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Don’t Think of a Maverick!
Could the Obama Campaign Be Improved?
Throughout the nomination campaign I was struck by how well the Obama campaign was being run, especially how sophisticated the framing was. I was heartened that my five books on the subject might have had a real effect. But recently I have begun to wonder. It looks like, in certain respects, the Obama campaign is making some of the same mistakes of the Hillary campaign and the Kerry and Gore campaigns.
The Dayton speech on education had fine policy, but was the first really deadly dull Obama speech I've heard. It started out with lots of numbers. True, but dull. And he is promising more of the same policy wonk speeches. He's right that we are facing serious realities, and he's right to say what he intends to do, but the old inspiring Obama just isn't there. And the surrogates - Biden and Hillary - are policy-wonking it too.
I hope I'm wrong. Given my great respect for those who ran the nomination campaign so well, I wonder if I should say anything at all. But, as I predicted (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/george-lakoff/death-by-definition-save_b_124904.html), Palin has turned out to be effective and the Obama campaign has not been effective in dealing with her. I've been getting loads of email asking me to say something to the campaign. So with some hesitation and a great deal of respect, I will simply point out what I see.
Four years ago I wrote a book called, Don't Think of an Elephant! The title made a basic point: Negating a frame activates that frame. If you activate the other side's frame, you just help the other side, as Nixon found out when he said, "I am not a crook," which made people think of him as a crook.
The Obama campaign just put out an ad called "No Maverick." The basic idea was right. The Maverick Frame is central to the McCain campaign, and as the ad points out, it's a lie. But negating the Maverick Frame just activates that frame and helps McCain. You have to substitute a different frame that characterizes McCain as he really is. There are various possibilities. Let's consider one of them. Ninety percent of the time, McCain has been a Yes-Man for Bush. Think in terms of questions at a debate. If the question is, is McCain a maverick?, you are thinking about him as a maverick, even when you are trying to find ways in which he isn't. McCain wins. If the question is whether McCain is a Yes-Man for Bush, you put McCain on the defensive. People think of him as a Yes-man 90 percent of the time, and try to think cases when he might not have been. This is not rocket science. It's the first principle of framing.
The "No Maverick" ad also misses an opportunity. It correctly observes that McCain's campaign is loaded with "lobbyists." But most of the people the ad is trying to reach don't know just what a "lobbyist" is. McCain is saying he is fighting against the Washington power structure. A lobbyist is a "member of the Washington power structure." If you use such a phrase, you can point out that McCain campaign itself is part of the Washington power structure, the old-boy network.
But these are small, easily fixable problems. Just change a word here or there. The campaign is facing bigger internal problems. Let's start with the statement by Rick Davis, McCain's campaign manager, that the campaign is "not about the issues."
In 1980, Richard Wirthlin -- Ronald Reagan's chief strategist -- made a fateful discovery. In his first poll he discovered that most people didn't like Reagan's positions on the issues, but nevertheless wanted to vote for Reagan. The reason, he figured out, is that voters vote for president not primarily on the issues, but on five other factors -- "character" factors: Values; Authenticity; Communication and connection; Trust; and Identity. In the Reagan-Carter and Reagan-Mondale debates, Mondale and Carter were ahead on the issues and lost the debates, because the debates were not about the issues, but about those other five character factors. George W. Bush used the same observation in his two races. Gore and Kerry ran on the issues. Bush ran on those five factors.
In the 2008 nomination campaign, Hillary ran on the issues, while Obama ran on those five factors and won. McCain is now running a Reagan-Bush style character-based campaign on the Big Five factors. But Obama has switched to a campaign based "on the issues," like Hillary, Gore, and Kerry. Obama has reality on his side. And the campaign is assuming that if you just tell people the truth, they will reason to the right conclusion. That's false and they should know better.
Chris Cillizza, in his Washington Post column, made the mistake of calling this a matter of "personality." DLC theorists Bill Galston and Elaine Lamarck have previously made the same mistake. Voters are smarter. Since they don't know what the situation will be in a couple of years, it is rational to ask if a candidate shares your values, if he's saying what he believes, if he connects with you, if you trust him, and if you identify with him. That is a rational thing to do. Not just a matter of personality.
Unfortunately, it is also easy to manipulate these things with marketing techniques. As Cillizza points out, McCain and Palin are being marketed as American icons: the war hero and the ideal mom. Obama and Biden were marketed (honestly) as realizations of the American Dream, living hope that it is still possible-with Obama as the lone figure with the charisma, character, and talent to actually unite the country and bring back the dream.
