Saturday, August 23, 2008

"Clear-Eyed Pragmatist": The Obama Brand Has Come Full-Circle

Perhaps the most striking feature of Joe Biden's speech in Springfield today was his description of Obama as a "clear-eyed pragmatist who will get the job done". This is certainly different from the rather more abstract meaning of the Obama "CHANGE" brand as it was applied during the primary campaign. In fact, it sounds more along the lines of how Hillary Clinton was trying to present herself.

It's also a description, of course, that could reasonably be applied to Joe Biden. The selection of Biden represented the inevitable terminus of a route that Obama had chosen in the days immediately following the conclusion of Democratic primaries, one which was signified by his choice to accept public financing, and his decision to side with Nancy Pelosi in supporting the FISA compromise bill. Along the way, there have been other milestones, ranging from Obama's tepid endorsement of the Gang of 10 compromise to his decision to pay out so-called 'street money' during the general election campaign in cities like Philadelphia and Detroit.

To certain progressives, all of this has come as something of a disappointment. Obama's brand during the primaries was essentially an anti-establishment one, and that allowed him to beat the establishment choice of Hillary Clinton. It would surely have been a lot of fun to see how everything played out had Obama not compromised on FISA, not accepted public funding, and then had picked someone like Kathleen Sebelius as his running mate.

But in other ways, "clear-eyed pragmatist" is a more accurate reflection of the 'real' Obama, and certainly of the ways that he made his way through the Chicago system, as Ryan Lizza's seminal piece in the New Yorker concluded:

Perhaps the greatest misconception about Barack Obama is that he is some sort of anti-establishment revolutionary. Rather, every stage of his political career has been marked by an eagerness to accommodate himself to existing institutions rather than tear them down or replace them. When he was a community organizer, he channelled his work through Chicago's churches, because they were the main bases of power on the South Side. He was an agnostic when he started, and the work led him to become a practicing Christian. At Harvard, he won the presidency of the Law Review by appealing to the conservatives on the selection panel. In Springfield, rather than challenge the Old Guard Democratic leaders, Obama built a mutually beneficial relationship with them. "You have the power to make a United States senator," he told Emil Jones in 2003. In his downtime, he played poker with lobbyists and Republican lawmakers. In Washington, he has been a cautious senator and, when he arrived, made a point of not defining himself as an opponent of the Iraq war.
And in other ways, the primaries version of the CHANGE brand was a poor match for the mood of the country. The most acute problem with George W. Bush is not that he's corrupt, not that he's the inevitable consequence of a broken system, but rather simply that his mode of thinking led him into an series of exceptionally poor decisions that left the country worse off. The problems of the Bush administration are not abstract -- they are highly tangible, made more manifest still by the deterioration in the economy that occurred over the first quarter of this year. What CHANGE means now is this:
i) Not Bush, or someone who thinks like him;
ii) Working our way, by any means possible, out of the hole that Bush left us in.
This certainly isn't what CHANGE meant during the primaries. But it's a message that voters should have little trouble understanding. And now that the Obama campaign seems to understand it too, it should help them to provide a more focused and disciplined message.

107 comments

Franco said...

I consider myself a progressive and I think what Obama has done is OK. The whining progressives like the self serving David Sirota was on Fox talking down Obama-Biden, all the while proclaming they are just telling it like it is....LOL....right, Fox only has whining progressives on who will bash Dems,so he goes on... then Sirota can proclaim that the repubs are destroying our country, while he and his rhetoric are helping their cause.

SarahLawrenceScott said...

I think "clear eyed pragmatist" was Obama's brand early in the primary process. It's what attracted me to him, certainly. If you think back to the earliest states, his appeal to independents and cross-over Republicans was a big part of the deal.

SalP7 said...

It would surely have been a lot of fun to see how everything played out had Obama not compromised on FISA, not accepted public funding, and then had picked someone like Kathleen Sebelius as his running mate.

I don't think it would be fun to see John McCain in the White House. The Dems can't win with just the "progressives"

Sedi said...

