February 12, 2007

Arianna Huffington Knows What Obama Stands For

by Neil Jensen

She writes

Picking up the rhetorical shank bone, and accepting Obama’s substance anorexia as a given, Russert asked, “Is there now a second phase of the coverage of Barack Obama where reporters and voters will start demanding from him real specifics on the real challenges confronting our country and world?”

It makes me wonder: don’t these guys own a computer? If they took the time to surf the websites of any of the candidates, they’d see that the presidential campaign is already awash in real specifics on all kinds of real challenges. Indeed, they should go to barackobama.com right now and click on ‘Issues.” They’ll see something called “Plan to End the War in Iraq,” which is… a plan to end the war in Iraq. But maybe the war isn’t a real enough challenge for Russert.

They could also check out the page on “Creating a Healthcare System that Works” and read a bunch of real specifics about “Harnessing the Power of Genetic Medicine,” “Fostering Healthy Communities,” and “Fighting AIDS Worldwide.” Though, to be fair, Obama has been willfully vague on what the co-pay is for a dental cleaning, and exactly what allergy drugs would be in the formulary of his prescription drug plan.

In fact, just two days into Obama’s official campaign — a full year and nine months before the election — we know quite a bit about where Obama stands. But there is a much larger point here than the quantity of meat on Barack’s policy bones. It’s that when it comes to presidential politics, specifics on the issues are not really the issue. Campaigns for the White House — especially this one — are about leadership. Specifics are nice, but they’re meaningless without the leadership skills needed to turn the policies into reality. And leadership is a much, much harder thing to come by than position papers.

Obama made this point himself earlier this month at the DNC meeting: “There are those who don’t believe in talking about hope. They say, well, we want specifics, we want details, we want white papers we want plans. We’ve had a lot of plans, Democrats. What we’ve had is a shortage of hope.”

This is one of Obama’s most appealing attributes: his willingness to address perceived liabilities head on (apply directly to forehead), and to turn potential negatives into attributes.

Think I don’t have enough experience? Then go ahead and elect Dick Cheney — he’s got a lengthy resume. Think I need more meat on my policy bones? Then gnaw on the endless, and endlessly detailed, policy laundry lists that, absent true leadership, have gone down to defeat together with the uninspiring Democrats holding them — again and again and again.

People aren’t hungry for policy meat. They are starving for prime-cut leadership.

Well said, Arianna.


No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Powered by WordPress