Thursday, October 23, 2008

Endorsement can matter - a personal testimony

I will confess to being influenced by an endorsement four years ago. I come from a strong Republican family and had worked as a legislative assistant for the Republicans in the Ohio State Senate and had always voted Republican in presidential elections up until 2004. By 2004 I had become disillusioned with the unilateralist approach Bush had taken to foreign policy but still thought of myself as a good Republican. When asked about my politics, I would often describe myself as an Eisenhower Republican meaning that I was a fiscal conservative but one who valued professionalism over ideology. I was generally more liberal in most areas of social policy and a strong internationalist in foreign policy. I was undecided about which way to go in 2004 until reading a strong endorsement for Kerry written by John Eisenhower, President Eisenhower's son. I found his argument that Kerry actually shared more of Eisenhower's values than did Bush very convincing and ended up voting Democratic for the first time in my life.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Second Debate

Little new was said at last night's debate. What stood out for me were the visuals. The town hall format was one that McCain wanted, but as I watched McCain move around to the different questioners in the audience, I found myself thinking more about how old he looked rather than what he was saying. Obama just semed to move more gracefully and confidently to me. Maybe it is not fair to attribute McCain's awkwardness to age; he remains physically limited in several wasy because of the injuries he suffered as a prisnor in Vietnam. Maybe I was just focusing more on appearance last night because I had heard most of the words before. There were a couple camera shots of Obama answering questions where you could see McCain sort of walking around behind him like he wasn't really sure where he should be. How candidates look can make a difference. I always thought bringing Carter and Reagan together on the same stage during the presidential debates in 1980 benefitted Reagan before any words were spoken. My guess is that if someone who knew nothing about the campaign had watched the debate without sound, they would have picked Obama as the more presidential.

Video: Bruce Springsteen Highlights - Campus

Video: Bruce Springsteen Highlights - Campus

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Palin Biden Debat

I've had a hard time coming up with anything to say about the vice presidential debate. Maybe the reason is that I could not really take seriously the exchange that took place between Biden and Palin as a debate. Palin did not bother to answer questions or respond to Biden's charges. She stuck closely to her talking points and played up her image as a small-town hockey mom who would cut taxes adn reform government. While not as incoherent as she was in some of her ealier interviews, I did not find that she offered any evidence that she had the type of qulaifications or the judgment that we would want in a national leader. I was surprised that so many commentators were declaring her the debate winner, or at least declaring the debate to be a draw. I need help in understanding her appeal - why are so many voters so excited about placing this woman one heartbeat from the presidency?

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Debates

Friday's presidential debate is now old news. The conventional wisdom was that no "knock out" blows were struck. I think it was actually one of the better political debates I've heard in recent years - both candidates were reasonably articulate in explaining their positions. I am not quite sure why a number of news reports claimed that McCain had won "on points" - I guess it was because he was the more aggressive of the two, forcing Obama to spend more of his time responding to McCain's charges than in making charges of his own. In my judgment, Obama had the advantage during the first part of the debate when the questions were on economics and that neither candidate had a clear advantage when the questions turned to foreign policy. McCain repeatedly emphasized his long years of experience, but in so doing may also have reminded viwers of his age. His continued emphasis on "dealing with these sorts of problems" for nearly 30 years also undercuts his argument that he is the candidate of real change.

NPR's Cokie Roberts compared Obama and Ronald Reagan in one of her commentarties after the debate. In 1980, Reagan was running against Jimmy Carter. Voters wanted a change but many were afraid of Reagan, believing him too dangerous or not experienced enough to be president. In has first debate with Carter, Reagan came across as calm and reasonable and reassured many voters that he could be trusted with the presidency. Roberts argued that Obama had done the same thing Friday night, and I agree.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Hurricane Ike

As many Houston area residents have found, it is difficult to keep up a blog without electircal power. It is also difficult to keep up on national political news. For two or three days after the storm hit, all the local news outlets focused almost exclusively on hurricane news. For eleven days after Ike hit my primary contact with the outside world was a little battery operated AM radio. As the local stations returned to their normal broadcasting schedules, I gained an increased apprectiation of the role talk radio has come to play in our political process. The overwhelming number of shows I ran across were right of center in their political orientation. Like blogs, there are no editors to fact check the assertions the hosts of these shows make or their listeners. When liberals complain of the conservative bias of talk radio, the response given is that there is a much greater market for conservative talk shows than there is for liberal talk shows. The political influence of people like Rush Limbaugh raises the same sorts of questions about establishing a fair playing field that questions about campaign contributions raise. A candidate who has twice as much money to sepnd than his opponent certainly has an electoral advantage, all other things being equal. Similarly, a candidate who is getting the active support of three or four times as many talk show hosts as his competitor also has an advantage. Money is an extremely important resource in politics but but the only one . . . unions or churches who can turn out their members to work in campaigns, celebrities who help candidates attract large crowds to their rallies, favorable coverage in the print media, guest appearances on late-night TV - all of these things can be of real benefit to a candidate. I am really not sure what the minimum requirements for fairness in an election are - - I suspect that it is nearly impossible for any of us to be fully objective about what constitute a "fair playing field" for an election. So far in thise election, my sense is that the different advantages of the two major presidential pretty much balance one another out. Of course my opinion may change about the fairness of this election if my candidate loses:-)

Monday, September 8, 2008

The Real Campaign Begins

Now that the conventions are over, we can get a better sense of what each campaign is trying to do. From the press reports I've read, it appears as though the basic McCain strategy was not decided on until the last minute. A week before he named Palin as his running mate, he was hoping to be able to pick Joe Lieberman. The right wing would not have been happy about Lieberman but McCain's initial thinking apparently was that conseratives would have no other place to go. My understandig is that he was finally convinved that a Lieberman pick would literally split the party in two and that there was no chance of winning if he lost his party's base. Other possible picks like Romney would have been more acceptable to the base but would not have injected much excitement. Therefore he turned to Palin as someone conservatives like Rush Limbaugh had been pushing all summer albeit below the radar screen of most press coverage. A lot of the press coverage over the weekend argues that the pick helps build McCain's image as an indpendent maverick, but I think it could also be argued that it supports Obama's claim of "more of the same" in that McCain, like Bush, appears to be willing top pander to conservative fundamentalists and to make major appointments on largely political criteria. Republicans will want to campaign on McCain's biography and the heroism he showed as a prisnor of war, aswell as his foreign policy credentials, while attackingObama for his lack of experience and for not being tough enough on defense issues. The Democrats, on the other hand, will want to focus as much attention as possible on the economy and make the election as much as possible as a contest between Republicans and Democrats. McCain, of course, is trying to distance himself from the Bush administration and its record of the last 8 years and has tried to co-opt Obama on the change issue but I think he will have a harder time than Obama he selling himself as a change agent since he has been a member of the party that has been in power these past 8 years. By most indicators, this should be a Democratic year. The best hope of the Republicans will be try to raise enough doubt about Obama that voters will view McCain as their only real option.