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Obama's Blueprint for Change


Obama's blueprint for change is a long read, but it does counter the charge that Obama is an empty suit. His ideas are all solid and progressive (though I doubt they are his). Even if he isn't sharp enough to create policy himself, he certainly has positioned himself correctly on all the issues. I assume Hillary is pretty much on the same page on most of these things. However, it is true that she is more beholden to big money and corporate lobbyists than he is. And that could be a major impediment to getting the job done right. I do wonder whether Obama's plan is so progressive that it will be unacceptable to many who have supported him without actually knowing any of these details. Much of what he proposes is very leftist. Yet, he has campaigned as some sort of bipartisan. It is really hard to imagine that he is going to win over any republicans to such an expansion of the role of the federal government in every aspect of our lives. Personally, I have pretty mixed feelings about it myself. But again, Hillary would move in the same direction and despite her connections still have little chance of flipping enough republicans in the senate to do anything meaningful. (Thank god the president can just end the war without congress being involved, so at least we can count on that.)


So how is any or all of such an agenda accomplished? One way would be to get clear supermajorities of progressives in both houses of congress. That seems unlikely in the next cycle, and by all accounts, is even less likely with Clinton as the nominee. There has been a lot of talk within the Democratic party that she will have negative coattails in many "purple" states that we need to hold on to. The thing about Obama is that he will bring a lot of people to the polls in these red-leaning purple states. It might not be enough to flip any or many of them in the presidential vote, but many of these states have elected Dems to congress just two years after re-electing Bush. The huge turnouts he will draw could magnify this. 


And there is another factor in the mix as well when it comes to getting things done. It bother me to say this, but you have to work with what you have got. Most Americans are religious, which is a large reason why Obama's "revivalist" campaign style (large on oratory and inspiration and light on substance) has been so successful on the grassroots level. It reflects the weak-mindedness of Americans. (Not that all his supporters are weakminded; some probably figured out what I am writing here long ago.) By not taking a public stand for much (besides his opposition to the war), people can project whatever hopes they have onto him. Now, this is a problem when it's a Reagan manipulating the masses this way, but it's quite different when it's a progressive (in terms of the outcome, I mean). Reagan got all his legislation passed despite congress having huge Democratic majorities throughout his terms. How did he do this? Largely with his oratorical skills. Did he sway congress with these skills? No. They all saw him as the empty suit he was. As vacuous as I find Obama, he is a genius compared to Reagan. Reagan swayed the public and congress ran scared. I hate to admit this, but Obama could do the same thing (and Hillary definitely could not). So, even without a supermajority in the senate, he might be able to bring public pressure to bear on the small number of senators he will need to flip (and by most accounts, he could need as few as 4 after the next election, which means only flipping blue-state republicans like Arlen Spector, Olympia Snowe, and Susan Collins).


Now, my vote probably doesn't matter in the GE since Georgia will go republican in all likelihood (though perhaps Obama could actually flip the south with huge black turnout and because he is more overtly religious than McCain, the latter of whom is not well-liked by evangelicals). Don't get me wrong. The way Obama speaks turns my stomach. If he was president, I would go another eight years without listening to a presidential speech. I am also not sure federal solutions are the way to solve our problems. Ideally, I would rather see a much smaller federal government and really progressive state governments coming up with more local solutions. But the fact is that some of our problems probably just cannot be solved that way. We can't allow a single state to work against the environment or all the polluters will just move there and the net effect will be the same. I also wonder whether a lot of companies would just leave the US altogether if they lost all their tax breaks, were forced to unionize, couldn't lobby anymore, had to protect the environment, and treat their workers well. But I think that is a chance we will have to take. And if they do, perhaps a new green, high-tech economy will rise from the ashes of the old one.


My point is that I keep flirting with the idea of voting for McCain, even changing my registration to NJ where my vote could make a difference. I also have considered a third party. But today, I am kind of curious about an Obama presidency. Unless Hillary wins TX and OH by large margins, he will carry the pledged delegates by a decent margin. He is probably well over 150 ahead after yesterday. She could still win if the superdelegates pick her. It is their right to do this and the idea that they should follow the will of the voters is ridiculous. If they just rubberstamped the existing vote, their would be no reason for them to exist. Obama always talks about not being poll-driven and being able to exercise judgment. Well, most of the supers are (or were) elected representatives of the people. They should certainly be free to exercise their judgment as well without being beholden to polls (i.e., the primary voters). If I was a super, and Obama had won the most states, the most votes, and most delegates, it would probably come down to an electoral college calculus—who could beat McCain in key purple states? Right now, it looks Obama could possibly flip CO, KS, MO, and VA. Hillary looks better in MI, PA, OH, FL, and TX. Either way, I hope this is settled in early March. If it goes all the way to June, the party will be divided and we will likely lose in the fall as a result.


