Dominic Lawson: Can Obama hope to win if he lacks the common touch?
Tuesday, 12 August 2008
If fear had a smell, the westerly breezes would be bearing a rank odour from the other side of the Atlantic: it would be emanating from the pores of the Democratic Party establishment as it contemplates the dwindling of Barack Obama's previously impressive opinion poll lead over John McCain.
This really was not meant to happen. The intensity and discipline of Obama's campaigning has been unremitting, while that on behalf of McCain has seemed incoherent, not helped by the 71-year old Arizona Senator's occasional senior moment. So how on earth could Gallup last week have found that those it claims to be "likely voters" are currently 49 per cent in favour of McCain and only 45 per cent for Obama?
Some in the Obama camp complain that it has come as the McCain campaign has switched to "negative advertising". This seems to be largely based on a Republican ad called "The One", which splices images of Obama with Charlton Heston as Moses parting the Red Sea. Actually, since Obama had declared of his victory in the Democratic primaries that "this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and the planet began to heal", he was almost asking to be satirised.
You might think that the Democrats would be grateful to their opponents for comparing Barack Obama with a Biblical miracle-worker but, of course, they understood the unspoken sub-text – that Obama is man of unbelievable pretentiousness. The implicit contrast is with John McCain, the down-to-earth guy who tells it like it is in plain language – "the straight-talk express".
There is also a painful awareness in the Democrat camp that their candidate does not always help himself to appear more representative of "ordinary Americans". They still shudder over his unguarded comments to wealthy San Franciscan party donors about the industrial working classes who bitterly "cling to guns or religion", or his remarking in Iowa, apropos of rising food prices: "Anybody gone into Whole Foods lately and seen what they charge for arugula?"
So McCain was spot on – at least in domestic American political terms – to contrast his attendance at a motorcycle convention in South Dakota with Obama's grandiose quasi-presidential tour of Europe's capitals: "As you may know... a couple hundred thousand Berliners made a lot of noise for my opponent. I'll take the roar of 50,000 Harleys any day!" The bikers loved that one – and they were almost certainly not the only ones.
Obama's supporters will protest, reasonably enough, that their man, of mixed race and brought up with a father absent, had to fight against social adversity to reach his current elevated status, while McCain comes from what might be described as America's military aristocracy. The point, however, is not where you come from – although Obama has manufactured his own personal history into an astonishing political narrative – but how you come across.
We see the same phenomenon, or something like it, in this country. When William Hague was leader of the Conservatives, the optimists in the party (of which there were admittedly very few at the time) thought his Yorkshire accent and comprehensive education would make him seem more like a man of the people than the privately educated barrister, Tony Blair. Yet the New Labour leader was eerily brilliant at making himself seem more, well, normal – and not like a politician at all.
In his Labour Party conference speech of 1999, Blair made use of this, referring to leading frontbench Tories of the day such as Hague, John Redwood and Ann Widdecombe, and describing them as "weird, weird, weird". When I remarked to Hague at the time that I thought this was rather cruel, he said, with a mixture of ruefulness and characteristic honesty: "Yes, but he's right."
In a newspaper interview a few days ago, Hague suggested that David Cameron, in this sense at least, was the heir to Blair: "Normally, there is something peculiar about us politicians ... we all have our foibles. David Cameron is remarkably free of such flaws. He does very normal things like go down to Tesco and having his bike stolen."
Thus, although Cameron's own back story is one that you would not have thought would appeal to the demotic age – son of a rich stockbroker, prep school, Eton, Oxford (and the Bullingdon Club), financial PR executive – the Tory leader manages with ineffable ease to come across as "in touch with ordinary people". Gordon Brown, however ...
Barack Obama, obviously, does not have Gordon Brown's problem, or indeed that of his immediate predecessors as Democratic presidential candidate, John Kerry and Al Gore. Obama actually does well in polls designed to assess the candidates' "likeability". How could he not, with a smile like that? In this sense, he is a great improvement on the grim self-righteousness of Gore and Kerry. Gore is now a movie star – and is even spoken of as "charismatic" – but the fact is that George W Bush's victory over him in 2000 owed as much to the belief that the Republican presidential candidate was less of a stiff-necked wooden-top than his rival as to any intervention by the Supreme Court.
Obama's undoubted star quality – what Republican advertisements now attempt to disparage as the "Paris Hilton effect" – should give some cheer to nervous Democrat supporters; but the more experienced among them also mutter that Gore was supposed to wipe the electoral floor with goofy George W, while at this stage of the last electoral cycle, John Kerry was so far ahead in the polls that his wife must have been mentally measuring up for the White House curtains. So, no wonder that the recent slight hiccup in their latest candidate's poll ratings is causing conniptions in the Democrat camp.
To steady their nerves – and their bowel movements – they should probably consult, not a psychiatrist, but a psephologist: Professor Alan Abramowitz of Emory University. Abramowitz has long argued that head-to-head public opinion polls – especially in the summer – are of little real value in forecasting which of the two candidates will win the November presidential election. Instead, he has a ready-reckoner which consists of the growth rate of the economy, the approval ratings of the incumbent President and how long that man's party has controlled the White House.
