Barack Obama lost again, very badly
by
Philidor
05/13/2008, 11:49 PM #
The story of the nomination has been Barack Obama beginning strongly, but then losing his Jimmy Carter-like ability to make people think he was saying the right things to them. Hillary Clinton made a comeback.
Then, quietly, in caucuses and not especially prominent elections, his organization gathered enough votes to put him in the lead while the public waited for the contest to begin again.
And then, with the country paying attention, he lost badly, dramatically in almost every major contest. His reaction: somberly, I have the votes, she can't hurt me.
And there's Hillary Clinton, campaigning while the press gloats over Obama, shouting at the Democratic electorate the race is over, your vote doesn't matter unless you vote for Obama and end the primaries.
Low on money, without a good image except for her determination in difficult circumstances, she wins again and again.
Are these votes for her? Yes, to a degree. But a public which has been described as treating politics like a horse race instead of an expression of beliefs and principles, these people are shouting back at the race callers We don't want Obama. You won't force him on us while we can vote.
And so the super delegates will move to Obama against the highly visible trend in Hillary Clinton's favor, making the nomination look like a back room deal ignoring the most dramatic elections.
Barack Obama will stand before the general electorate with his wife and his pastor (visible or invisible) and his lapel bare of a flag pin and he will announce: I will unite the country. And those who wanted another candidate, those who wanted someone inspiring rather than a drab player of ordinary politics will wonder where he got that idea.
The press will applaud, the self-righteous elite will speak of the triumph of the country that a black candidate represents. But how many in the public will consider the election already a failure from the Democratic side?
Barack Obama's substantial defeats piled one atop the other are the image of the reaction to his character. And when some people have begun to wonder whether he even likes the US, he has a huge challenge becoming a viable candidate.