THE COOK REPORT
Obama Heads For The Goal Line
An Obama White House could be more careful and disciplined than past Democratic 
administrations.
by Charlie Cook
Saturday, Nov. 1, 2008


It has been 38 years since the Grateful Dead recorded "Truckin'," the song 
whose lyrics capture this campaign so well: "What a long, strange trip it's 
been." We haven't had a presidential election in 40 years with as many 
unexpected twists and turns and weird dynamics.
 
At this point, John McCain probably can't win without divine intervention. Say 
what you will about the campaign he has waged and the running mate he picked, 
but the collapse in credit markets and the stock market may very well have 
ended his chances of victory, notwithstanding anything he could have said or 
done differently. The senator from Arizona is a good man, who served his 
country admirably. And many would say that he deserved a better chance than he 
got.
 
Because I've lived and worked in Washington for more than 36 years and spent a 
lot of time around Capitol Hill, my bias is toward experience--toward believing 
that time served is often a proxy for knowledge gained about issues and how the 
federal government sometimes works and often doesn't, about the incredibly 
complicated world of finance, and about the skills necessary for effective 
international relations. My preference for experience naturally made me 
skeptical of Barack Obama. But perhaps it is those who are proven wrong who end 
up most impressed by someone they underestimated.
 
Other than his "bitter" comments at a closed-door fundraiser in San Francisco, 
Obama hasn't made a serious verbal miscue that I'm aware of. The $605 million 
he has raised is an amount that a year ago would have been considered utterly 
impossible. His extraordinarily loyal campaign organization not only runs with 
Prussian efficiency but also appears not to leak or engage in backbiting. The 
campaigns of McCain and Hillary Rodham Clinton created the impression that half 
the people in a senior staff meeting would love nothing more than to stick 
knives in the backs of the other half. You don't sense that with Obama's team.
 
John McCain probably can't win without divine intervention. 
Whether the Obama campaign would bring its best qualities into an 
administration isn't for me to predict. But I get a strong sense that we are in 
for something very different from past Democratic administrations: a White 
House more cautious and circumspect in its decision-making, more careful and 
disciplined in its execution.
 
As this campaign draws to a close, I'm reminded of what happened last year in 
my home state of Louisiana. For more than three-quarters of a century, 
Louisiana has suffered from what were frequently some of the worst public 
policy decisions imaginable. Sadly, competence and farsightedness among the 
state's top officials were the exception rather than the rule. Throw in the 
lousy luck of being hit by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and the state's saga was 
really distressing.
 
Last year, Louisiana elected Bobby Jindal, a 36-year-old son of Indian 
immigrants, to be governor. Jindal is from Baton Rouge, graduated from Brown 
University, then turned down Harvard Medical School and Yale Law School to go 
to Oxford as a Rhodes scholar. He next joined McKinsey and Co. management 
consultants. That's not exactly the typical career path for Louisiana governors.
 
Louisiana did not elect Jindal to impress the rest of the country or the world 
with its multiculturalism or to make some symbolic gesture. In the aftermath of 
Katrina, the state was facing fourth down and long yardage in a losing game. 
Voters decided to take a risk. It was as if the people of Louisiana said, "We 
are in deep trouble and have tried everything else. This kid seems really 
smart, seems to know an amazing amount about the issues, and seems so confident 
and poised. Let's give the ball to the kid and see if he can do something with 
it."
 
If Louisiana weren't in such bad shape, Jindal almost certainly could not have 
won. But, so far, he has performed admirably and lived up to his advance 
billing. Indeed, he is one of the few bright spots on the Republicans' horizon.
 
As I have watched the rise of Barack Obama and how he appears to be on the 
verge of being elected president, the Jindal analogy seems to ring true: People 
seem to want to take a chance. If my assumption of an Obama victory proves 
incorrect, this space will be filled next week with a huge mea culpa.
 
 
http://www.nationaljournal.com/njmagazine/cr_20081101_1313.php
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"WebTV Dawgs/Dittos" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/WebTV-Pals
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to