That political barometer successfully predicted the outcome of all but one of the last 15 presidential elections – and it makes Obama a shoo-in for the White House. For good measure, Abramowitz wrote on The Huffington Post website last week that the Gallup poll which had McCain ahead by four points among so-called "likely voters" was methodologically flawed and therefore "not to be believed". All of this may very well be so – and it is certainly the case that the Republicans remain the electoral underdogs in the race for the White House. But they were the last time. And the time before that. No wonder there's a funny smell in the air.
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Comments
17 Comments
"" although Obama has manufactured his own personal history into an astonishing political narrative ""
There is nothing in your article that goes on to back your statement. What evidence do you have to make such a statement - other than prejudice?
theangloamerican.com
Posted by Johnny Wickens | 12.08.08, 23:31 GMT
anyone who's paid attention knows that Obama makes many more gaffes than McCain" - Posted by Rob
But considerably fewer than Bush. -Posted by Steve Wilds
I dunno, Steve, at least Bush knew how many states there were in the US. Obama seems to think there are 57 (maybe he's counting Germany?)
Posted by Rob | 12.08.08, 22:54 GMT
I wonder which poll the author has been consulting? Gallup.com gives Obama a 5 point lead. In fact, the best McCain had polled was a tie at 44%.
Posted by Kwame B Kissi | 12.08.08, 20:02 GMT
1. The Republicans did dodgy things in BOTH the last two elections. They may well do again.
2. As a result, lectures on democracy from the US are 'past their sell-by date'.
3. If Russia is starting wars again, then maybe US voters will look to the oil and back the Vietnam veteran.
4. If the voters have had sufficient 'feel good' politics to look to the future, then Obama needs to change strategy. Economics not counselling.
5. Obama is pretty normal. He has a wife who rules the roost at home. He has two pretty kids. He's wealthy but not rich.
6. He's Bill with pigmentation. Except he's from Chicago not Arkansas.
7. Hopefully his European tour was not his 'Kinnock Sheffield rally'?
8. But if it was, then Hillary'll win by a landslide next time!
9. What could be more American in a matriarchal society than rejecting the Black man, then voting in a woman, eh?
10. Taking the bull by the horns and voting Obama into the White House, that's what!
Posted by Rhys Jaggar | 12.08.08, 19:05 GMT
Obama cannot hope to win, regardless of what the current polls say, because Obama is a black man. To understand this, you must taken into account the symbolism of blacks in American history. The issue is complex, but white voters will not accept a black first family. Of course, people are self-conscious about this and their responses to polls lead to biased statistics.
Americans white voters are hostage to three centuries of prejudice against blacks, this is not done away with easily. This cultural baggage must be replaced, and this won't happen until blacks become a larger and better informed share of the population.
All McCain needs to do to be crowned is to be a white, heterosexual, married, church-attending male. When the alternative is a black family in the White House, everything else will prove irrelevant in the privacy of the voting booth. The fact that the American press finds this issue too embarrassing to be openly discussed does not cause it to go aw
Posted by Domingo Tavella | 12.08.08, 18:42 GMT
I think Lawson is right - I think the Democrats will really regret not having gone for Clinton. Whatever you think of her (and I don't really know what to make of Clinton, Obama or McCain) she seemed to understand the American political landscape much better than the other 2.
Posted by JT | 12.08.08, 18:07 GMT
Get a grip Mr Lawson. The popular vote figures are meaningless. It's the electoral college votes that will count, and on today's showing, Obama would win comfortably, although without a landslide.
In any event, it's a long time to November, and as Harold Wilson aptly remarked, a week is a long time in politics.
Posted by grumpyoldman | 12.08.08, 17:35 GMT
McCain is only hanging in there due to his virtual free ride from the media (don't believe the right wing rhetoric about media bias, the US media is pretty solidly republican).
When McCain is questioned about economics he excuses his ignorance by saying that his area of expertise is security and foreign affairs.
Then he can't tell the difference between Sunni & Shia, and thinks that Iraq & Afghanistan share a border!
Any democrat with that staggering level of ignorance would be laughed out of the race. The republican, as usual, gets away with it.
Posted by Andrew Dale | 12.08.08, 15:24 GMT
McCain lacks the polish and smoothness of Obama, but has a long well documented history of being a maverick. Obama has no real record of anything, has done virtually nothing in the Senate, but is a very good speaker, though his speeches sound much more impressive than they read.
McCain was asked why he voted against the ML King Holiday. His simple response: "Because I was wrong", before a black audience, did him no harm.
McCain has held contradictory positions. Until recently Obama had a free ride from the press. But now they are starting to examine him more critically. Also more Americans are starting to take an interest in what's happening, and asking "who is this guy, what does he what to do, what does he mean by 'change', and what has he done?" and that is part of the reason for the disappearance of the Obama lead. Everyone knows who McCain is and what he stands for. With Obama almost nobody does - and that is the reason for the misgivings.
Time will tell.
Posted by Tim | 12.08.08, 14:57 GMT
Trust me, Big MaC will win. Americans are finally waking up to the fact that BO is an empty suit.
Posted by JW | 12.08.08, 14:41 GMT
17 Comments