Re: Gender Issue Lives On as Clinton Hopes Dim
by
Beathan
05/19/2008, 3:50 PM #
LaurieAnn --
I agree with your assessment on where we are and where we should go from here. Obama needs to emphasize that he supports equal rights -- for all people -- including gender equality. To be fair, I think that he has been clear on this already -- but the point bears constant repetition.
However, I disagree with your assessment of the history of this campaign or of Hillary Clinton's challenges to Obama. (I agree with Lunesta even less.)
The Clinton campaign turned very negative in February, and Obama stayed on the high ground. Obama had just come off a series of solid victories -- and the initial assessment was that Clinton had to change tactics to have a hope of catching him. However, true to his claim to stand for a "new kind of politics", Obama did not respond in kind.
The result was that he lost Ohio badly and had an apparent defeat, which later turned into a draw or slight victory, in Texas. Initial thoughts were that these were demographically unfavorable states for Obama -- but the Clinton campaign attributed its success to its negative campaign and increased its attacks.
They even started using Obama's decision to take the high road against him, claiming that his refusal to hit back with Clintonesque low-blows was a sign of weakness, not of priniciple. They claimed that Obama was a bunny -- and he would be eaten alive by McCain and the GOP in the general. The Clinton's proof -- he was not responding with classic negative ads despite the Clinton attack machine working on him 24/7.
This attack began to play -- so Obama had to prove that he was capable of hitting back. He did so in Pennsylvania, knowing that the state was demographically loaded against him -- so he had relatively little to lose by backing off his principles to prove that he held them out of genuine conviction rather than out of weakness. I think of Obama's campaign in Pennsylvania as the political equivalent of a metal band singing a sweet love ballad -- it proves that they are capable of singing the old kind of music, and that their genre choice is an aesthetic decision, rather than a default because they cannot sing.
After Pennsylvania, Obama (for the most part) returned to his style of campaigning "above the fray." In other words, proving that his early style of campaigning was a principled choice, rather than a symptom of his inability to campaign old school, he returned to his principles. Clinton did not -- but, in her defense, the only campaign method that worked for her at all was the ugly campaigning of "kitchen-sink" attacks and race and gender baiting identity politics.
I think that the difference between these two campaigns, and these two candidates, is summed by by a quote from Zhuangzi, a Chinese Philosopher from the Warring States Period, who said, "Great wisdom is generous; petty wisdom is contentious. Great speech is impassioned, small speech cantankerous."
From the beginning, I have considered Obama to be a great candidate and Clinton to be a small one. Obama has the soaring lofty ideals and the big picture of a true reformer; Clinton has the detail-focus and small-picture approach of an apparatchik. So far, everything about this campaign has confirmed my opinion.
We have selected the right candidate for the general election, now is the time for all good Democrats to come to the aid of the Party.
Beathan