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BILL HARRISON

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Three Things Obama Should Do If He Wants to Win

Emphasize this.

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Tone this down.

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Wave goodbye to them at the Denver Airport -- for good.

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Now that the political "silly season" is drawing to a close it's time to focus on the two campaigns in this dead heat race as the conventions are about to commence with the Democrats leading off next week in Denver. Since clinching (presuming, of course, that all the superdelegates go his way) the Democratic nomination in late spring Barack Obama's presumptive stroll to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue has seen a stumble into a couple of potholes that have erased most of the early lead he had over Sen. John McCain. I would still put odds on him being the nation's next president but that prospect seems less sure now than it did three months ago for a variety of reasons. If he wants to regain what former president George H.W. Bush referred to as "big Mo'" here are three things he needs to do now and in the two months remaining in the campaign.

1. Tone Down the Coronation in Denver

As is well-known by now, the Democratic Convention will see its culmination with Obama's acceptance speech at Denver's Invesco Field before a crowd possibly approaching 75,000. Not coincidentally that speech will come on the forty-fifth anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech in 1963 here in Washington which marked the kickoff of the push for integration and full civil rights for black Americans. In my view it was a huge mistake to move the speech to the outdoor stadium but what is done is done and to backtrack now would be pounced upon by the press as a sign of weakness in the campaign. That said, Obama's speech in Berlin (as I commented upon at the time) was a boondoggle of immense proportions and was the first sign of a less than surefooted Obama campaign apparatus after a carrying off in splendid fashion the capture of the nomination for their man. The gassy prose delivered before 200,000 Europeans (with no doubt a smattering of Americans thrown in) given at a time when his opponent was sitting down with voters at local venues in Ohio simply reinforced the image of Obama as some sort of mushy world messiah. There can be no doubt it played well before Europeans who see the United States as as much of a threat to world peace as nations like Iran or non-state actors like al Qaeda but those people don't have a vote in US elections and it flopped spectacularly here at home and gave Senator McCain much ammunition for advertising suggesting that Obama is a hubristic narcissist out of touch with the concerns of average Americans. And on the viral front in the campaign battle it gave birth to one hilarious parody that has now been viewed by hundreds of thousands on YouTube.

So what to do about this conundrum on the night of August 28th? The speech should go light on the self-reference to the candidate himself and long on the traditions of the Democratic Party on whose shoulders Obama now stands. Now no doubt, health permitting, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy will play a big role at the convention and Obama should take the occasion of his acceptance speech to praise Sen. Kennedy and most especially the Kennedy legacy both in the muscular foreign and defense policy of President John F. Kennedy but also with regard to the concerns for the poor expressed by his brother the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy. And despite the clearly bad feelings still emanating from the Clinton wing of the Democratic Party Obama should use the convention and his speech to praise President Clinton and Senator Clinton and make pointed reference to the former's leadership in the Balkans in the late '90s which should segue into a section of the speech emphasizing the United States's continuing support for the former captive nations of Eastern Europe and Eurasia at a time of growing Russian revanchism. And all of this leads me to my second point as regards the Clintons.

2. Say Thanks, But No Thanks to the Clintons

I believe that it is no longer an arguable point that Bill and Hillary Clinton really do not wish Barack Obama well in his quest to become the nation's forty-fourth president. Anyone who has followed the Clintons' careers over the past thirty years knows that first and foremost the Clintons are about the Clintons and if Barack Obama loses this fall Hillary Clinton by default becomes the leading candidate for president among Democrats in 2012. Yes, Obama should give Sen. Clinton and her supporters and President Clinton their due at the convention but that should be that. I would not encourage either of them to campaign actively for me if I were Obama because somehow, some way the two will find a way to make those appearances primarily about themselves.

There are other surrogates who can be used without the mixed messages the Clintons will no doubt send out. Missouri is an important battleground state and Sen. Claire McCaskill can serve Obama quite ably there. In other areas, Obama should call on former Clinton officials like former UN ambassador and chief Bosnia negotiator Richard Holbrooke to make his case in the foreign policy arena especially as regards Russia and sideline the hackish Susan Rice who so far has been his leading surrogate in this area. On the ecomomic front (now that he's "refined" his position on offshore oil drilling) the best thing he can do is to put pressure on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to get off the dime as well and reopen the debate on this issue when Congress comes back from its August recess.

