Posted by
Ned Barnett on Tuesday, March 18, 2008 4:49:02 PM
Ned Barnett © 2008
After his stellar performance this
morning, as he tried to explain away his pastor, the Reverend Doctor Jeremiah
Wright, it is clear to me, as a former campaign speechwriter myself, that
Barack Obama is perhaps the most effective speech-reader in American politics
today. His speech was a masterwork of
misdirection – a tour de force of the triumph of emotion over logic. It was nothing
short of a remarkable “bait-and-switch” –
an advertising gambit that “promises one thing and delivers something very much
different, without the customer noticing” – that may have saved Obama’s
campaign. If so, it succeeded by avoiding the real issue – the candidate’s
judgment – that had mushroomed in the past week.
Senator Obama’s campaign is built on two
elements – his “post-racial” refusal to let race be an issue, and the Senator’s
sound judgment, which more than compensates for his lack of real experience in
national government.
Senator Obama’s challenge was daunting. Americans have been inundated by video clips featuring
the Senator’s pastor spewing race-based hatred of America, demonstrating this willingness
to believe every wack-job conspiracy theory this side of black
helicopters. To counter this, the
Senator had to explain away his own lack of judgment in putting up with such
vile blather for twenty years. That’s
what this speech promised – the bait.
What he delivered was something very different – the switch.
Senator Obama carefully – and
effectively – addressed some (but by no means all of) the specific hate-filled
and conspiratorial positions that his pastor has consistently advocated from
the pulpit, drawing each narrowly to minimize their impact. However, while giving America a fascinating
lecture on the history of the “black experience” in America, Senator Obama very
effectively changed the subject. He
promised answers and delivered fascinating distraction – executing a classic
“bait-and-switch,” one which would have made any Madison Avenue Ad-Man green
with envy.
Much of the media is focusing on this
remarkable and seemingly candid exploration of race – one of the thorniest
issues America has faced since the first African chattel slaves were brought to
America. However, this same media – and,
presumably, at least some of the Senator’s large national audience – missed the
larger point. Instead of addressing the
issue – his judgment – as promised, Barack Obama gracefully and effectively changed
the subject. Bait-and-Switch.
No longer is the media focusing on “why
did Obama stay in the congregation of a man who clearly hates America and
despises whites?”
No longer are pundits asking “what does
this relationship say about Senator Obama’s judgment?”
Instead, Americans – and the American
media – are again marveling at the man’s podium dexterity, a real skill that
the Senator cultivated at Harvard and Columbia, then refined in the
rough-and-tumble politics of inner-city Chicago.
As a former speechwriter and ranked
intercollegiate debater, I have nothing but raw admiration for Senator Obama’s
dual abilities to write and deliver truly remarkable speeches. He does so with
a power and style not seen since President Reagan reminded America of the power
of the spoken word. Senator Obama’s
skills bring to mind another remarkable orator, President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, whose words and presentation did much to hold together a shaky
coalition through both the Great Depression and the world’s greatest war.
Senator Obama has that gift.
However, he’s used this gift to “bait-and-switch”
us away from questioning his judgment and core beliefs, away from thinking
about what it means that he sat through 20 years of hate-filled Sunday sermons
without hearing anything offensive. With
this bait-and-switch speech, Senator Obama has moved us away from the real
issue and toward the open sore of race that has troubled America for centuries –
an issue he’d carefully avoided until this speech.
The irony is clear. Senator Obama has portrayed himself as the
man who transcended race, effectively appealing to Americans regardless of their
race. This “post-racial” positioning played
nicely into the Senator’s “hope and change” pitch, since nearly all Americans
hope to change our historic racial intolerance and move toward a color-blind
“all men are created equal” standard.
But now, thanks to this speech, race is
front-and-center in the campaign. In
order to save his campaign from his own remarkably poor judgment – remaining
affiliated to a church whose minister damns America and blames our country for
9-11, AIDs and crack cocaine – Senator Obama has injected this “post-racial” campaign
with a massive dose of race.
The ultimate irony is clear – though
Reverend Wright is black, the reason he’d become a liability to Senator Obama isn’t
his race, but his blatant hatred for America.
Senator Obama has excused that hate by reason of race and “generation,”
and undone in one day a year’s worth of “post-racial” positioning.
That’s a great debating strategy – don’t
let your opponents focus on your weaknesses – but when it comes to healing
America, or even to running a Presidential campaign, Senator Obama has done
himself, and his country, a profound disservice. Instead of addressing his pastor’s hatred for
America – and what that means about the Senator’s own judgment – he instead
tried to shame white America into letting go of the issues created by Reverend
Wright. Instead of understanding Senator
Obama’s choice of affiliating with such a notorious hater, we now know where he
stands on the issue of race – an issue that, until today, Senator Obama himself
had said was off-limits and out-of-bounds.
Politically, this may be the ultimate
“bait-and-switch.”