Joho the Blog
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January 25, 2007
Hillary announces her campaign is a conversation. But her site looks like a re-direct from www.RiskAvoidance.com. It's the site of a front-runner thinking the goal is hers if she just doesn't make any mistakes. Thus, her kick-off conversation ("Let the conversation begin," as if we were waiting for her) is a TV-style interview answering safe questions with safer answers. Take her very first question: What do you say to someone who says this country isn't ready for a woman president. Clinton's answer: "Well, we won't know until we try." Whaaaa? Was it too risky to give an unabashed answer even to this question? [An hour later: Aha. I misunderstood. Clinton was answering about electability whereas I took the question to be about competency. It was still an uninspired answer, though.] Edwards' site is that of a challenger. It reads like a dare. Anyone can blog there, and the conversation on the site shows it. In last night's webcast, Edwards seemed so intent on proving that it was unscripted that it wouldn't have surprised me if he had turned on a sports broadcast to show it was live. And you could see the moment of resolve when he would decide to extend a satisfactory answer onto riskier ground. The devilish little angel on his shoulder kept whispering, "Go for it, John. Sin boldly!" If Edwards becomes the front-runner and then the nominee, every sane political advisor and every seasoned campaign veteran on his staff will insist that he flick that angel away. Lock in the message, lock down the site. "You're ahead, John. Nothing between you and the White House but a gaffe." And the moment a candidate hears the grinding of the infernal machinery in those tempting voices will be an inflection point. This isn't about campaign techniques. It's about democracy, because when a candidate controls her campaign, that means she in fact is being controlled. One coin, two sides. To control is to be controlled. The need to be timid in one's views, to vette every comment, to make only tested jokes, to say nothing that will diminish the flow of cash, all these enslave the candidate. These forces can turn an outspoken Vietnam war hero into a tight-lipped, humorless, mealy-mouthed tree stump. Really, it can. But democracy is about how a brawling nation of passionate, outspoken citizens can nevertheless live together. There are lots of ways a citizenry in disagreement can come to governance, including monarchies and tyrannies. What makes democracy different isn't that it achieves governance but it does so while enabling and encouraging the diversity of thought, behavior and speech. We all believe that, but you wouldn't know that from how we run our political campaigns. They're better models of TV production than of democracy in action. And they will be until a campaign like Edwards' can move all the way to victory without surrendering to the anti-democratic, fear-based temptation of control. Before you ask, why do I refer to Sen. Clinton by her first name but to Sen. Edwards by his last? Because "Clinton" is ambiguous in a way that "Edwards" is not. [Tags: politics john_edwards hillary_clinton john_kerry e-democracy media ] Posted
by D. Weinberger at January 25, 2007 10:28 AM
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Comments
I refer to Clinton as Mrs. Clinton to differentiate between the former President and the senator.
I watched webcast number 2 at her site the other night, and I couldn't get too excited about how condescending she is to the Netrooters who submitted questions.
It is no wonder Taylor Marsh isn't too thrilled with Mrs. Clinton either.
Senator Edwards is more authentic and he does take some care on answering questions the bloggers. Listening to him and his wife on podcasts is the 21st version of FDR and his fireside chats.
Posted by: benny | January 25, 2007 12:20 PM
Brilliantly stated, David. Edwards has some very smart and web-hip folks behind-the-curtain.
Posted by: Terry Heaton | January 25, 2007 12:24 PM
To seek solice in the face of the uncertainty of the future through politics is to disregard the dialectic of pure reason; antimomies, paralogisms, and such chasing of the ideal. This is not said to condone complacency, nor to acquiesce in solipsism, but as a reminder of the contradiction inherent in our very humanity. As Muriel Rukeyeser has said, she does not long for an Eden of the past, but accepts her mission to garden anyway toward such a future. I, myself, only await the Orphic moments--for only then does truth shine through!
Posted by: Philo | January 26, 2007 09:15 AM