. Obama lacks experience and will encounter some resistance from racists, which thankfully now is only marginal, but possibly influential in the outcome. I see an Edwards/Obama ticket as being invincible. It is still a clear 'change' ticket which the country strongly prefers. In 2016 after eight progressive years under Edwards, Obama will be better positioned to become president. We should remember, if McCain is the Republican candidate, he will paint himself as a seasoned 'protector', better prepared to deal with continuing terrorist threats. Bush won re-election on the threats/protector platform and I believe the residue of fear is not exhausted.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 PM on 01/11/2008

I suppose if Obama had won, the Clinton and Edwards spinners would have come up with the same skewed logic that Cledwards really won (or was that Edinton?).

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 01/11/2008

Paul, thank you for an enlightening, intelligent, and well thought out piece. It is such a breath of fresh air to finally read something that is coherent and based on facts. Thank you very much!

Although I'm a diehard Edwards supporter because of his stand on the issues, standing up against corporations, and standing up for the middle class, if it came down to the choice between Barack and Hillary, Barack would be my second choice. Again, thanks for stating the obvious!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 01/11/2008

I continue to believe that both Hilary and Obama are not viable candidates. I do not think the American public is ready to elect a woman or a black man to the White House. The democrats may have lofty ideals, but the reality is that it is hard enough to change the status quo with a white male running for the Dems, let alone a candidate that is black or female. It's as if the Dems have left the seat unfilled, waiting to be stolen by a Republican. And if the Republicans win again, I think it would be time to dismantle the democratic party and start from scratch. Jim Webb should be running for President, NOW!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 AM on 01/11/2008

There is no one "fighting for change" they have all taken dirty lobbyist money. And do you think for one nano second that they have our best interests at heart?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 AM on 01/11/2008

So what your saying is that Edwards, who is fighting for change, by staying in the race is helping the forces for status quo DLC corporate owned Democrats stay in control. Hmmm...interesting.

Maybe Edwards needs to consider this passage from Romans in the Bible:

"The good that I would, I do not do, the evil that I wouldn't, I do..." St. Paul

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 01/11/2008

I prefer Edwardsama. And it's not Edwards AND Obama. It's Edwards OR Obama. They are not a continuem of progressive potential.

Obama was encouraged by George Will to run. He supported Lieberman against Ned Lamont. True later, when he thought Lamont would win, he endorsed him . Flip flop. Enter... Kerry. So now spineless Kerry has endorsed him. WHY? Because Obama's going to "turn the page." What freakin' page? If I hear one more lofty meaningless over-bloated sound bite from that rhetorical establishment puppet, I'm going to scream!

This is a sneaky ploy to equate Edwards with Obama in some twisted argument (read, "drop out, Edwards") that together they can beat HRC. FYI: Any third candidate combined with any front runner will defeat the other front runner. Duh. Do you think we're dumb?

Edwards people, please don't buy this. Don't listen two it. The differences between the three candidates are vast. Hang in. There are nine long months to go. Time enough to birth a revolution.

Go Edwards!

And please, please send him your money. Please!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 AM on 01/11/2008
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next › Last » (6 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

You must be logged in to reply to this comment. Log in


 
 
Bloggers Index›
Read All Posts by
Paul Loeb›
 

 Site  Web ask.com