3. Give the "Fifty State" Strategy a Rest

Much was made and rightly so of the Obama team's "fifty state" strategy during the nominating fight with Senator Clinton which shrewdly exploited the rather byzantine system put into place by party chairman Howard Dean which apportioned out delegates based on formulae playing to the party's near fetish for "diversity" politics. But in the general election if Obama thinks he can win by carrying such states as MT, the Dakotas, NV, GA and the Carolinas over the traditional battlegrounds of FL, OH and MO he's whistling Dixie. This election will rise or fall exactly where the last two have been decided and that's in the latter states and not the former.

Yes, some of these states like my native Virginia have "purpled" in the last four years but not sufficiently in my view to give the Obama people good reason to believe that they can carry them. Campaign efforts in these states should concentrate primarily on a ground game strategy of voter registration drives but save the big television buys for the traditional battleground states and also concentrate Obama's "retail" appearances in these states as well. And if I were Obama's Davids (Axelrod and Plouffe) I would have my man appearing before as many audiences of older voters as I could find given the candidates problems with this demographic and the fact that the "kiddie korps" element's turnout (which Obama carried handily in a more higly concentrated pond of the primaries and caucuses) would have to rise dramatically to offset the weight of older voters and if a report on likely turnout of younger voters I saw Sunday afternoon on CNN is any indication the same will hold true this cycle. "Retail" politics has kind of gone out of style in today's media dominated elections but McCain has used retail appearances, combined with the local television coverage it demands, to erase much of Obama's early summer lead. Obama should not lose sight of this lesson.

Any readers who have read my column or commentary over the past two months know that I've largely eschewed discussions of the nitty gritty of the day to day sturm und drang of the campaign trail so far because I simply do not believe that much of anything we've seen to date will prove probative come November as to who wins or loses. Now the race really begins and to paraphrase the late, great Bette Davis, "Fasten your seatbelts, it's going to be a bumpy ride."

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2.3
{"commentId":2487546,"authorDomain":"brianford"}
...I simply do not believe that much of anything we've seen to date will prove probative come November as to who wins or loses.

Yeah. I find polling data, which so many people are orgasmic over, to be particularly worthless, for the most part. Still, there are a lot of people who should have paced themselves. I think some of the strategies that could be used (by both sides) are no weaker based on over-eager supporters blowing their wad months too soon.

{"commentId":2487546,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"brianford"}
  • 7 votes
Reply#1 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 10:22 AM EDT
{"commentId":2488381,"authorDomain":"brianford"}

Err...

"...now weaker..."

{"commentId":2488381,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"brianford"}
  • 3 votes
#1.1 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 11:44 AM EDT
{"commentId":2490445,"authorDomain":"JoulesBeef"}

#1 advice for obaqma.. ignore the advise of conservatvies.

{"commentId":2490445,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"JoulesBeef"}
  • 3 votes
#1.2 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 2:34 PM EDT
Reply
{"commentId":2487928,"authorDomain":"jcunningha"}

There may be a #4 (as well as 5,6, etc.). Which would be to start addressing not only the issues, but to also give the electorate an outline as to how he as a candidate will implement his plan for and how he will push it through the legislature. I am all for hope, but my hope is that there is an actual plan for the future and not just more political rhetoric! Man (or woman) does not live by hope alone.
Certainly agree with your three points here though.

{"commentId":2487928,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"jcunningha"}
  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 11:04 AM EDT
{"commentId":2492464,"authorDomain":"wharrison55"}

Issues are highly overrated when it comes to a general election with great swaths of voters only passably acquainted with them or inclined to devote the effort to them. When it comes to the undecideds it's more of a gut thing.

I will check back later this evening after dinner.

