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January 8, 2008
University of Virginia Professor James Ceaser meditates on Barack Obama's invocation of mystical "Change" as the keystone of his campaign: It looms in Obama's discourse like a mystical concept that is larger than the sum of its parts. It is Change with a capital C. Break it down into its individual pieces--the changes--and it loses much of its luster. It becomes little more than a conventional litany of liberal Democratic programs: ethics reform, universal health care, fairer taxes, and ending the war in Iraq. But allow it to soar in Obama's eloquence and it achieves almost a moral and spiritual dimension. Change will bring "a different kind of politics" that produces a leader (Obama) able to reach across party lines to end polarization, albeit entirely on liberal terms. This aspect of Obama's appeal, which elevates politics beyond concrete issues, has completely confounded Hillary Clinton's campaign. She has had no answer to it.Do the Republicans have an answer for Obama, even if Ms. Hillary lacks one? Ceaser thinks so, in the person of John McCain: The greatest real change in the presidential campaign so far has been the shift in the military situation in Iraq. It has revived John McCain's campaign and turned the Democrats' debate into one largely about domestic issues, with vague references to our standing in the world. Obama's stump speech has evolved over the past few months to accommodate this shift. Republicans can take some solace from this change. 2008 will not be a simple repeat of 2006.I can think of a few things in response to Professor Ceaser's concluding question, but I take his point. To comment on this post, go here. |