The Democrats are having their flop-sweat moment. Barack Obama should be way
out in front. The Republicans are in terrible shape. There hasn't been a
more battered brand name since Bart Simpson swallowed a jagged metal "O"
from his box of Krusty-O's cereal. The GOP has nominated an old white-haired
dude, in Paris Hilton's words, who makes Dick Cheney look like a lambada
champion. He'll be the kind of president who will yell from the Oval Office
window, "You kids get off my lawn!" The economy isn't roadkill quite yet;
it's sort of like wounded roadkill, flopping around, unable to get going but
unwilling to lay down and die.
And yet, John McCain is pulling ahead of Obama. The latest Reuters poll has
Grandpa Munster up five percentage points over our secular messiah. The Real
Clear Politics average of polls has Obama and McCain in a virtual tie. And,
according to RCP, if the race were held today and McCain took the toss-up
states where he's currently ahead, he'd be the next president.
Yes, it's early. McCain has had a good couple weeks. But these were McCain's
first good couple weeks since he secured the nomination. Meanwhile, with the
exception of the Jeremiah Wright unpleasantness, Obama has had a good couple
years.
The winds at the Democrats' backs are hurricane-force gales, and yet there's
Obama holding steady, like a young Dan Rather in his schoolgirl rain
slicker, immobile and unmovable.
Ask the typical Obama supporter why this should be so and you'll get a range
of answers. Some just stare at the poll numbers the way my late basset hound
would look at me when I tried to feed him a grape: with pure unblinking
incomprehension. Others act like the guy who sits alone with his shopping
bags at the public library, muttering about Fox News conspiracies and how
Karl Rove-like aliens are doing terrible things with probes of proctological
exactitude. Still others just shake their heads at the racism of anyone who
could possibly have a problem with a very left-wing politician with almost
no experience, who often sounds like his campaign slogan is: "People of
Earth! Stop Your Bickering. I Am From Harvard, And I'm Here To Help."
Perhaps therein lies the answer to this supposed mystery. Indeed, perhaps
there's no mystery at all, and Obama's problems are the same problems
Democrats always have at the presidential level: He's an elitist.
Oh, I know. Upon reading that, some liberal spluttered herbal chai tea from
her nose at the injustice of this whole elitist canard, and the earnest Ivy
League interns at some liberal magazine have burst into laughter, offering
the appropriate bons mots from Balzac at the preposterousness of such a
suggestion, saying: "Don't you conservatives understand? Democrats care
about the little guy. They're on the side of the proletariat - I mean
workers - and as Obama has so eloquently put it, if the workers would only
stop clinging to their silly sky god and guns, they'd understand that."
Liberalism is often a problem at the presidential level. Cultural liberalism
is a burden. Haughty cultural liberalism is a disaster in the making. For
good or ill, the presidency is a cultural institution as much as it is a
political institution. And it's fundamentally a culturally conservative one.
Fair or not, many perceive Obama as a cultural outsider. This week, Chicago
Mayor Richard Daley said of Obama's friendship with former left-wing
domestic terrorist Bill Ayers: "They're friends. So what?"
Psephologist and columnist Michael Barone noticed during the primaries that,
with the exception of the black vote, Obama's support within the Democratic
Party is comprised almost entirely of cultural liberals. He dubbed this
intra-Democratic split a divide between "academics and Jacksonians." The
Jacksonians are working-class, culturally conservative whites. The academics
are the same people who formed the base for Howard Dean, Bill Bradley,
Michael Dukakis, Gary Hart, George McGovern and other successful presidents
in the anti-matter universe where Spock has a goatee.
In this universe, however, you need Jacksonians more than you need academics
to win a general election, which is one reason why no non-Southern Democrat
has won the presidency in nearly a half-century. It's not that voters love
Southerners, either. Rather, Southern Democrats simply seem more Jacksonian
(even so, only Jimmy Carter won with a majority of the popular vote).
Obama may still win, of course, proving that America is not only ready for a
black president, but a cultural liberal as well. If he loses, though, you
can be sure Democrats will claim he lost not because he is a black and more
charming Michael Dukakis, but simply because he is black. Because liberals
are never wrong. |