{"commentId":2492464,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"wharrison55"}
  • 3 votes
#2.1 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 5:06 PM EDT
{"commentId":2499851,"authorDomain":"jcunningha"}

But is this not somewhat the fault of the media, for not bringing the real issues out into the light for all too see, rather than presenting the latest buzz in a Hollywood Xcess fashion?
I understand that this is the way most citizens seem to favor their news acquisition, but the media should use greater force in hammering home the real plight of our nation.

{"commentId":2499851,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"jcunningha"}
  • 1 vote
#2.2 - Tue Aug 19, 2008 7:21 AM EDT
{"commentId":2500718,"authorDomain":"wharrison55"}

The media does a fine job of sensationalizing the supposed "plight" of our nation. To listen to Lou Dobbs tell the tale we're teetering on the brink of another Great Depression.

{"commentId":2500718,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"wharrison55"}
  • 4 votes
#2.3 - Tue Aug 19, 2008 9:27 AM EDT
{"commentId":2501401,"authorDomain":"jcunningha"}

Exactly my point!

{"commentId":2501401,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"jcunningha"}
    #2.4 - Tue Aug 19, 2008 10:21 AM EDT
    Reply
    {"commentId":2488384,"authorDomain":"jfxgillis"}

    Bil:

    On #1:

    The speech should go light on the self-reference to the candidate himself and long on the traditions of the Democratic Party on whose shoulders Obama now stands.

    Yes Yes yes yes Yes yes.

    And Yes.

    On #2:

    I don't think it's practical. Even as a longtome Clintonista myself, I wish it was practical simply because I believe political parties should be forward looking on policies and personalities (while being grounded in an established ideological position). But I just don't think Obama can ditch Hillary and win.

    On #3:

    He's already restricting ad buys in uncompetitive states. However, the field organizing should continue on the "50 state" model. It's relatively low cost and and it will have benefits down-ballot this election and benefits going forward for the next four years should Obama win in November.

    {"commentId":2488384,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"jfxgillis"}
    • 4 votes
    Reply#3 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 11:44 AM EDT
    {"commentId":2488462,"authorDomain":"brianford"}

    Also, re: Cost and the 50 state model..

    If it's not that expensive, doesn't he stand to bring in a lot more money through small donations by keeping his focus more broad, even if he won't carry those states. And, even if he won't carry them, won't small inroads energize his base elsewhere, if he trumpets them?

    {"commentId":2488462,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"brianford"}
    • 4 votes
    #3.1 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 11:51 AM EDT
    {"commentId":2492255,"authorDomain":"wharrison55"}

    Guys what I'm saying is that he should continue with the ground game of registering voters and get out the vote drives in the 50 but hit the traditional battleground states hard in his personal appearances. They say "retail" politics is impractical these days in a national general election but in VA for instance he needs to get down the Valley to SW he wants to win.

    Been out all day on the Mall doing the tourist thing with my bro' and niece. Taking a break now before we head down to the Georgetown waterfront for dinner.

    {"commentId":2492255,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"wharrison55"}
    • 5 votes
    #3.2 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 4:49 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2493284,"authorDomain":"barry-rutherford"}

    I'd like to see more policy emphasis by Obama. To date its been the dream vision thing although important. I think the campaign so far has been light on policy detail then again I do see things from afar !

    {"commentId":2493284,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"barry-rutherford"}
    • 1 vote
    #3.3 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 6:19 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2496246,"authorDomain":"wharrison55"}

    That's what the debates are for Barry but even then one has to be careful as Gore found out with his droning on about "Dingell-Norwood" and they mythical Social Security lockbox in the '00 debates.

    {"commentId":2496246,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"wharrison55"}
    • 3 votes
    #3.4 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 10:05 PM EDT
    Reply
    {"commentId":2489600,"authorDomain":"lisaed"}

    Bill---for shame for shame---giving such good free advice to the enemy. I like your point #1---but there's nothing Obama can do to scale that down and I believe Camp Obama regrets that Invesco decision seeing how he got no post-Berlin bounce whatever. The McCain camp has done a very effective job of late painting obama into a celebrity with no substance and Invesco plays very well into that message. I'm looking forward to it immensely.

