7 Days: TEFLON-OBAMA? w/ Dorgan, Huffington, Green & Bender
7 Days: TEFLON-OBAMA? w/ Dorgan, Huffington, Green & Bender
What’s the matter with…
There didn’t seem to be much “brotherly love”
in either of the pivotal Democratic presidential debates held there – not
in the Russert-Williams grilling of Hillary
Was the one thing each debate had in common that panelists went after the front-runner each time? I asked this of our headliner Senator Sen. Byron Dorgan and then panelists Arianna Huffington and David Bender. And the answer and conversation went off on…ABC News.
Being a hopelessly high-minded Democrat, I too agree it
would have been ideal to have asked any so-called “gotcha”
questions at the end, not the start of the 90 minutes – and questions
about William Ayers and flag pins reflect the awful rise of Gaffegate,
when the sensational pushes out the significant. A
But Gibson-Stephanopoulos aren’t on the ballot. What
really matters in the days before the
Let’s face it. Obama had a bad month and week. Perhaps not as bad as American Airlines and Bear Stearns but the combination of a poor debate performance and answering questions about Rev. Wright and his “bitter” comments put his campaign on the defensive.
So why haven’t the polls appreciably moved? The headlines changed, voters didn't. So far, Obama appears to have developed a Teflon skin every bit as impressive as Reagan’s. Why?
*Style: His casual, cool, bemused manner – including his hip-hop move of physically flicking off the attacks and teasing his opponent as “Annie Oakley” – is very winsome. Recall how when Jimmy Carter accurately nailed Ronald Reagan for wanting to privatize and thereby undermine Social Security, Reagan’s now uber-famous “there you go again” completely turned the tables on the hapless incumbent. During the ABC debate, as Alessandra Stanley wrote in the New York Times, Obama managed to “hang onto his soft diction, flat affects and refusal to project anger.” When I asked one Democratic Senator about what Obama was like with his colleagues, he noted that “he’s very at ease, funny and unflappable”, which are not bad traits in the heat of a presidential primary contest or indeed a presidency.
*Chorus. Whenever Obama is criticized, by
*Money. Obama’s phenomenal fund-raising, doubling
*The Drip-Drip Strategy.
All of this helped slow or stem any serious questioning of his bona fides or lead. Indeed, there were moments in the debate that a policy roundtable could plausibly question: he’s now for the Scalia view that there’s an individual right to bear arms in the second amendment, which contradicts the 1939 Supreme Court decision on the matter; he falsely denied that his handwriting was on that decade-old questionnaire about choice; and as George Packer wrote in The New Yorker, it was a flub or worse “to equate guns and religion with racism and xenophobia,” especially since small town voters have embraced hunting and church pre-industrial revolution, certainly pre-Bushonomics.
And, like it or not, why are McCain insiders starting to rub their hands with glee that attacks on Obama’s positions and associations make him the more vulnerable Democrat in the Fall? McCain in effect implied as much when he harshly attacked the Ayers-Obama connection on This Week with George Stephanopoulos this Sunday.
None of this broke through because of Obama’s thick Teflon. Then, because of a campaign with a powerful theme of change and a candidate who carries it off with poise and flair, 35,000 show up to cheer him in Philadelphia Friday night. 35,000 is a lot of people, probably the most ever for a presidential candidate. John McCain has trouble attracting 350.
Hillary Clinton now reminds me of John Kerry in his general
election. When Kerry personally bailed out his stumbling campaign with
brilliant debate appearances against Bush, he closed the gap, for a while.
Listen to our panel on
EXCERPTS FROM THE APRIL 19TH 7 DAYS PROGRAM, W/DORGAN, HUFFINGTON. GREEN & BENDER
DORGAN: Q: How can Democrats lose a debate to John McCain on whether we should increase taxes on those earning over $250,000 annually? "Well, we shouldn't. But I refuse to lose a debate that I'm not having. McCain and others say that the Democrats want to raise taxes on middle income workers. That's not true at all. Do Democrats believe that the folks on Wall Street who are earning billions of dollars each and are paying 15% rate on income tax should pay more in taxes? You're darn right I do! I think most Americans would feel that way as well" GREEN: "When they say, 'Oh, Dorgan, you're engaging in class warfare,' what's your answer?" DORGAN: "Warren Buffett says, 'Class warfare exists and my class is winning.' And he's the richest man in the world."
DORGAN Q: What should a Democratic presidential nominee say about gasoline prices at the pump? "I'd stop the Bush administration from putting 70,000 gallons of oil underground everyday. We ought to increase the margin requirements for those who are speculating on the futures markets. You can control 100,000 gallons of oil for 4-6 thousand dollars. To set the country on a real path to less dependence on foreign oil and more conservation and more efficiency and more investment and more predictability in the investment capability in renewable energy and renewable fuels."
DORGAN: Q: How
optimistic are you that Americans this Fall won't fall for distracting
arguments about flag pins but will say, 'we're in a bad war and a bad
economy -- what are your plans for each?'" I sure hope so.
So, McCain says 'bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb
HUFFINGTON: Q: Were the questions posed by ABC to Barack Obama like the questions directed at Hillary Clinton five months ago by NBC's Tim Russert -- par for the course for a front-runner? "It doesn't have anything to do with being a front-runner. It has to do with the way the right (wing) and their talking points have actually infiltrated the public debate. I found it stunning and honestly I don't think it's about Obama or Clinton. There was something about the relentless use of Republican talking points."
HUFFINGTON: Q: How do you feel about breaking the Obama story where he said that voters in small towns are bitter and clinging to church and guns? "There was very little choice but to post the story. We did not know that it would be so distorted and manipulated by the media, but it was a newsworthy story and we are a news site. I think it was a sort of defining moment. People now believe us that we will post newsworthy stories and the chips will fall where they may."
BENDER: Q: The Pope
has talked a lot about sexual abuse in the Catholic Church on his trip this
week; has it helped defuse this horrible problem? "The Pope is
the head of state. The
- FILED UNDER: Host Posts, Barack Obama
- April 21, 2008