So far, the McCain-Palin narratives are proving powerful. Palin has enormous charisma of her own. Meanwhile the Obama narrative is being given up in favor of "the issues." It is as though, after the Republicans attacked Obama's charismatic leader persona, the Obama campaign gave up on it, instead of realizing that they could capitalize on it.
Barack Obama's campaign manager David Plouffe released the following statement: "We appreciate Senator McCain's campaign manager finally admitting that his campaign is not in fact about the issues the American people care about, which is exactly the kind of cynical old politics people are ready to change." But Plouffe, very much to his credit, beat the Clinton campaign in just that way. Hillary played the policy wonk and lost. Barack ran on what his biography showed about his values; his willingness to say what he believed (authenticity); his ability to connect, communicate and build trust through his sincerity; and on the use of his biography to get voters to identify with him. The beauty of Obama's nomination campaign, right through his acceptance speech at the convention, was his ability to frame realities through running on those five character factors. The campaign performed brilliantly.
But post-Palin, the Obama-Biden campaign seems to have become the Gore-Kerry-Hillary campaign. They are running on 18th Century theory of Enlightenment reason: If you just tell people the facts, they will follow their self-interest and reason to the right conclusion. What contemporary cognitive scientists have discovered (See my new book, The Political Mind: Why You Can't Understand 21st Century Politics with an 18th Century Brain), and what Republican marketers have known for decades, is that the Enlightenment theory of reason doesn't describe how people actually work. People think primarily in terms of cultural narratives, stereotypes, frames, and metaphors. That is real reason.
Realities matter. To communicate them, you have to make use of real reason. That's what Obama did in the nomination campaign when he used his personal narrative to communicate about the country's needs. Obama needs to go back to being Obama. The Obama campaign's job is to shine a light on those realities through Obama's unique personal qualities as a leader and communicator.
The Obama campaign has problems with conservative populism. They don't seem to understand it. Conservative populism on a national scale was invented in the late 1960's. At the time, most working people identified themselves with liberals. But conservatives realized that many working people were what I have called "biconceptuals" -- they are genuinely conservative in their mode of thought about patriotism and certain family issues, though they are progressive in their understanding of nature (they love the land) and their commitment to communities where people care about each other, etc. So conservatives have talked to them nonstop about conservative "patriotism" and "family values", thus activating their conservative mindset. At the same time, conservative theorists invented the ideal of "liberal elitism": that liberals look down upon working people and are not like them. Conservatives have been working at constructing this mythology for nearly forty years and liberals have stood by and let it happen. Palin is a natural for the conservative populists. She understands their culture.
Conservative populism is a cultural, not an economic, phenomenon. These are folks who often vote against their economic self-interest and instead vote on their identity as conservatives and on their antipathy to liberals, who they see as elitists who look down on them. Simply giving conservative populists facts and figures won't work.
They tend to vote for people they identify with and against people who they see as looking down on them. The job for the Obama campaign is to reverse the present mindset that the Republicans have constructed, to reveal the conservatives as elitist Washington insiders who cynically manipulate them, to get conservative populists to identify with Obama and Biden on the basis of values and character, and to have them see realities through Obama's leadership capacities. Not an easy job. But it's the real job.
Debate Preparation
I am concerned about the upcoming debates. There are two aspects of debate prep: internal and external. Let's start with the external, since it's less obvious. What happens in a debate depends very much on questions asked and the framing used to ask them. It's the job of a campaign to get questions asked that use their own framing and language, not the opposition's framing and language. The McCain campaign has been very active in prepping the press to ask his questions with his frames: The Maverick Frame, the Country First Frame, The Surge Is Working Frame, the Victory Frame, The Drilling Frame, the Change Washington Frame, and so on. McCain can answer questions based on these frames easily and forcefully, as he did at the Saddleback debate, which he won handily.
Obama's On Your Own Frame for McCain is one the press should bring up. And whether our economic problems are all psychological, as McCain has said. And Obama's riff on empathy, and caring for one another being the basis of our democracy. This is a matter for Obama to decide, but the press should be prepped about what the moral and character issues are for Obama, as well as what the policy issues are.
McCain won because he used short answers, and answers that reflected deep conservative values. Obama hesitated, tried to give nuanced answers, and came off looking like he had no values. Obama needs to train, to give fast, straight-on, inspiring responses that link his major themes-empathy, responsibility (both social and personal) and aspiration-to the foundational ideals of our country. Obama's values are America's values, and that has to come out loud and clear.
