By Charles Krauthammer
She threw the kitchen sink at him. Accused Barack Obama of plagiarism.
Mocked his eloquence. Questioned his truthfulness about NAFTA.
Wasn't enough. Hillary Clinton still faced extinction in Ohio and
Texas. So what do you do when you have thrown the kitchen sink? Drop
the atomic bomb.
Hence that brilliant "phone call at the White House at 3 a.m."
commercial. In the great tradition of Lyndon Johnson's "Daisy" ad, it
was not subtle -- though in 2008 you don't actually show the nuclear
explosion. It's enough just to suggest an apocalyptic crisis.
Ostensibly the ad was about experience. It wasn't. It was about
familiarity. After all, as Obama pointed out, what exactly is the
experience that prepares Hillary to answer the red phone at 3 a.m.?
She was raising a deeper question: Do you really know who this guy is?
After a whirlwind courtship with this elegant man who rode into town
just yesterday, are you really prepared to entrust him with your
children, the major props in the ad?
After months of fruitlessly shadowboxing an ethereal opponent made up
of equal parts hope, rhetoric and enthusiasm, Clinton had finally made
contact with the enemy. The doubts she raised created just enough
buyer's remorse to persuade Democrats on Tuesday to not yet close the
sale on the mysterious stranger.
The only way either Clinton or John McCain can defeat an opponent as
dazzlingly new and fresh as Obama is to ask: Do you really know this
guy?
Or the corollary: Is he really who he says he is? I'm not talking about
scurrilous innuendo about his origins, religion or upbringing. I'm
talking about the full-fledged man who presents himself to the country
in remarkably grandiose terms as a healer, a conciliator, a uniter.
This, after all, is his major appeal. What makes him different from the
other candidates, from the "old politics" he disdains, is the promise
to rise above party, to take us beyond ideology and other archaic
divisions, and bring us together as "one nation."
It's worked. When Americans are asked who can unite us, 67 percent say
Obama vs. 34 percent for Clinton, with McCain at 51.
How did Obama pull that off? By riding one of the great non sequiturs
of modern American politics.
It goes like this. Because Obama transcends race, it is therefore
assumed that he will transcend everything else -- divisions of region,
class, party, generation and ideology.
The premise here is true -- Obama does transcend race; he has not run
as a candidate of minority grievance; his vision of America is
unmistakably post-racial -- but the conclusion does not necessarily
follow. It is merely suggested in Obama's rhetorically brilliant
celebration of American unity: "young and old, rich and poor, black and
white, Latino and Asian -- who are tired of a politics that divides
us." Hence "the choice in this election is not between regions or
religions or genders. It's not about rich versus poor; young versus
old; and it is not about black versus white. It's about the past versus
the future."
The effect of such sweeping invocations of unity is electric,
particularly because race is the deepest and most tragic of all
American divisions, and this invocation is being delivered by a man who
takes us powerfully beyond it. The implication is that he is therefore
uniquely qualified to transcend all our other divisions.
It is not an idle suggestion. It could be true. The problem is that
Obama's own history suggests that, in his case at least, it is not.
Indeed, his Senate record belies the implication.
The Obama campaign has sent journalists eight pages of examples of his
reaching across the aisle in the Senate. I am not the only one to note,
however, that these are small-bore items of almost no controversy --
more help for war veterans, reducing loose nukes in the former Soviet
Union, fighting avian flu and the like. Bipartisan support for apple
pie is hardly a profile in courage.
On the difficult compromises that required the political courage to
challenge one's own political constituency, Obama flinched: the "Gang
of 14" compromise on judicial appointments, the immigration compromise
to which Obama tried to append union-backed killer amendments and, just
last month, the compromise on warrantless eavesdropping that garnered
68 votes in the Senate. But not Obama's.
Who, in fact, supported all of these bipartisan deals, was a central
player in two of them and brokered the even more notorious
McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform? John McCain, of course.
Yes, John McCain -- intemperate and rough-edged, of sharp elbows and
even sharper tongue. Turns out that uniting is not a matter of rhetoric
or manner, but of character and courage.
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