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Mark Shields
Mark Shields
11 May 2013
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The Race up to Now ...

Comment

What sauce do you eat with crow? That's the question asked by yours truly and an unhealthy majority of my fellow travelers on the press bus who could not resist speculating the fallout from Hillary Clinton's losing the Texas or Ohio primary.

Would she soldier on or get out in order to preserve her dignity and her future? Or would her campaign troops lead such a scorched-earth, take-no-prisoners assault on Barack Obama in Pennsylvania that the survivor would be left unelectable in November?

But those pesky voters once again — just as they had after Obama won Iowa, after Clinton won New Hampshire and Nevada, and after Obama later won 12 contests in a row — humbled all professional and amateur know-it-alls by declaring loudly: "You were just as wrong in 2007 when you declared Clinton 'inevitable' as you were in 2008 when you called Obama 'inevitable.' This is our decision. We take it seriously, and don't try to take it away from us!"

Once again chastened by election results, I modestly offer the following observations on this remarkable presidential saga.

American Optimism: Missing From Campaign 2008.

By actual measurement, Americans have consistently been the most optimistic people on the planet. Because of their pervasive optimism, Americans reflexively welcomed change, which they judged to be synonymous with improvement, while other peoples in more established societies spent time, energy and effort trying to hold back change.

In 2008, American optimism is almost as scarce as Rudy Giuliani delegates (the former New York mayor spent $55 million for zero delegates). Fully two out of three Americans now believe that their own children's lives and futures will not be as bright and as full as their own lives have been.

"Hope," as Sir Francis Bacon noted, "is a good breakfast, but it is a bad supper." The electorate is firmly in the grasp of — not economic anxiety, but more accurately, economic fear.

In hurting places like Ohio and Pennsylvania, hope, alone, is not a compelling campaign theme.

How bad is the economy? Here are two, as yet, unconfirmed reports: In New Jersey, the economic picture is so bleak that the Soprano family was forced to lay off three judges. When the abusive Ebenezer Scrooge fired poor Bob Cratchit, immediately 73 people applied for his job.

American voters are always in the market for one of two types of presidential candidates: A tough, no-nonsense liberal and/or an upbeat, compassionate conservative.

The last liberal candidate who projected a genuine toughness was Robert Kennedy in 1968. Ronald Reagan in 1980 and George W. Bush in 2000 qualified as upbeat conservatives who showed a compassionate side.

Based upon his insistence of reminding GOP primary voters that undocumented immigrants working in the United States illegally still had to be treated as "God's children" and his environmental record, John McCain could qualify as a compassionate conservative. Now, can Barack Obama show, in the trenchant question of respected pollster Peter Hart, "that he is not only tough enough to take a punch, but aggressive enough to throw a punch"?

To that, I would add: Will Obama prove his toughness not just by attacking Clinton or McCain, but by publicly telling some powerful interest group what they do not want to hear?

Can he tell an assembly of super-wealthy hedge-fund moguls that their paying federal taxes at a rate lower than that imposed upon the human beings who clean and scrub their executive washrooms is morally and politically unacceptable? Or how about telling a teachers' union that in an Obama administration, teachers will earn new respect and rewards by first establishing their professional qualifications by passing tests in the subject matters they are teaching?

To John McCain's credit, he seems to loyally support President Bush when he believes Bush is right, and McCain tries mightily to keep quiet the other 65 percent of the time.

To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.

COPYRIGHT 2008 MARK SHIELDS



Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment
Well, the reason you all in the media got it so wrong is not because of the unpredictable voters. It's because Ms. Billary outsmarted you along with the voters themselves. She calls the media biased against her and what do the idiots of the media do? Swallow it whole and serve themselves up to her for some of the most juicy prime time opportunities a political season has ever seen. Boy did she sucker you. Here's some advice: Don't think about buying any bridges for a while.

By the way, have you all listened to her diction lately? She's soundin' more suth'n' by the minute, and I'll be switched if I didn't think they don't let nice girls from Chicago who talk like that into upper crusty schools like Wellesley and Yale.

