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A Dozen Reasons that Obama will win the Presidency, for Obama and Clinton supporters


On this day, May 20th, in which Obama will win a majority of pledged elected delegates, I would like to offer a dozen reasons, a baker's dozen, for why Barack Obama will be the next president. I know that this is a difficult time for Clinton supporters, but Democrats have a candidate who can win in November.  Let's make it happen!  (I am cross-posting this blog.)  

1. The Change Factor: Yes, you have heard it before, but it is for real. People are hungry for it, especially after the worst presidency in living memory. A key point here is that Obama has been on message about change from DAY ONE. He is the Change candidate.

2. The Organization Factor: Obama has built a remarkable organization. Nothing quite like it has been seen before in its capacity to raise money, generate enthusiasm, and get out the vote. For more on the uniqueness of Obama's organization, see Joshua Green's piece, "The Amazing Money Machine" http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200806/ob ama-finance and Marc Ambinder's "His Space" in The Atlantic http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200806/am binder-obama

3.The Charisma Factor: Hard to explain. Hard to quantify. But you know it when you see it. (Obama's recent Portland crowd, 75,000 in a primary election, was no accident.)

4. The Republican Factor: They are in disarray and have money problems. This will have an impact on the Presidential race. How much? Good question. But no doubt it will have some.

5. The Money Factor: A corollary to the Organization Factor. Obama will have lots of it and will be able to raise more and more of it. To those who say that money can't buy love or office, agreed, at least in terms of the former. But money can certainly help win office. It is especially helpful if you have a good candidate, a good brand as they say, to sell. Obama is such a brand.

6. The Even Keel Factor: In this case, the young man, Obama, seems to have a more even temperament than the older candidate. This undermines a potential advantage for McCain and also defies expectations, namely, that age should bring a more even temper. (McCain's anger problem is for real.) Americans believe that we need a steady hand on the rudder in these difficult times.

7. The Intellectual and Expert Factor: There are those who have claimed that Obama is an elitist, a pointy head, etc., and that too many in his campaign fit this bill. But the bottom line is that candidates who can comfortably make use of experts and genuine intellectuals-not faux intellectuals, for example, the neo-conservative ideologues-are in stronger position than those who cannot. Knowledge may not be power, but it sure can help keep power from making foolish mistakes, like Iraq. It can also help win elections. (It was the "nerds," after all, who really understood how the delegate process worked in the Democratic race. And guess who had them on staff and who listened to them.)

8. The African-American Vote. Obama will draw the greatest number of African-American voters in American history. It will make a difference. As Poblano's analysis shows, just a 10% to 20% increase can make a significant difference in who wins in the fall. (Poblano suggests 13 electoral votes for each 10%.) See Josh Kalven's "Obama Over the Top: How New Voters Could Redraw the Electoral Map" http://progressillinois.com/2008/05/11/f eatures/obama-over-the-top

9. The Youth Vote and Support: Typically the youth vote is viewed as an unreliable voting block. But Obama has shown that he can increase the youth vote. In addition, youth represents `boots on the ground.' They do much of the door to door and office work that campaigns require. On how the youth vote could assist Obama, once again, see Josh Kalven's "Obama Over the Top: How New Voters Could Redraw the Electoral Map" http://progressillinois.com/2008/05/11/f eatures/obama-over-the-top

10. A Motivated Democratic Party: Yes, there is the issue of whether most of Hillary's supporters will come around. And there are unknowns in terms of whether Obama will be able to bring more working class folks into his corner. But the Democrats are hungry and they have resources. There will be some synergy between Presidential, Congressional, and local races.

11. The Oratory Factor. We know what the man can do. He is pretty much in a class by himself. Speeches matter. Words delivered well matter. McCain, on the other hand, is not a strong public speaker. (The "My friends" thing just isn't going to cut it.) In addition, Obama will best him in the debates.

12. The Bush factor: Obama is the anti-Bush. He listens to those outside an inner circle. He is anti-Iraq war, exceptionally intelligent, reasonably hip, etc. McCain, on the other hand, appears to be running for Bush's third term. The McBush notion will stick with a significant number of voters.

13. Michelle Obama: Michelle has made some gaffes. Some view her as coming on too strong. But her story will get out: poor kid from the South Side of Chicago, who through her own hard work and intelligence made it to Princeton and Harvard. She is now the mother of two young daughters, juggling family and career. Women, many of Hillary's supporters, will relate. Further, Michelle is a powerful speaker. The Republicans would be foolish to underestimate her.

For a baker's dozen of reasons for why McCain will NOT win, I shamelessly offer you a link to my blog  http://msa4.wordpress.com/



2 Comments

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I'd add to this that the straight talk express will have been thoroughly derailed by the end of the general campaign - it's wheels are already coming off. (See today's Huff Post for the latest example)

Far more importantly, McCain's greatest strength has been the perception among Independents (and some Democrats) that he is not a down the line Republican. He's already been making the argument that he, not Obama, is the true bipartisan. He's lost this completely - all it needs is for the Democrats to highlight it. His policies are so right wing they're out of the ballpark. No way could he get bipartisan support for them. The Democrats should be able to win this election with ads showing bridges collapsing, the actual conditions of the poorest schools, good hard working middle class Americans whose economic lives have been shattered through illness...
Check out this analysis from the Brookings & Urban Institute's Tax Policy Center
http://taxvox.taxpolicycenter.org/blog/_archives/2008/4/17/3644448.html
"Cuts this size would pare government back to levels not seen since the Eisenhower administration."
I also get a huge lift every time I think about the fact that McCain clearly can't stand Barack - the impact this will have on his temper is simply priceless. Think how well McCain did when debating with Huckabee and how utterly disastrous he was every time Romney took him on.

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Very nice, well thought out. I agree, but I think it will be close. But we are looking at a new Democratic president.

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Mitchell Aboulafia

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