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I do wonder whether Obama's plan is so progressive that it will be unacceptable to many who have supported him without actually knowing any of these details. Much of what he proposes is very leftist. Yet, he has campaigned as some sort of bipartisan. It is really hard to imagine that he is going to win over any republicans to such an expansion of the role of the federal government in every aspect of our lives.

I think that charisma cuts more ice than your allowing into your calculus here. The same logic could have been used to prove that Reagan could not carry states like MA or WI or IL, and yet he did. That is rather the point that Obama supporters like myself are making (and to which I see you are starting to warm) - he can be our Reagan. He can bamboozle the red state folks into handing over the keys in the same way that Reagan did to the blue state folks.

Hillary looks better in MI, PA, OH, FL, and TX.

Looks better where? Where you are seeing indications that she could flip TX or FL? I would be curious to see those polls, because all of the polls I am seeing show both democrats losing in FL in November and I have not seen any match-up polls from TX, which I think is fairly well regarded as unshakably red for at least another several election cycles.

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I meant she looked better than Obama in those states, not that either looked better than McCain right now. I also have not seen any TX polls, so it was a matter of extrapolating from demographics (though the primary next month will the be the true test of this). Last FL poll I saw a day or so ago, her gap with McCain was much smaller than his (6 points vs. 16). This may be an artifact of hard feelings for his support of the DNC on the delegate issue. I also think she would have won the FL primary under any circumstances. Obama and Edwards were on the ballot in FL and none campaigned there at all, so those results were meaningful, IMO. Though I think Obama would have closed the gap if he had had a ground operation there. At that point in the cycle, however, she was still winning large states like those.

While I am warming to the idea that Obama's oratorical skills could help him achieve goals she could not, I do not believe that his base of support is really that strong in purple or red states. While voter turnout was larger than usual for the many caucuses he won, it was still less than 10% of registered voters in almost all of them. Since caucus voters tend to fit a demographic that has strongly supported him (more affluent, educated, and activist), I don't think the results are really telling of what will happen in the GE. While Reagan did somehow win many blue states in both terms, I find it far less likely that any amount of charm is going to flip states like ID and UT. OTOH, they have so few electoral votes, they are not all that important in the calculus. If he can flip GA and MI and LA, though, that will be awesome.

In any event, I am no longer flirting with McCain. His recent pandering to the ultraright is the last straw for me. And for the record, I never liked Hillary. Wes Clark or Al Gore or John Edwards all suit me more. The thing about Obama is the way so many people like him in their gut is the exact opposite for me. I have no use for his oratorical style. Its just a personal predilection. And because up until today, I had not been able to find the details of his plans—has this blueprint been around for a while; was it just not readily available; I went to his site the other day and didn't see it; went back today and there it was, plain as day—I was worried that his bipartisan rhetoric meant he was going to compromise progressive values to get things done. I see that is not true, so I will be glad to vote for him now. Sadly, many of my peers are still flirting with McCain. I guess after months of bashing Obama, I now need to start making a different argument.

I also have not seen any TX polls, so it was a matter of extrapolating from demographics (though the primary next month will the be the true test of this).

Forgive me, but I am not following you here. How does the primary election tell us anything one way or another about Texas in the GE? Some democrat has to win the democratic primary in that state, but that does not imply that the winner stands anything more than a snowball's chance in Hell of taking the state in Nov. The same goes for Obama in GA. I guess I just do not see any realistic likelihood of either democrat winning anything down south (or losing CA, MA, NY or NJ). The business of winning the race in Nov will be the business of flipping MO, IA, NE, OH, NM and CO (or some combination of those) while holding on to PA and WA. Both my gut instincts and the head-to-head match-up polls suggest that Obama is the candidate more likely to do this. Primary election results, however, are largely irrelevant to the question.

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Thanks for posting the blueprint. Despite my long support of Obama, I had not read it before, much to my discredit.

heretic, in you last comment, you wrote:

I was worried that his bipartisan rhetoric meant he was going to compromise progressive values to get things done

Everyone seems to assume that by "change", Obama means ending partisan conflict by compromising with Republicans. I expect that he will do this if necessary in order to accomplish objectives, as would Hillary, but I don't think that's what he means, or at least it's only a small part of what he means.

