ChrisWeigant.com

Please support ChrisWeigant.com this
holiday season!

Barack Obama Is Smarter Than Us

[ Posted Monday, November 3rd, 2008 – 17:21 UTC ]

Barack Obama has run one of the most impressive political campaigns in all of American history. That is saying quite a lot, but I truly feel he has earned that much, no matter what happens tomorrow night. The Obama campaign did not leak, and they did not squabble amongst themselves in public -- right there, two astounding feats that no other candidate in the race could manage. Should Obama be elected, and should he run his White House the way he has run his campaign; then we are about to see some professionalism and basic competence in Washington once again, instead of the pure partisan rancor and dysfunction we've (sadly) become accustomed to.

But it has to be said -- Barack Obama is where he is today because he is smarter than us. Now, by "us" I am not referring to you, dear reader (perish the thought!), but rather the collective "us" out here blogging in the progressive trenches on the left. We (and I certainly include myself in this) have been second-guessing Obama's political tactics and strategy for over a year now. Obama has had us tearing our hair out at times with frustration, and each time he wound up proving us wrong.

For months and months now, we bloggers have been telling Obama what to say and what not to say, what to do and what not to do, where to go and where not to go, and who to pal around with and who to shun. At times, we have gotten the collective vapors over the burning question: "Why isn't Obama campaigning the way I would tell him to campaign?!?" Obama showed us all that hysterics weren't the way to go -- and that the way to win the election was cool, calm, and collected. Which he does admirably well, I have to admit.

First it was Iowa, then the later primaries. Then the Reverend Wright fiasco. Then how Obama should campaign in Texas and Ohio. Then the long, long period of angst before Pennsylvania voted. The end-game with Hillary. The pre-convention jitters ("He's going on VACATION?!? NOW?!? What is he THINKING?!?"). The convention itself -- who speaks, when they speak, what to say.

And the "Party Unity My Ass" crowd (the "PUMAs") deserve a special mention in here as well. They bamboozled the media into covering their story, and then when their uprising didn't happen at the convention, all the media had left was: "What an astounding display of party unity!"

The last few months have been particularly intense -- Paris Hilton, the debates, Bill Ayers, Sarah Palin. Especially Palin. Anyone who thinks I'm exaggerating over saying we got "the vapors" just needs to go back to the week after the Republican convention (and before her ABC and CBS interviews) to see that I am not overstating our hand-wringing.

Even when Obama started his final rise in the polls, after the economic meltdown, we still couldn't entirely make the core fear of losing go away. This led to ever-more heartfelt pleas for Obama to do something differently.

But Barack Obama was smarter than us all. He has shown us how it should be done. His success is due in part to not listening to our hysterics, and doing what he thought he should in order to win.

As an aside, I firmly believe that in his first 100 days in office (should he win tomorrow), President Obama is going to intentionally pick a fight with the hard left. He's going to seriously annoy the progressive blogosphere wing of the party with some action he either takes or doesn't take. This, I should add, is going to annoy me personally... but I bet it will only improve his general approval with America-at-large.

Now, it has to be admitted that the bloggy left is a growing Democratic force, and it fulfills an important function -- to raise issues the mainstream media ignores, to police said mainstream media, and to push our own pet issues to the fore (most especially when Democratic politicians are content to ignore them). Our liberal voice is strong, and growing louder. And we are righteous in our beliefs that we have the answers. We force things to get done, and get done right. There's no denying our growing influence.

But I have to say, once again, that Barack Obama was right not to always listen to me, and others of my ilk. He knew through it all that the perfect is the enemy of the good, and that a purist lefty candidate would not win the White House. So I have to stand up and admit it.

Obama was right. We were wrong. And he has shown he knew what he was doing all along, which makes me even more comfortable casting my vote for him tomorrow.

 

[Program Note: Instead of Wednesday's usual Electoral Math column, I will be posting my picks for the election some time tomorrow afternoon, both on my site and at the Huffington Post, before the polls close.]

 

Cross-posted at The Huffington Post

 

-- Chris Weigant

 

15 Comments on “Barack Obama Is Smarter Than Us”

  1. [1] 
    Elizabeth Miller wrote:

    Say, what? You're part of the "bloggy left" and stuck in the "progressive trenches"?

    Who knew.

    May I predict that it will take less than the first 100 days of an Obama/Biden administration to cure you of all of that. In fact, I will hereby bet the farm - even if it's Iowa - that you are safely tucked into the fold of the true blue centrists before Inauguration Day!

  2. [2] 
    Chris Weigant wrote:

    Elizabeth -

    Depends on who you ask.

    I thought it was only polite while castigating others to include myself as a mea culpa. I'm not really on the left/right scale, I'm off in the third (second?) dimension of "reality-based politics." But, like I said, I felt it was only polite to blame myself as well (for all those Friday Talking Points columns, mostly).