Additionally, he must show just how extremist the McCain/Palin ticket is.
Drilling
Senator Obama occasionally uses a rhetorical strategy that I believe is counterproductive. In response to a conservative position he rightfully opposes, he will sometimes try to sound sweetly reasonable by using a conditional sentence of the corm: If A, then B. Here B is the conservative position he is against, and A consists of one or more reasonable proposals that he knows conservatives would never accept. If we raise fuel efficiency standards on cars, get rid of the oil company subsidy, invest hundreds of billions in renewable sources of energy, ... , then I might be in favor of limited office drilling. This is reported in the news as Obama changes his position on drilling, when he hasn't changed it at all. Knowing that the if-clause could not be accepted by conservatives, he isn't really making a commitment to offshore drilling. But the fact is that, to many people, it looks like he supports drilling, and in so doing, he is helping to legitimize drilling.
Meanwhile, an opportunity is being lost. The Drilling Frame is being accepted. The Drilling Frame works like this:
You drill. You hit oil. You pump it up. There's lots of it. Prices go down.
What is left out of the frame are all the crucial facts.
The timeline: It's ten years from drilling to getting gas at the pump.
The amount: It's very small compared to what we use. We'll barely notice it. There isn't enough to significantly bring down prices.
The danger: Drilling is killing: Offshore spills can destroy fishing grounds.
The world market: The oil will go on the world market, which means that China, India, and other countries will drive up the price. There may be no saving at all.
Global Warming: More oil can only increase global warming.
A Diversion: Drilling takes investment away from alternative energy.
Just stating the facts won't change the frame. But the right visuals might. Start with the existing frame and visuals. Add each pitfall visually, one by one, so that it becomes clear at each stage what will go wrong. Visuals are powerful, and they can be used to put McCain on the defensive.
The Moral: Obama needs to be Obama again, the inspiring figure who gives us hope, not the dull policy wonk. He underestimated McCain's debating abilities, and needs to prep both externally by giving the press new questions to ask, and internally, by being precise and making his values clear. And he has to remember that voters vote on the basis of values, authenticity, communication, trust, and identity. If he is going to bring realities into the campaign, he has to do it via a strategy that includes all of those.
Natural charisma and brilliance are not enough. There's some hard work to be done.
Comments
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69 Comments so far
Show AllTo be honest, moving into rural areas would be impractical and counterproductive. They'll be coming to us soon enough, fuel prices will make sure of that. Urbanization and the concentration of population and resources is really much more efficient and will have plenty of environmental and economic benefits that we need to encourage as much as possible. We are already in the right place, ahead of the game.
Until that point, I'm not sure what can really be done on the national front beyond "do the best we can to weather the storm". The system is really rigged against us nationally, but the same can't be said for the cities. We need to focus on them, encouraging economic development, green policies, infrastructure, and progressive policies at the local level. There's no reason progressives shouldn't be more active in local politics, and even dominant. Things like cities acting on their own to adopt Kyoto are good steps that prove that very often cities are ahead on the national curve on progressive issues --often out of a sense of practicality. As the federal and state governments increasingly turn their backs on cities to focus obsessively on the rural and small town and suburban populations, cities are learning to act on their own in their own best interests. It doesn't at all hurt that cities are waking up to their own economic power, and the sense that they're more or less on their own has helped inspire them to find local solutions and autonomous unilateral actions. We need to organize to be in the right place to encourage that.
In a way, it's like the old song, "live and let die". We shouldn't give up the national picture, but we have to accept that our power there is limited. Do the best we can, sure, but in the end if the Republicans and their base want to self-destruct despite our best efforts to stop them, that's what they're going to do. We have to take care of our own, which means helping the cities survive and become more progressive, self-sufficient, greener places to live.
The federal government is going to weaken a lot as it bankrupts itself. There'll be less money to spend on an army, or on police state tactics, or in federal law enforcement. Much like Russia before Putin, our nukes will keep us from being invaded or officially attacked, but beyond a lot of impotent saber rattling we won't have much ability to project force beyond our borders. The rest of the world will know it, too, and we'll be the only ones not referring to us as a "former superpower". National policies, while remaining conservative longer than the trendline for the rest of the country, will become less relevant and less able to push it's agenda onto localities. There'll be federal saber rattling at the states and cities too as they chart a more independent course, but without funding for federal law enforcement it will be more rhetoric than reality.
