This front-loaded presidential election year is spinning past at dizzying
speed. It's all happening much too fast to think. Which isn't good for the
voters, the country, or the candidates, who no longer get to wage a long,
drawn-out national campaign for their party's nomination. To run a
presidential marathon requires endurance, thought, organization and grace
under pressure. Maybe even high principle. Or at least low cunning. Reduce
the race to a sprint and you get, well, what the country's got in 2008 - too
many elections too soon. Result: The chances increase of electing a chief
executive unprepared for the job - and Lord knows the country has had enough
of those.
Some of us can remember those long-ago times, like four years ago, when a
proper pace was maintained in these presidential sweepstakes. The campaign
would essentially start off, as long custom dictated, in New Hampshire in
February, proceed in measured steps to big states like New York in the late
spring, and then conclude with the biggest prize of all, California, at the
beginning of summer. This long, stately procession of primaries set the
stage for the big show, the nominating conventions, at the end of the whole,
and possibly even deliberative, process.
Well, deliberation ain't got a chance in 2008. Not in all this swirl. Those
of us who are supposed to comment on these hasty proceedings barely have
time to scrawl a few notes, let alone go beyond the horse race to discuss
the great issues at stake, if any.
There's just barely time to count the votes in one primary before the
country must move on to the next crucial/decisive/must-win primary or
primaries. Super Tuesday is followed by Super Tuesday II, which will be
followed by what? A sudden-death playoff tonight? A slow swan song over
half a year? A helluva trainwreck at this year's Democratic national
convention that'll derail the surviving candidate in the fall?
Through the grace of history or maybe just happenstance, the United States
of America had developed just about the best of tests for a prospective
president: the long, well-paced campaign. Now we're busy junking it.
The only sure thing about this year's presidential election is that it's
going too fast. The effect is like running an old movie at twice the
intended speed, or a 33 rpm record at 78. Everything is reduced to a
high-pitched whine, a montage of jerky movements. Think? Americans are too
busy voting - early and often.
In such an atmosphere, the press is as subject as the voters to mindless
enthusiasms, maybe more so, for we've got deadlines to meet, copy to file,
air time to fill, judgments to rush to. Consider the whole phenomenon known
as Obamamania. This kind of political intoxication deserves a chapter in the
sequel to "Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds" that I'd long
intended to write if only I hadn't been swamped by the sheer overabundance
of raw material.
Oh, the swooning of the crowds, the adulation of the political junkies! The
whole thing has been sweeping over the country like a great national
revival, or maybe just the flu. Whatever it is, it's contagious. The
media-ocracy, formerly known as the press, seems unable to control its
attraction for this bright new star flashing across the political heavens.
To cite a few symptoms of the effect St. Barack Chrysostom has had on some
of us taking notes out in the pews:
Chris Matthews, who once prided himself on playing hardball, went all weak
in the knees, literally, after one of the Sen. Obama's many victory
speeches, saying he felt "this thrill going up my leg." Contrary to Mr.
Dooley's oft-cited dictum, politics is beanbag
once Barack Obama casts his spell over formerly hardened observers of the
game.
Tough, probing questions are transformed into sweet nothings as Sen. Obama
enchants the smitten fourth estate. Bob Schieffer of CBS, who's been around
so long you'd think he'd be resistant to puppy love by now, confessed that
he got all choked up just watching the pro-Obama video "Yes We Can."
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