    But I bet if you asked Rush Limbaugh, he'd say "Who? Chris who?" Heh heh. But then if he read a column or two of mine, I bet he'd call me a lefty. Close enough for government work, as they say...

    :-)

    -CW

  3. [3] 
    Osborne Ink wrote:

    WHAT?! A Democrat admitting to non-omnipotence?! I thought Dems were all know-it-all Al Gore clones, or something.

  4. [4] 
    fstanley wrote:

    Trying to cater to the middle without offending those on either side too much seems to be how you get elected to the White House in this country. The first 100 days should be very interesting.

    Please don't stop making suggestions in your FTP posts because there is still a lot of work to do after the election to repare all the damage that has been done.

    ...Stan

  5. [5] 
    Elizabeth Miller wrote:

    CW,

    I'd never ask Rush Limbaugh - or the vast majority of the idiots who call themselves journalists or pundits, for that matter - anything about anything because the collective lot of them are completely incapable of intelligent thought or cogent analysis, period.

    If you ask me, you have no business copping a mea culpa - not for any of your blogging which rests in the company of a select few who have reported on the critical issues and difficult challenges of the day with level-headed intelligence and clear-eyed insight, always infused with a reliably phenomenal sense of humour.

    The media coverage of this campaign has been a major eye-opener, even for a moderately (bordering precariously on right off the cliff) cynical and self-described media critic like myself. It seems as though I have always known that you can seldom believe what you read or hear in the media but I literally had no idea about just how dangerously incompetent and inept they could be. And, sadly, I have no hope that this particular situation will change, anytime soon or ever.

    And, so...Chris, don’t ever stop doing what you’re doing or even think about apologizing for it because we need you and your reality-based political commentary far too desperately!

  6. [6] 
    kevinem2 wrote:

    Chris- A thoughtful post, as always. A few comments..I think he's already shown the "hard-left" that he's pragmatic...FISA, the looking worse every day bailout "plan".
    I just hope he's as intelligent as he's been in the past and has detailed plans in place for how to clean up the most toxic spills he'll inherit.

  7. [7] 
    kevinem2 wrote:

    A late P.S.- what a tragedy his grandmother passed on just before the culmination of her upbringing!

  8. [8] 
    Michale wrote:

    Only in America...

    You get arrested twice for driving while suspended, you can't vote.

    You blow up buildings, cause the deaths of people and dedicate your book to RFK's assassin and you get to vote..

    What a crazy country this is sometimes..

    Michale.....

  9. [9] 
    Elizabeth Miller wrote:

    Michale,

    Oh my God! Don't tell me they didn't let you vote!

  10. [10] 
    Michale wrote:

    Hehehehehe

    No, I'm free and clear...

    Naw, I just read an article about Obama voting. It mentioned that Ayers voted in the same place a little before Obama.

    It just got me thinking that a piddley-arsed "crime" like DWS prevents an American from voting..

    But a terrorist that blew up buildings, was responsible for deaths and thinks that RFK's assassin was a "political" prisoner gets to cast a vote..

    It simply boggles the rational mind...

    I voted last week under early voting here in FL. Unfortunatly, I didn't have my camera with me (grandson being born took priority, camera-wise :D ) so ya'all just gonna have to take my word for it. :D

    Michale.....

  11. [11] 
    Michale wrote:

    So, how do ya'all feel about the reports in two Blank Panther types, in full militia regalia standing in front of a Philly voting station, one armed with a police baton??

    Before you answer that, imagine a couple of rednecks wearing T-Shirts with Confederate Flags and camo fatigues, standing in front of an Alabama voting station, one armed with a baseball bat..

    I can picture the Democrats reaction to the former..

    "eh, what's the problem? They aren't doing anything..."

    And the Dem reaction to the latter??

    "OH MY GODS!!! VOTER INTIMIDATION!!! ARRGHHH!!!!!"

    Go ahead.. Tell me I am wrong. :D

    Michale....

  12. [12] 
    Chris Weigant wrote:

    Michale -

    I'm stuck wondering what exactly a "Blank" Panther looks like. Invis-i-kitty?

    Heh heh. Couldn't resist.

    My election picks column is up...

    -CW

  13. [13] 
    Elizabeth Miller wrote:

    HA! That's too funny. I think that was a freudian slip...right, Michale?

  14. [14] 
    Michale wrote:

    Oh, that's just WRONG on so many different levels!!

    Grrrrrr.....

    OK, ya got me on that one...

    Michale.....

  15. [15] 
    Chris Weigant wrote:

    Sorry... it's been a LOOOOOONG election season, y'know?

    Heh heh.

    -CW

Comments for this article are closed.