The places we live and work and play are the places we have the most opportunity to gain power and influence and bring about positive change. If we cant save the federal government or the nation beyond the city limits, it sucks but it's survivable. If we do what we have to do to keep the cities livable, economics will take care of the rest. A bankrupt nation can't prosecute wars, or field gestapo agents to police private citizens. Localities, however, can make laws to protect it's vulnerable citizens and keep it's environment clean and reduce waste. As national structures weaken and fail, cities will do for themselves. It's a process that has already begun, and progressives need to organize to be in positions to both hold and influence power.
The decline of the United States as an empire and a nation will open a lot of space for DIYism to take root. We have to be ready to meet those challenges head on and get things done where it counts, in the places we live. Accomplish that, and the state of the national government will become academic.
Again, thanks for the response. You've done a great deal of thinking about the issue.
I do have one additional question to add into the mix.
Over the last few days in particular I've wondered at the extreme verbal invective used predominantly by Right-leaning folk. For me, the contrast has been startling and perplexing. I'm not a particularly religious person, though have always believed in freedom of religion. So in general, I've not really thought about religion or extreme views of religion as a possible motivating factor. To me, that's not what religion is about. But when I read about the extremes, about Dominionist connections and views infiltrating the fabric of government (mostly on the GOP side) and when I read what these views actually are, I'm a bit floored.
These are aberrations I do concede. Still, these aberrations seem to be establishing more and more of a foothold.
According to Chip Berlet "Dominionism is therefore a tendency among Protestant Christian evangelicals and fundamentalists that encourages them to not only be active political participants in civic society, but also seek to dominate the political process as part of a mandate from God." (http://www.talk2action.org/story/2005/11/28/172929/14)
Also, (and this could be a partial explanation for the extreme vituperative language in certain circles against Dems and Liberals):
"...in 1958, Branham began teaching "Serpent Seed" doctrine, the belief that Satan had sex with Eve, resulting in Cain and his descendants. "Through Cain came all the smart, educated people down to the antediluvian flood — the intellectuals, bible colleges," Branham wrote in the kind of anti-mainstream religion, anti-intellectual spirit that pervades the Joel's Army movement to this day. "They know all their creeds but know nothing about God." (http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=964)
I would put to you this question. What else could possibly cause the extreme hatred towards Dems, Liberals and Progressives I'm seeing currently from a good portion of the Right Wing?
"MAVERICK" a gun slinging gambler willing to risk everything for a quick buck. "PITBULL" a viscous attack animal that would turn on it's handlers with jaws like a steel trap.You know the term mind like a steel trap; once it closes nothing gets in. Throw it back at 'em sounds like Maverick and pitbull are apt descriptions.
PEACE GURL: Thank you for the compliment.
ENLIVEN: Have you ever had your IQ tested? Is it in the upper atmospheres?
de nada
… well some may have seen my sparks here and there to be compared to that of a quasar, which is strong enough -- out beyond the faint traces left of what's left of the big bang 15 billion light years away -- to beam through billions of galaxies to reach us as merely odd notes clanging still.
It's really not about me, as I'm the hole in the flute that Christ's breath blows through -- Listen to that music ( Hafiz c. 1400 ) !
… others have said that perhaps I tried breathing that thin air up there for too long, and that explains it all.
Everyone's mileage will vary -- mine humbly does.
Namaste
I like Lakoff...
but the comment about how Obama needs to train to sound more like McCain is distressing.
I don't want OUR candidates to fall down that pr trap.. So what if you can speak in soundbites...
I LIKE thoughtful and I think that is what Obama had going for him.. is THOUGHTFULNESS>
We are a dumbed down society because people are not willing to listen to thoughtful speech.
100+ years ago.. people wrote and spoke THOUGHTFULLY. Now it is how many points can you make in a 20 second spot. While that is the reality of our situation..when can we turn it back and make it more about thoughtfulness?
"Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity" Horace Mann First President of Antioch College.
Hearing from a bunch of you about how bad Obama is and how bad John is, what is your solution? and don't say vote third party because that doesn't work and I'm sure we could all run those people down too. I'd rather have Obama in the White House than McCain and Palin because McCain is just like George and GOD help us with another four years of the Republican corruption and B.S. I think we should all just "foget about it" because it will be all over. They will not change anything. Palin is as bad as Cheney from what I have read about her. She is a manipulator and puts herself first. She fires anyone that doesn't agree with her,(Bush) is secretive (Cheney). I saw a little of her on Gibson's interview. He asked her about the Bush Doctrine. She looked like she didn't know and just went off on something about war. Some reporter asked McCain about her experience with intermational terrorism. He went off on some thing about her economic policy ect,ect. The reporter asked again and John went off on something else. The reporter asked him again about her experience and John changed the subject again.