I will say this, though. Ms. Billary caught Obama flat-footed, and if he can't learn how to return fire a little better and look a little less like a kid with his hand caught in a cookie jar when asked long-anticipated, garden-variety questions about issues like the Rezko affair, maybe he is just too green.

It's time for him to start swinging. He happens to be in the ring, and that's where you throw punches if you want to walk out instead of getting dragged out flat on your back. He can still fight a fair fight, but he can't just stand there and act surprised as he lets himself get kicked in the groin. And yes, Mark, he still hasn't answered your legitimate question about whether he plans to keep his promise to forego private fundraising and participate in the public campaign financing system. He needs to. I would really hate to think that we are starting to see a backbone issue with this once-in-a-lifetime candidate.

A final parting thought about Ms. Billary. I read Frank Herbert's column today in the New York Times about Obama today, in which Mr. Herbert shines a light on her sweet response to Steve Kroft on 60 Minutes when he asked her if she believes Obama is a Muslim: “No. No. Why would I? No, there is nothing to base that on. As far as I know.” I do hope Obama can find his fists and get going, because if he doesn't, I think an awful lot of democrats may just not want to soil themselves by voting for a candidate who can play that kind of card.

Comment: #1
Posted by: Masako
Sat Mar 8, 2008 10:54 AM
Oops. I meant to say Bob Herbert, not Frank Herbert.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Masako
Sat Mar 8, 2008 11:31 AM
Thank you Mark Shields for another good article. I would like to comment that Mrs. Clintons wins were hardly routs. In fact they were bought with a lot of amunition that will serve as well in Republican hands, especially her ranking of Mccain as more prepared for the presidency than Obama. In fact, the qualifications are slight for the presidency, and the lower standard has often been met. But as an intelligent, and learned man, Obama is as qualified as anyone. We, as a largly uneducated, prejudiced, parochial population have the good sense to fear intelligent people in positions of leadership; but how does a country survive without people actually qualified to think at the helm of state?
Another comment I would offer is this: We have always embraced change as a people because we looked at our government, and our laws as a rock of stability standing against any tide or storm of change. We have been able to look to business and an unfettered free market as a source of good that might be governed to curb excess. What does one do with the rock of government when it becomes a mill stone around your neck? When government shackles the hands of the injured to keep them from acting in their own defense? When government sides with the enemies of peace, and the friends of exploitation. This thing with the economy could not have happened without years of government negligence. It has played the largest part of the relocation of national wealth to the rich. If property were not protected from taxation while labor carried the country there would be no great boom or bust of property values. If interest for housing were not protected by law, and encouraged it would not be the great drain of wealth from working people to the wealthy. So, we have loved change when the winds of change blew balmy, but when they pile up thunderheads over the bottom lands; lookout.
Comment: #3
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Mon Mar 10, 2008 3:35 PM
According to exit polls 24% of the people who voted for Hillary in Mississippi were Republicans. (http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/3/12/81339/4516/40/474909) This is not white people going for Hillary and blacks going for Barack. This is the Rush Limbaugh people trying to ruin the Democratic primary. This needs to be covered. Its the main reason why Hillary is still in the race. She would have lost Ohio and Texas if it weren't for Republicans trying to get her to win the primary so that a Republican will win the general election.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Charlie Ransford
Thu Mar 13, 2008 9:22 AM
I agree with Charlie Ransford ^^^ there were many Republicans going for Hillary and the amazing thing is Limbaugh talked of this for weeks before yet no media person picked up on it. If the votes had gone as expected then I think Clinton would have been toast. Now she is slinging more mud whilst you media types (you just said tonight on NPR) that the Black vote is going to Obama with no mention that these same votes in near the same percentages went to Gore, and Clinton before him. Also no one mentions the fact that Many in Mississippi, Georgia, and Texas (to some extent) were impacted by Katrina and many of them just happen to be Black. Still the Black vote percentage for Obama, Gore and Clinton are all into the 90%.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Daly
Fri Mar 14, 2008 7:03 PM
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