http://www.slate.com/id/2152252?GT1=8702


Political assumptions can remain constant for long periods and then 
change very quickly. And so they have in the approximately 10 days 
since the publication of Barack Obama's book The Audacity of Hope. In 
the brief time he's been on book tour, Obama has overthrown much of 
the reigning conventional wisdom about what's likely to happen in the 
2008 campaign, how shrewd politicians ought to behave, and what the 
informal rules of the American system really are. Consider the 
following statements thought true by the political class in early 
October but called into question by month's end.
1. Hillary Clinton is the front-runner for the Democratic nomination.
There was a basis for thinking this until Oct. 18, the day Obama 
appeared on Oprah. Hillary has raised a formidable amount of money, 
lined up extensive backing, and has the Democrats' best political 
thinker for a spouse. Obama's bigger advantage is that the party is 
actually excited about him and thinks he could win. Based on an 
unscientific reading of Democratic enthusiasm, Obama, not Hillary, 
will be the de facto Democratic front-runner the day he declares 
himself a candidate. If Obama chooses not to run, he could still sap 
Hillary's strength, the way Colin Powell did Bob Dole's in 1996, by 
reminding primary voters that their most promising candidate isn't in 
the race.

2. John McCain can beat anyone the Democrats put up.
"Our sense right now is that McCain would beat any Democrat including 
Hillary Clinton, and Clinton would beat any Republican except for 
McCain." Thus spake political guru Mark Halperin of ABC News and John 
Harris of the Washington Post in their book, The Way to Win. Obama 
upsets that equation because of his crossover appeal to independents 
and moderate Republicans. Like John McCain, the candidate he would be 
most likely to face in 2008 if he won the Democratic nomination, Obama 
attracts support more through his style, personality, and biography 
than by his specific positions. Last week, New York Times columnist 
David Brooks, a long-standing McCain fan, nearly announced his 
defection to Obama in an admiring column($). As for McCain himself, he 
would evidently prefer to run against Clinton than Obama.

3. Democrats have a problem with religion.
In 2000 and 2004, evangelical Christians and regular churchgoers voted 
overwhelmingly for George W. Bush. Neither Al Gore nor John Kerry was 
comfortable talking about his faith or employing a religious idiom, 
leading many to conclude that Democrats were doomed to function as the 
secular party in a still-religious nation. Obama is the rare Democrat 
who talks easily about faith and values, and who does so without 
upsetting those offended by the mixture of religion and politics. In a 
thoughtful speech last summer that also forms the basis of a chapter 
of his book, Obama explained his own religious motivation and defended 
the use of spiritual language in a political context. He argues that 
his party should explicitly try to win over the spiritual followers of 
more moderate evangelical leaders such as Rick Warren and T.D. Jakes. 
Obama hasn't closed the Democrats' religious gap, but he has initiated 
a productive conversation about how to narrow it.

4. Old liberalism is dead.
Closely allied to the assumption that Democrats can't win because 
they're too secular is the view that they can't win if they're too 
liberal. This assumption has steered Hillary Clinton toward the 
center, following her husband. I tend to share this view myself. But 
somehow it doesn't seem to apply to Obama, who has excited centrist 
Democrats and many moderate Republicans while steering clear of the 
Democratic Leadership Council and earning a perfect-100 score from 
Americans for Democratic Action in his first year in the Senate. Obama 
began his political career as a community organizer and civil rights 
lawyer in Chicago. He is close to unions and voted against CAFTA, the 
most recent free-trade agreement to come before Congress. His domestic 
policies are consistently liberal on issues like national health care 
and affirmative action (though he supports the death penalty in 
certain circumstances and has not come out for gay marriage). He was a 
big dove on the Iraq war. None of this seems off-putting to people who 
would dismiss almost any other candidate with Obama's views.

5. Extreme partisanship works.
Obama can thrive as a liberal because of another paradox: the 
resonance of his moderate, deliberative style and calls for "common 
ground." The lesson of recent elections seemed to be that 
bipartisanship was dead. Congressional gerrymandering, the rise of the 
Section 527 loophole, and a more partisan media have all contributed 
to the current, polarized environment. Obama rejects all of this. The 
main theme of his book is that something has gone wrong with American 
politics because of how divided, absolutist, and bitter it has become. 
He invariably tries to see issues through the eyes of his opponents, 
sometimes to the point of self-parody. Though the call for 
bipartisanship is the quintessential Washington platitude, it doesn't 
sound that way coming from Obama. He somehow makes civility, 
moderation, and compromise into rallying cries.

6. Politicians must tread carefully.
Watching a Hillary Clinton or a Bill Frist, you could get the idea 
that a single miscalculation or misstatement is fatal to American 
political careers. But like McCain in 2000, Obama simply declines to 
play a cautious and calculating game. His approach in the many 
television and public appearances he's been making around his book is 
one of disarming frankness. (McCain, meanwhile, has made his peace 
with Bush, the Republican establishment, and the religious right.) At 
a magazine conference this week in Phoenix, I watched David Remnick of 
The New Yorker interview Obama on a stage. Obama declined to deeply 
regret his much-publicized youthful indiscretions with drugs. He 
suggested that believing in angels is a sign of irrationality. And he 
acknowledged that his wife doesn't like his choice of careers. He 
disarms challenges with grace, humor, and unexpected candor.

7. The bubble must pop.
Skeptics note that we've been through swoons like this 
before-including for McCain in 2000. Obama could turn out to be just 
another liberal fad, like Howard Dean in 2004. Once he decides to run, 
the cynics assure us, his halo will tarnish or crack. And maybe so. 
But this time, maybe not.



xponent

Obamate In '08 Maru

rob


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