The first section of the blueprint, "Obama's Plan to Change Washington" is all about transparency and good government. Only the first sentence mentions bipartisanship and only in the specific context of ethics reform.

A Leader for Reform Obama reached across the aisle and challenged leaders of both parties to pass historic ethics reforms both in Washington and Springfield, IL. Unlike other candidates, he refuses to accept campaign contributions from PACs and Washington lobbyists.

Close the Revolving Door
Obama will close the revolving door between the executive branch and K-Street lobbying shops. Obama’s appointees will serve the American people, not their own financial interests.

Increase Transparency
Obama will increase transparency so that ordinary Americans can understand their government and trust that their money is well spent.

End Wasteful No-Bid Contracts
Obama will clean up government contracting and end the abuse of no-bid contracts.

It's largely Obama's fault that people think that change means bipartisan compromise. He rarely offers details of what he means by change other than ending partisan conflict. This is probably by intention, as it offers people a blank slate in which to project whatever it is that they think "change" should encompass.

But for me, his focus on transparency and good government is a large part of what attracts me to him, and I was pleased to see that these themes suffuse the entire blueprint. I've often wondered why he doesn't play them up more, as the focus on government transparency seems to me to be one of the clearest areas of difference between Obama and Clinton.

It will be interesting to see how these issues play in the general election, as McCain also promotes transparency and good government. I fear that they will take a back seat to other issues of greater difference between them. Oh well. I'm pleased that there will be not one but two candidates who promote ethics and government reform, though Obama is of course far preferable to me because of his other progressive policies and because he would, I believe, be far more successful in implementing reforms.

I agree. I don't think there is really ANY chance of a Democrat taking Texas in the GE.

But Colorado...maybe, they had a disasterous GWB clone for Governor but now the Governorship and the State government has gone blue.

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Greg,

I think that the large latino vote in TX could possibly flip that state. What I meant about the primary vote being an indicator of was Obama's potential strength there. Hillary has been much stronger amongst latinos, so I give her a better chance right now of flipping the state. But they seem to be coming around for Obama and if they give him strong support in TX (even if he loses by a small margin), I think he has a chance, too. I do agree that the most of the states you mentioned are probably more likely to flip for him than Hillary, but I am also not sure anyone can beat McCain in those states, either. Have you seen recent GE matchup polls by any chance? I haven't looked and have been on the Web too long today to start another search query right now.

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I was actually quite impressed with the transparency positions as well as the positions on rules about his appointees not being allowed to become a lobbyist during his term nor have recently come from an industry they preside over. As for confusing change with bipartisanship, it is true that bipartisanship is not something he touts in the blueprint. However, it certainly has been a meme in much of the MSM commentary from likes of David Broder and such. But perhaps they also are projecting onto him. Personally, I think Hillary would be just as progressive as Obama on most issues, so I have been pretty irritated about all the republican-lite comments directed at her in many of the blogs that I read. She is certainly more beholden to lobbyists, but on countless issues (abortion, gun control, environment, gay rights, stem cell therapy, etc.) she is not even remotely conservative. I seriously doubt she would be appointing judges like Alito and Roberts, that's for sure.

I was also a big fan of Bill Clinton's. I see that I am little older than you guys (45). I missed voting against Reagan by three months in 1980. I think people who suffered through all of Reagan and Bush the elder years ad adults have a different perspective than those who became adults right before or during Clinton's terms. It was such a relief to have an articulate young president (around Obama's current age). So, it also irks me that so many Obama supporters have such hatred for the Clintons. But I like to think I am a rational person. All I needed was some facts on the issues which I hadn't been able to find until today. If they were there for a while, I wonder why nobody else has linked to them before the past few days. I found out about them on another reader blog. (Josh, the new feature that puts flags recommended reader posts on election central is great.) If he succeeds in campaign finance reform, getting the lobbyists out of the white house, and even more ethics reform, I think a lot of other good stuff will happen. I guess I am feeling a whiff of the "hope." Very weird.

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It appears Obama could win MI and VA from recent polls. If he flips VA, that could be enough. There was some talk of Webb being his VP. Webb gots the military cred, but that would be a ticket with two junior senators on it. Any thoughts on who would make a good running mate. This is a discussion I haven't heard yet here. I always liked Wes Clark for Hillary. Wouldn't be bad for Obama, either.

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