This is what we have to look forward to. I'm for Obama and I don't care if you like him or not. I don't want John and Sarah running this country. It scares me.
What Obama needs to do is match his inspiring rhetoric with congruent action in his role in the Senate. I may be unusual, but the incongruence between what candidates make speeches about and how they vote, legislate and do the business of government has alienated me from the mainstream voting process, the campaigns of both parties, and any belief that I might be represented in any acceptably significant way if either candidate is elected.
I may be unusual in this aspect, but my bet would be that, whether most potential voters realize it or understand it the way I do, the fact that we have miserable turnout on election day, even in large turnout years, is related to these incongruencies.
It looks dishonest. It appears to be framed in disingenuous and manipulative ways and then is framed to take those manipulations and that disingenuousness off the table of discourse and minimize it as unimportant. To encourage more of the same, or to encourage ways to improve the framing and the ways in which this disingenuousness is approached does not solve the problem, just exacerbates it at a higher level of accomplishment. More adept manipulation.
Added to that the outrageously corrupt way these campaigns are funded and the ignorant and classist attitude toward the obscene amount of money squandered while the candidates attempt to appear genuine while they profess an authentic interest in "real people" and the economic problems this system of elections has contributed to, the framing I see has more to do with the tragically comical enforced enrichment of a class of people who do not want to find ways to cut their addiction to corporate Machiavellians who know how to buy influence and power by buying people whose personality constructs are generally without substance and demand to be filled by a combination of manufactured and equally empty adoration and greed.
I strongly agree. Had Obama voted like a true populist and actually stood up to the corporate/military/religious elites despite the odds being stacked against him, he wouldn't be running a Gore/Kerry-esque style campaign by now. Of course, it is hard to say that he would have made it to the nomination status either. The Democratic Party and the advisors and strategists need to be thoroughly reformed if the party really wants to win and make a difference for the better rather than lose most of the time and lose even when they win.
Enliven, I read Frankel's book many times, but not for at least twenty years. I may look at it again. I believe everything you said in my better moments. Thanks
WC DEVINS: Your 11:04 PM commentary is excellent, but you stated it yourself: "the discerning voter," and therein lies the lethal rub. There are approximately 50 million Evangelical types in the "true believers" camp who will ONLY hear the "maverick" title, and perhaps just like these 2 fools on some kind of visceral--I identify with them--level. Thus TRUTH gets lost and they respond like Pavlov's dog to "key cue" words. It's a sorry state, but even the ideal of educating some of these people is made nearly impossible by the sheer fact that faith & belief (which they identify with) are not responsive to Truth. Thus the TRUTH ain't gonna set these followers free any time soon. The irony is that when they do meet their maker, their lame excuse that they "were only following orders" (in this case of highly corrupted religious "leaders") ain't gonna hold any cosmic water.
After seeing that 'craigslist/politics' site I realized that everyone who posts here at CD has at least some intellect, whatever the motivation for their positions. So rather than call Leea names I decided to appeal to her intellect with the "discerning voter" phrase, which I chose very carefully. The problem is it takes so much more time and thought to pen a rational and reasoned response rather than to simply fire away rantingly!
There are certainly millions of "undiscerning voters", and it is truly our burden to overcome their ignoring of the facts with our intellects. We need to outnumber them at the polls, or the country is lost.
Hehe, if you're like me in a deep red state like South Carolina, it can be a daily chore. For a guy like me who's a moderate progressive, I'm more like a raisin in a muffin. We're trying to reform the Democrats at the local and even state levels. The state levels are very tough to crack and even some local levels are tougher to crack as well but every state will have places that won't change parties for the forseeable future. Still, it doesn't hurt to give more places a try and perhaps offer progressive/liberal ideologies that can click.
P.S. I relate the previous post in that I see those who NOW vote for Republican candidates as WILLFUL accessories to crimes against humanity. As RICH M and other intelligent posters have elucidated in this forum, the democrats ARE complicit. I understand fully the excellent argument as per the "A" and "B" team and their respective functions to keep the illusion going; yet I still see the democrats as the lesser evil. Evil, indeed... and perhaps lesser is a small distinction when it comes to who gets to manage the great beast: which is our military industrial complex, only too quick on the trigger of GENUINE weapons of mass destruction.