    {"commentId":2489600,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"lisaed"}
    • 5 votes
    Reply#4 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 1:25 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2489704,"authorDomain":"brianford"}
    The McCain camp has done a very effective job of late painting obama into a celebrity with no substance and Invesco plays very well into that message. I'm looking forward to it immensely.

    What if it turns out America doesn't much mind a celebrity? Focusing on someone's celebrity status is just another way of saying: "People really seem to like the competition."

    Ultimately, those he's preaching to will chuckle, those on the opposite end will bristle, and he better hope those in the middle don't read between the lines.

    McCain's campaign just seems like another marketing arm for Obama's campaign, at this point.

    {"commentId":2489704,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"brianford"}
    • 5 votes
    #4.1 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 1:33 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2489848,"authorDomain":"lisaed"}

    Brian--it's completely up to obama to convince the elecorate that he is more than just a celebrity.

    {"commentId":2489848,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"lisaed"}
    • 3 votes
    #4.2 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 1:46 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2489947,"authorDomain":"brianford"}

    1) I don't think the electorate has an issue with Obama's celebrity, by and large. I realize you really *want* that to be the case, but I don't think that makes it the case.

    2) I think it's up to the electorate to decide whether they buy into McCain's accusations of celebrity -- either for the truth of the matter, or for the worth of the matter.

    Put another way:

    If someone tells everyone that I'm homosexual, simply because I happen to like pink shirts, despite the fact that no one has ever questioned my sexuality -- it's kind of messed up to then say...

    "It's completely up to Brian Ford to convince everyone that he's not a homosexual..."

    That's a funny way of spinning an issue that someone else created.

    {"commentId":2489947,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"brianford"}
    • 3 votes
    #4.3 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 1:54 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2490149,"authorDomain":"lisaed"}

    Brian - this election is not about pink shirts -it's about the largely unknown quantity that is barack obama---the public does not know who he is and why with such a thin resume he thinks he should be our President......it is up to Obama to convince voters that he is the one for the job---but don't expect McCain to make it easy for him. The in the tank for obama press has not done enough to vet this guy (and yes that could backfire) so it is truly up to obama to make the electorate feel comfortable with the idea of him as our President.

    {"commentId":2490149,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"lisaed"}
    • 5 votes
    #4.4 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 2:10 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2490459,"authorDomain":"JoulesBeef"}

    lol mccains crubbed all the references callign him a celb on his site.. I guess when youc ant get a crowd of more than a coupel dozen ancient old pepeople your ralllies.. you are no longer a celb.

    {"commentId":2490459,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"JoulesBeef"}
    • 1 vote
    #4.5 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 2:35 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2491203,"authorDomain":"brianford"}
    it is up to Obama to convince voters that he is the one for the job...

    If that's what you had said the first time, I wouldn't have disagreed with you. That's not what you said the first time, though.

    I also never said McCain was obligated to "make it easy" for him.

    With that said, it amuses me that this election is at various times about Obama's massive celebrity and also about not knowing who he is. I have little doubt who he is. I spend so much time double-checking assertions about who he is (usually unfounded assertions, mind you) that on a personal level, I have little doubt about Obama.

    When it come to policy, I'm similarly comfortable with "who he is..."

    And yes, for McCain, this election *is* about pink shirts. It's about whatever outfit he can put Obama in -- whatever sticks to the wall from poll to poll. I'm not sure how you can argue otherwise when you look at the amount of time McCain spends talking about Obama.

    {"commentId":2491203,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"brianford"}
    • 2 votes
    #4.6 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 3:32 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2491464,"authorDomain":"lisaed"}
    With that said, it amuses me that this election is at various times about Obama's massive celebrity and also about not knowing who he is.

    Brian --au contraire---does anyone really know who ANY celebrity really is? What their core says versus what their public persona says? See the problem for obama vis a vis this celebrity bit? And of course McCain must define Obama....he can pretty effectively since Obama has no real record of his own to disprove what McCain is saying.

    {"commentId":2491464,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"lisaed"}
    • 4 votes
    #4.7 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 3:51 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2491897,"authorDomain":"brianford"}

    Sure. I know everything I need to know about, say, Tom Cruise. Ben Stein has given me pretty much everything I need to know about Ben Stein. Mel Gibson? I've got a pretty good idea of what to expect.

