The Work Horse vs. The Show Horse
By SusanUnPC on January 6, 2008 at 12:37 PM in Clinton, John Edwards, Obama
From the influential rightwing big-ad-bucks blogger site, Pajamas Media, rating Obama’s debate performance last night:
High: Obama, for looking and sounding presidential. He still hasn’t said much, but more and more Obama knows how to make you feel comfortable with the idea of him as President.
Add to your list of “Republicans For Obama” the smug George F. Will:
He is the un-Edwards and un-Huckabee — an adult aiming to reform the real world rather than an adolescent fantasizing mock-heroic “fights” against fictitious villains in a left-wing cartoon version of this country.
That’s George Will code for: Don’t worry. Even if we can’t destroy him in a general election fight, Obama won’t endanger our corporate and fat-cat entitlements. He’ll be easy to control. Add Mr. Will and Pajamas Media to the Republican/conservatives extolling Obama’s vague virtues, eager to ensure he — not real fighters like Edwards and Clinton — gets the nomination. Those who lie in wait include David Brooks, Peggy Noonan, Shelby Steele, Karl Rove, RedState.com blog, Bill O’Reilly (who helpfully accosted an Obama aide), Dick Morris, Hot Air blog, Free Republic blog, Dallas Morning News, Weekly Standard and the conservative Republican newspaper the Sioux City Journal.
Me? Give me the one who extolls hard work, not undefined “change” and “hope”:
Adds Greg Sargent of TPM Election Central in today’s article, “Dem Debate Roundup: Work Horse Versus Show Horse,” “Here’s the moment that came as close as possible to capturing, in a brief exchange, the entire argument between Hillary and Obama.”
“Words are not action and as beautifully presented and as passionately felt as they are, they are not action,” Mrs. Clinton said. “What we’ve got to do is translate talk into action, and feeling into reality; I have a long record of doing that.”
But Mr. Obama came back at her.
“The truth is, actually, words do inspire,” Mr. Obama said. “Words do help people get involved.”
True enough. But, best I recall, Mr. Obama, you’ve given only about three speeches that really charged people up: 2004′s Democratic national convention, the 2007 Democratic dinner speech in Iowa, and — according to others — Thursday night’s speech in Iowa. That’s three speeches in the three years, Mr. Obama, that you’ve been in national politics.
And, by the way, you don’t get ALL the youth vote — at least not the mature youth vote. My 25-year-old daughter, who’s about as hip as they get, finds your speeches “Borrrrriiiiing,” Mr. Obama. She thinks you don’t say anything. She suspects the excitement about you is mostly people’s own desperation to seek a savior, and she suspects they’re not thinking straight.
Sargent highlights another moment in the debate, via a NYTimes article:
In the second half of the debate, which was sponsored by ABC News and Facebook, Mrs. Clinton was asked to explain why voters found her less likable than some of her rivals.
“Well, that hurts my feelings, but I’ll try to go on,” she said in a soft voice, her smile widening. “He’s very likable, I agree with that. But I don’t think I’m that bad.”
Looking her way, Mr. Obama deadpanned, “You’re likable enough.”
“I appreciate that,” Mrs. Clinton responded, before launching into a sharp argument about the importance of this election.
“In 2000, we unfortunately ended up with a president who people said they wanted to have a beer with, who said he wanted to be a uniter not a divider — who said that he had his intuition and, you know, really come into the White House and transform the country,” Mrs. Clinton said. “And you know, at least I think there are the majority of Americans who think that was not the right choice.”
Talk is cheap, my hard-working mother always told me. She once told me a story about her college days. She said on Saturday nights, all the girls would sit around talking about washing their hair. She said, “While they were still talking, I just got up and bent my head over the sink and got it done.”
I’m concerned — like other loyal Clinton supporters:
Worried that voters are ignoring her experience in favor of “flash in the pan” Obama. One 87-year-old: primary becoming “personal-liking affair” dominated by “students and the trendies.”
It may be “in” to back Obama. But give me the work horse. (And both Clinton and Edwards fit that bill.)
Not Obama, who hasn’t even bothered to learn the rules of the Senate, according to Senate colleagues.
Not Obama, who hasn’t convened a single hearing of the Foreign Relations subcommittee he chairs. (It IS an important committee. It not only oversees European affairs, but also NATO — which happens to be fighting the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan.)
Not Obama, who’s missed more Senate votes than any of the other candidates except McCain.
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Clinton was relaxed and fearless from the start, which was no doubt part of Obama’s frustration. She also got the only applause line when she said the first woman president is the very definition of change. It was clear she indeed felt liberated after Iowa. It might have been the best thing that happened to her. Once you lose you can let go. So she went straight at Mr. Obama on his record and he couldn’t or rather didn’t respond, offering non sequiturs instead. He didn’t answer the questions, so he segued to the results in Iowa.
Another problem for Mr. Obama was that he seemed a bit drained. Obama didn’t score points with Iraq either. Mr. Obama also kept talking about change, but throughout the debate the specifics just weren’t there. …
Clinton offered the opposite, … She had the words, but she translated them tonight into what she can accomplish through talking about her years of experience and what she’d already gotten done for the American people.
When it came to foreign policy in the debate Clinton stood apart on the details. The broad strokes all Democrats agree on, but the details were a different subject. She laid out a plan point by point that was clearly thought out and anything but general.
The biggest difference tonight in Clinton was her relaxed presentation and her transparency. We also saw part of her personality, including a very feisty Clinton that responded strongly when Edwards and Obama ganged up on her, but it didn’t faze her. …
Clinton showed leadership, fearlessness, knowledge of specifics, humor and grace. No one on the stage matched her. … (Read all.






















