Being yourself
An important piece of advice I give every candidate for public office, is be yourself. Naturally we try as best we can, to recruit candidates who fit Democratic Party ideals and values. These values are clear enough: you can read all about them in the links at right. But once we've decided on a candidate, we want that candidate to be authentic, meaning that the ideas, approach, and leadership style they project come from their whole lifetime of experience and learning. We don't want candidates to change their approach or priorities to fit the audience of the day. Voters won't — and shouldn't — trust someone who would do that.
On that count, Hillary Clinton lost me this week.
I've been staying neutral throughout this primary season, partly because of my responsibilities in the nominating process, and partly because I really like both Sens. Clinton and Obama. Sure, I've disagreed with both of them occasionally. I disagreed with Clinton on Iraq, for example. But I respected her approach on that issue because it fit her. All her life she has been tough, everyone knows it, so when she talks tough she has credibility. We have a lot of fearful people in this country today, most of them Republicans, and Clinton's approach is comforting to them. She can bridge the partisan divide because of this ability to make people feel safe. As a Democrat I have not been too worried about her sabre-rattling because I also know another basic thing about Clinton, that she is extremely smart and resourceful. Unlike Bush and McCain, who have only one tool in their toolbox, if Clinton ever takes us to war we'll know beyond a doubt that she has exhausted every other possibility first.
But that's where Hillary lost me. All her life she has been smart, and has surrounded herself with other smart people who are the best at what they do. Sen. Clinton never signed on to the current scourge of anti-intellectualism, the attitude that the world is too complex and therefore let's cast our lot with anyone offering simplistic answers. When she said this week, regarding the short-sighted notion of suspending the Federal gas tax for the summer, that she doesn't listen to economists, my jaw just sank. She must have been misquoted, I thought, or was suffering from temporary insanity. But she repeated it, emphasized it, convinced surrogates to carry the same message. Not one person in this vast nation believed it, because it just wasn't her.
Clinton's campaign has been under pressure, there's no doubt about it. She needed to make some adjustments. But this was one gigantic adjustment. If it was her best option, then her campaign is doomed.
Sen. Obama has an entirely different approach to bridging the partisan divide. What his opponents call "vagueness," is actually a deliberate effort to avoid pouring salt in old partisan wounds, to instead challenge all of us to work together on shared problems, and to be ambitious and fearless in doing it. He has worked steadily to change the framing of the debate, to get us out of the dead ends that we've been stuck in. It's an authentic approach: it fits the way he has operated through his entire life, and it fits the character of a smart, youthful candidate. What's more, it's obvious that people are ready for Obama's way forward, that they like it more than the incrementalist approach of Clinton. This is why his campaign is doing so well.
Both Clinton and Obama have a legitimate claim to being the ideal candidate for these times. That's what has made it so hard to choose. I want them both. But events are showing us that Obama has the stronger claim to be the transformational leader we need. That's why today I'm endorsing Barack Obama for president.
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And further, I think it's essential at this point that we put this primary contest to bed. It's done. There is nothing good that can come from a fight over Michigan and Florida delegates. We need to help make the delegate margin big enough, that it won't come to such a fight.
My part of the nomination process is completed, I won't be there next Saturday, so I'm free to speak out. I am urging all delegates, pledged to any candidate, to recognize where this is going and vote for Obama and Obama delegates at next weekend's State Convention. Specifically, I urge a vote for Susie McMahon, one of the people who has been indispensable over the past few years in helping move Douglas County out of the "safe Republican" column.
We need to get ourselves unified and refocused on the big contest ahead. Now is the time.