As Howard Zinn and others (Chomsky) have pointed out, the U.S. is thus far the only nation that's actually USED such weapons, and yet makes a claim to the moral authority to determine who else gets to join the club. Based on the history of India/Pakistan to provide both with weapons, or stand idly by as these regions develop nuclear arms is a recipe for mass suicide. The U.S. has NO moral authority and has MISUSED its own leadership, and its own purposes... the CANCER of greed, and the zodiac sign Cancer (our nation is a July 4/Cancer entity) with its emphasis on maintaining power within specific families of privilege, have co-opted the nation's intentions and resources for their own dark ends. THIS is the sign that will be up against cosmic foes in the next 7 years. "As above, so below," the Divine equation is inviolate... the misuse of power will be wrested away from those who are guilty of the worst trespasses against the family of mankind.
I agree with Frederic Johnson -- Lakoff should help third party candidates. These parties are our only hope of getting our country out the endless wars. Remember that Eisenhower warned us decades ago that the military industrial complex could take over and would want endless wars for their profits---well, here we are.
Our problem is really corporate control of our government. Mussolini defined fascism as government and corporations together. We must not vote for the two corporate parties. I suggest you vote for Nader and Gonzalez who have the termination of corporate 'personhood' as a major issue. You vote for Obama or McCain and you will get more of what we have now.
Hi Pat,
One other thing. Here's something about Lakoff in this article I want to add on:
"In 1980, Richard Wirthlin -- Ronald Reagan's chief strategist -- made a fateful discovery. In his first poll he discovered that most people didn't like Reagan's positions on the issues, but nevertheless wanted to vote for Reagan. The reason, he figured out, is that voters vote for president not primarily on the issues, but on five other factors -- "character" factors: Values; Authenticity; Communication and connection; Trust; and Identity. In the Reagan-Carter and Reagan-Mondale debates, Mondale and Carter were ahead on the issues and lost the debates, because the debates were not about the issues, but about those other five character factors. George W. Bush used the same observation in his two races. Gore and Kerry ran on the issues. Bush ran on those five factors.
In the 2008 nomination campaign, Hillary ran on the issues, while Obama ran on those five factors and won. "
Back during the nomination, Obama did not have to show his record. At that time, the media basically elevated him to the top. Issues do matter a great deal and actually, I thought Obama brought them up more than he's doing right now. The closer to the election one gets, the more both the issues and the framing matter. Obama has a very weak Senate record in pale comparison to most senators. Add to it, his voting pro-GOP most of the time and failing to discuss the times when he did vote liberal is what put him off to a bad start. Those five factors Lakoff is discussing can only be made to work if Obama had substance to back it up. Since he's running on empty, no amount of framing is going to help him at this point. His long term ditching of the progressive/liberal base is coming back to haunt him and that is why the collapse of his candidacy which started, I would say in the beginning of August, is becoming more apparent.
Democrats can only frame better if they have their progressive/liberal voting record to back it up. Otherwise, they have to frame as Republicans and LOSE yet again.
Hi FrederickJohnson...
I don't entirely agree with your conclusion that "Democrats can only frame better if they have their progressive/liberal voting record to back it up. Otherwise, they have to frame as Republicans and LOSE yet again."
I do think that if the Democrats can remind people in this country of what IS truly important in a thriving successful democracy and what contributes to such a democracy... can tap into that personal experience that speaks to this... Its all about garnering that personal, passionate reaction...then the Democrats can WIN. And this has nothing to do with track records or voting records. Interestingly, that's what made Obama so compelling early on... his ability to "remind" people of the possibilities. He inspired them. Gave them hope. There's power in this.
Issues are important as are track records. In many ways, I wish Obama's experience and ability to inspire could be morphed with a resume like that of the late Paul Wellstone. But we've got to work with what we have at the moment and be realistic about the abysmal alternative.
The game can be won.
I agree. I would love to see Lakoff give some aid to third-party (Green, Libertarian) and independent (Nader, Cindy Sheehan) candidates.
As it doesn't look like he'll do it, the job will be left to others. I would like to see any ideas that readers might have on this score.
--
Dan Clore
My collected fiction: _The Unspeakable and Others_
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Enjoyed the article.
Properly "framed", Sarah Palin is Dick Cheney in a blazer and high heels.
People can fill in the blanks.
Looks like McCain's choice is a page from the George Bush scrapbook.