Obama always was a pragmatist, and in the Democratic race was rather middle-of-the-road in ideological terms. I think there was always evidence that he was willing to compromise if it could benefit the larger causes that he was seeking to advance (including his own candidacy). But "clear-eyed pragmatist" is not the best slogan for a relatively new senator to beat out the Clinton dynasty in a democratic primary. And I think Obama certainly is seeking to change the way things are done in Washington. But you can't try to change everything at once and just have everyone go along with it. Just ask Kucinich.

MonsieurKovacs said...

Uh, he didn't accept public financing...

assmole said...

By now Obama's lost the plot. He's forgotten who he is and what he set out to do. Obama, after all the effort to 'find himself' (read his 'memoir', chaps) has gone and lost himself again in the mad dash for votes. Poor lad. Maybe if he had finished the primaries off quicker, he could have retained a shred of integrity. Maybe if he had won New Hampshire. Maybe if he had trained his eye on winnning Texas on March 4. It would have saved his supporters (as well as Hillary's, -including Hillary herself!-) a few dimes for the general election campaign and, even, celebratory doughnuts on Nov 5. It's the lack of killer instinct, as evidenced by his bowling as well as his performance in the primaries that has let him down. Shame 'cos he's 'likeable enough'.

DaveG said...

I've been reading this site you went by Poblano and had the old logo, Nate, and I've got to say this is the first time I've disagreed with you on anything, ever (including PECOTA rankings). What exactly did "Change" mean during the primaries? Certainly it's more defined now, but I'm not sure that definition leads to dilution.

The way I always saw it, "Change" meant "having a radically different worldview- and domestic view- then the current administration". Perhaps the primary campaign was slightly Charlie Kane-esque, and now it's more on message, but once again I don't see "pragmatism" as clashing with "change". Rome wasn't built in a day, and complete a change of Washington won't come November 6th. I always felt that Obama has said that "change won't be easy, it'll take a while", although this part of the message way have been skipped over before.

And didn't Obama reject public financing?

Stephen C. Rose said...

Ryan's article was hardly seminal. I am quite surprised as an early attention to the campaign and who Obama is, according to those who wrote about him in earlier days, gave ample indication of Obama's centrist, pragmatic and reasonable tendencies. That he became a hero of progressives until FISA more or less was probably a complex amalgamation of factors including a sort of romanticism which I am quite sure Obama does not embrace,

Barack as President would be, I think, progressive tending, given what David Wilhelm called a 65 percent presidency -- the capacity to get things passed in Congress.

But that he is seen as a lapsed progressive now is a stretch. He is in comparison to McCain a reasonable alternative if you want cogent domestic policy and an end to neocon-influenced foreign policy. If a majority agrees, we win,

Li said...

I could have sworn he rejected public financing.

stevie314159 said...
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SarahLawrenceScott said...
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The Dude Abides said...

Nate, Obama took a ton of heat for REJECTING public financing. Isn't that what you meant?

janinsanfran said...

Obama, like all Presidents, will be exactly as good for we the people as we the people make him be. (The only modern exception I can think of is Lyndon Johnson who was in some ways unexpectedly good -- and fatally bad in relation to the time's key issue, yet another war.)

I am neither optimistic nor pessimistic.

Subterranean said...
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Subterranean said...

"I can run for office with no talking points, no talking points..."

THAT is the Obama brand---the brand of a politician who, principally, happens to also be a decent human being.

The vague promises of "change" are pointless. Nothing good every happens. But sometimes good people come along and act decently---and Obama is one of them.

Continue to Spread the Word!!! said...

AP is ripping this pick, surprising for this biased associate press:

AP: Pick Shows Lack of Confidence

Like Nate was saying all the past 2 weeks on here bringing HRC on is the only way to sure the base, and according to an MSNBC poll, at least 3.8 million Dems, 21% of HRC voters, are backing McCain, with an addt. 27% undecided.. I bet many will now back McCain as they were waiting to see if Obama would pick Hillary, not the case.