    So, if you were to say: "It's just not fair that Tom Cruise has a massive fan-base! No one knows who the real Tom Cruise is, and the media glosses over his craziness!"

    I'd say: "Eh. People know who Tom Cruise is. They've simply formed two camps: Those who care, and those who don't. Everyone else just decides from movie to movie."

    Why? Because they've all had the spotlight. The spotlight tends to put you ... in the spotlight.

    I know more about Obama than any Presidential candidate in the history of my short-ish life.

    ...he can pretty effectively since Obama has no real record of his own to disprove what McCain is saying.

    If McCain wants to try and define Obama's policy stances, that's fine. I think he's having little success with that, though, which is why he's going after his celebrity status despite an early pledge for a civil campaign.

    It'll be interesting to see just how long Rev. Wright is off-limits for McCain, despite an early pledge to ignore the issue.

    {"commentId":2491897,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"brianford"}
    • 3 votes
    #4.8 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 4:23 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2492374,"authorDomain":"wharrison55"}

    Heh. Brian you may find this difficult to believe but I watched Ben Stein on Booknotes last night with Brian Lamb and he said he was voting for Ralph Nader and said supply-side economics doesn't work as while it does stimulate economic activity the added stimulus isn't enough to offset the revenue loss from tax cuts. Ben has a real problem, as do I, with some of the paper-shuffling Wall Street crowd.

    Lisa, in my straight political writing I try to call them as I see them. I will also write a "3 Things McCain Should Do" column the week before the GOP convention.

    {"commentId":2492374,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"wharrison55"}
    • 7 votes
    #4.9 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 4:59 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2531634,"authorDomain":"neoconstant"}

    Care to elaborate on that, Bill? The "paper-shuffling Wall Street" crowd.

    I have to say, Stein is a smart guy, but the whole intelligent design thing turns me off to him.

    {"commentId":2531634,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"neoconstant"}
    • 3 votes
    #4.10 - Thu Aug 21, 2008 4:04 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2532507,"authorDomain":"wharrison55"}

    The whole hedge fund business which simply makes a few very wealthy individuals more wealthy by creating exotic new debt instruments by "shuffling paper". That's where the big money is (or was I should say) on the Street these days. The traditional role of the investment banker in underwriting stock offerings and such doesn't generate nearly that kind of income.

    It's also looking like the runup in the oil futures market had a lot more to do with speculation than I had previously thought if this pans out.

    {"commentId":2532507,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"wharrison55"}
    • 3 votes
    #4.11 - Thu Aug 21, 2008 4:59 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2532598,"authorDomain":"neoconstant"}

    Well I've been reading about this some lately. I admit, I'm at a loss as to what needs to be done about it. It smacks more of smoke and mirrors than good, honest business--which really bothers me, because I think private enterprise is vital to our economy, and too much government can be detrimental--but then these voodoo businessmen come along and turn an entire industry on its head....

    {"commentId":2532598,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"neoconstant"}
    • 2 votes
    #4.12 - Thu Aug 21, 2008 5:04 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2532635,"authorDomain":"wharrison55"}

    There's nothing wrong with any of it per se. The problem is when big players get so big that they distort the market without adequate regulatory oversight. That's the proximate reason we're in the mess we're in now with the global credit markets.

    {"commentId":2532635,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"wharrison55"}
    • 4 votes
    #4.13 - Thu Aug 21, 2008 5:06 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2534324,"authorDomain":"jfxgillis"}

    E.D.:

    I admit, I'm at a loss as to what needs to be done about it.

    Working men of all countries unite!

    {"commentId":2534324,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"jfxgillis"}
    • 2 votes
    #4.14 - Thu Aug 21, 2008 6:54 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2534496,"authorDomain":"neoconstant"}

    Yeah, that's worked well in the past.... ;-)

    {"commentId":2534496,"threadId":"334018","contentId":"1756685","authorDomain":"neoconstant"}
    • 4 votes
    #4.15 - Thu Aug 21, 2008 7:06 PM EDT
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