The narrative out of last week’s ABC News “debate” seems to be set. Maybe Obama’s stumbling hurt him. Maybe Clinton’s resemblance to the vast right wing conspiracy hurt her. But, those things are pretty much a wash. The big loser was ABC News (and citizens generally, I suppose).
Frank Rich has a column on the “televised train wreck.” Charlie Gibson, in particular, is the subject of mockery since his primary display of passion was in opposition to an increase in the capital gains tax which seems to go along with his view that a family income of $200,000 per year is somehow “typical.” (In actual fact, 96% of families earn less than that.)
As between Obama, Clinton, and McCain, Rich seems to take Obama’s side:
The video of Mrs. Clinton knocking back drinks in an Indiana bar drowned out the scratchy audio of Mr. Obama’s wispy words in San Francisco. Her campaign didn’t seem to recognize that among the many consequences of the Bush backlash is a revulsion against such play acting. Americans belatedly learned the hard way that the brush-clearing cowboy of the Crawford “ranch†(it’s a country house, not a working ranch) was in reality an entitled Andover-Yale-Harvard oil brat whose arrogance has left us where we are now. Voters don’t want a rerun from a Wellesley-Yale alumna who served on the board of Wal-Mart.
Privileged though they are, Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama do want to shape policy to help the less well-heeled. Mr. McCain, who had a far more elite upbringing than either of them and whose wife’s estimated fortune exceeds the Clintons’, is not just condescending to working Americans but trying to hoodwink them. Next week, in a replay of the 2000 Bush campaign’s “compassionate conservative†photo ops among black schoolchildren, he will show he’s a “different kind of Republican†by visiting what he calls the “forgotten†America of Alabama’s “black belt†and the old steel town of Youngstown, Ohio. What he wants voters to forget is the inequity of his new economic plan.
Another good passage:
However out of touch Mr. Obama is with “ordinary Americans,†many Americans, ordinary and not, have concluded that the talking heads blathering about blue-collar men, religion, guns and those incomprehensible “YouTube young people†are even more condescending and out of touch. When a Washington doyenne like Mary Matalin, freighted with jewelry, starts railing about elitists on “Meet the Press,†as she did last Sunday, it’s pure farce. It’s typical of the syndrome that the man who plays a raging populist on CNN, Lou Dobbs, dismissed Mr. Obama last week by saying “we don’t need another Ivy League-educated knucklehead.†Mr. Dobbs must know whereof he speaks, since he’s Harvard ’67.
Rev. AJB says
I asked my confirmation class who they would vote for (if 11-14 year-olds were allowed to vote). Had one Mc Cain, one Hillary, and eight Obama’s. Funny…the one McCain is the granddaughter of a died-in-the-wool union Democrat. Don’t think I’ll tell him about that!
BTW I did not tell them how I am going to vote…seperation of church and state and all.
PTN says
All three candidates can really in no way relate to ordinary working people.I agree with the play acting stuff whether doing a shot and beer(Clinton) or bowling (Obama).McCain hasn’t started his acting yet I don’t think so anyway.I think it’s important to realize as PA. governor Ed Rendel said to a focus group of college students that all of these posing as the average person things are arranged by media consultants and the like and I’ve never seen any presidential candiate come off looking good in these settings.
Sorry but we,family and many friends love Lou Dobbs and never miss the program all are democrats.I’ve been a registered democrat all my life but now lean republican but will never change registration because we live in a democratic county and many times the local races are decided in the primary and I believe it’s every citizens duty to vote if not don’t complain.I already voted early and although as I sated earlier I do not support Clinton,Obama,or McCain I voted for Clinton.I couldn’t bring myself to not cast a vote for president.