The decisive news from last night is that John McCain can turn his missiles
on the Democrats, particularly Barack Obama, from this point forward. McCain
was in perfect form this evening, suggesting subtly that Obama has a messiah
complex about saving America while McCain humbly understands that America
saved him. It's only the beginning. In this line of attack, McCain was
echoing the Paul Krugmans and Clintonites suggesting that the Obama campaign
is a "cult.*"
Faced with a genuine and surprising mass movement, the elites' immediately
question the motives and mental stability of anyone willing to give up their
creature comforts to campaign for a cause. By that standard, the American
revolution was a "cult". The earliest town meetings were a threat to the
royal governor of Massachusetts who complained that "the Meanest
Inhabitants...by their constant Attendance there generally are the majority
and outvote the Gentlemen, Merchants, Substantial Traders and all the better
part of the Inhabitants."
But McCain's own story, apart from what he says of Obama, has its own power.
I was in Hanoi last month looking at the very spot that McCain broke his
arms parachuting from his fighter-bomber into an urban lake. I talked with
the famed novelist Bao Ninh, author of Sorro*ws of War, who* was one of the
teenagers who rushed to pull McCain out of the lake into his six years of
captivity. It was a story of epic proportions on all sides, like nothing
that Obama (or Clinton) has ever experienced.
McCain is a worthy Republican candidate with an understated heroism of
character, able to win independents and Western voters, who tends to be
trusted by Americans who feel threatened by war.
Democratic consultants who plan to attack McCain on issues of age, character
or temperament should forget such nastiness. They will only push
independents and some Democrats in McCain's direction.
The real issues which many Democratic consultants and insiders fear to
address are Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and "national security". They are
haunted by the party's anti-war past, even though they understand that the
Vietnam war was a disaster. McCain's strategists smell this Democratic
vulnerability. They will try to achieve a bipartisan consensus that there is
something called "Islamo-fascism", that the menace is unified, and that it
is evil, that it can be confronted only by military force. Thus they can
force Democrats into arguing that Iraq is a distraction from Afghanistan,
that Marines should be transferred from Baghdad to Kabul in a downward
spiral of fighting al Qaeda. They may find themselves trapped in McCain's
battlefield of assumptions.
The hemorrhaging loser tonight was Hillary Clinton, who appeared caught up
in escapist fantasy in El Paso as Obama swept through three more primaries.
So far, she has failed to settle on a convincing contrast with Obama as time
runs out. Her greatest problem is that 75 percent of voters have either
voted against her (in Democratic primaries), have unfavorable opinions of
her (40 percent overall), or even hate her (half of Republicans). She still
can win against McCain in a Democratic year, but those are overwhelming
odds. She seems entirely focused now on simply not losing in the primaries.
But even Clinton wins in Texas, Ohio, and Pennsylvania - not guaranteed -
will leave her short of a delegate majority and she could be trailing Obama
38-12 after the fifty primaries.
That leaves Obama, and little can be said about the brilliance of his
campaign so far. He now is slightly ahead of Clinton in the delegate count,
and eight percentage points ahead of McCain in the best polling data (six
points more than Clinton). He is the frontrunner and, if past history is any
guide, Obama will face the magnified media scrutiny and negative attacks
that often accompany that status.
Any sudden and surprising development -- a hawkish turn by Obama that shocks
his supporters, or an unknown scandal -- could demoralize or divide his
idealistic and voluntary base. So far, there is no sign of these dangers on
the horizon.
In an earlier version of this blog mistakenly sent out, I erred in implying
that the Obama movement is passionately organized around proven campaign
tactics and values of solidarity alone. If there is any "cult" in question,
it is the cliques o*f New York Tim*es military writers like Michael Gordon
and Judith Miller, and the neo-liberal free traders who dominate the op-ed
pages. If anything, the Obama movement needs to push its inherent populist
and progressive spirit upwards to the higher circles where many of Obama's
policy advisers themselves adhere to military, corporate and trade paradigms
rejected or questioned by most of the world. They are eerily reminiscent of
John Kennedy's "best and brightest" that brought us the Bay of Pigs and
Vietnam, before the young president took a different course. (More to come
on the community organizing tradition and the Obama campaign.)