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Another Voice

Wednesday, 26th March 2008

Reading the speeches of McCain and Obama has made me ashamed of our political class and its craven soundbites

Rather less than two years ago, bored and with time to kill at a Conservative party conference, I decided to do what is for a British journalist a rather unusual thing. I decided to read a whole speech, a long speech by a politician, a speech with no particular news value. I decided to read every word.

The full text happened to be lying on my bed. I had taken it from a huge pile left largely untouched on the counter of the Press Office. It was Senator John McCain’s speech to the Tory conference. I knew that it had not caused much of a stir, had said nothing new, and that fellow-journalists had reported it as ponderous, overlong and dull.

So I read it. And it was ponderous, overlong and often dull. Nor did the speech say anything surprising or new. There was nothing there worth remembering for future reference, or quoting to you now, two years later, nor any passage that seemed worth noting down. This was a speech cluttered with heavy furniture.

But it was his. You knew that at once. It had a certain old-fashioned style and respect for language that I admire. And it turned me into a convinced admirer of the Senator that I shall always now be. I finished reading, certain that an honourable and honest man was behind the writing, certain of his strength of mind and will, and certain of his almost abrasive sense of right and wrong.

I suppose the qualities that came through most were an uncompromising nature, and a certain thrilling carelessness whether or not he was keeping his reader with him. There were quaint, somewhat antique turns of speech that any Alastair Campbell would have removed at once; long, convoluted sentences with precarious dependent clauses; and an almost solemnly scholarly tone that reminded me of my dear, self-educated, bookish grandfather. Without being able to say how, I gained from it the strongest sense of a stiff-necked integrity that seemed both refreshing and different, and wholly admirable.

One of the ways that integrity came through, I remember noting, was in a stubborn if subliminal reluctance to overstate his case for the sake of effect; he never picked the easy, vulgar word. And (though I know McCain’s reputation for impatience and sudden anger) an essential intellectual modesty came through: this speaker did not believe and so would not pretend that politics was easy or obvious; that every question had a clear answer; or that his opponents were wicked or stupid. I feel I learnt more about McCain in that quiet 20 minutes with his text in my hotel bedroom than I have since from months of reading news reports and commentaries.

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Ian C

March 28th, 2008 11:26am

These men are running for Head of State (and the world) whereas our political leaders have to play second fiddle to the media and when in power are unchecked by Parliament or a Supreme Court, if they have any sort of a parliamentary majority which by definition they have. We need the checks and balances that the American Constitution brings (and that does not mean the poor relation that would be proportional represenatation) so we can get our politicians more closely accountable for their actions. If we can do this without the money and time spent on elections in the USA we would really improve our governance and sense of purpsoe as a nation.

Alf C

March 28th, 2008 12:35pm

Usually, in the discussion of race in America, it is all about "Black" and "White". In his Philadelphia speech, Senator Obama introduced immigration into the equation, and thus the question of assimilation. As the son of an immigrant, he surely realizes that being multicultural is a transient status and that Affirmative Action is only a temporary accomodation on the road to full assimilation. Mainstreaming can be the only goal.

Ian C, I had the impression that Parliament was more responsive, even though in the US, citizens may have "recall", and "referendum" by which to exert influence in their state or in the Congress.

Rosemary Fitzgerald

March 28th, 2008 5:12pm

In his 1989 memoir, 'Wordstruck', the Canadian broadcaster and author Robert MacNeil wrote about the way "public men" use words. I read them for the first time this month and can't stop thinking about them with respect to the US election in particular, and politicians everywhere. I think they make an excellent footnote to this article:

"We are adrift today in a sea of weightless words. . . . The public words of public men seem to be used increasingly like aerosol room fresheners, to make nice smells. The President of the United States routinely uttered words he did not think through, words that he had not searched his thoughts to find; just a package of words on a file card. Occasionally he read the wrong set and laughed it off.

"The U.S. was founded on words that weighed heavily, words that carried the deepest convictions of thoughtful, daring men. Would you believe a politician today who said he pledged his life and sacred honour? Or have those words just come to be a way of sounding sincere? . . . Politics, the law, advertising, religion become the art of employing words to cover for the moment, to get you off the hook, to win a verdict, pass a test, fill a space, get rid of a question."

Terry James

March 28th, 2008 6:28pm

As a Canadian I always respected the speeches Tony Blair delivered. They were well written and I believe that most of them he wrote on his own, unlike George Bush, who I think relies heavily on speech writers.

Terry James
Vegreville, Alberta, Canada

Paula Wagstaff

March 29th, 2008 12:37am

Matthew, a simple reply.

Thank you for your article and your observance.
Believe me, it is even more frustrating in New Zealand.
In fact a total kindergarten.

Serge Isaac Barou

March 30th, 2008 6:48am

In an article on speech and use of words, Mr. Parris' own performance is less then satisfactory.

He calls Rev. Wright's assertion that HIV is the government's invention purposed to eradicate the black community, “a strident comment about race”. Is it really?

Citing Senator Obama's description of his own Grandmother as “a woman who once confessed her fear of black men who passed by her on the street”, Mr. Parris obviously is not aware that the episode comes from Barack Obama's published autobiography, and that the book makes it abundantly clear that the old lady confessed her fear of one certain black man (single), not black men (plural) in general.

There are plenty of other discrepancies in the content of Senator Obama's speeches, lovely written and delivered in “that sonorous baritone of his which makes his drive-through Macdonald's order of Big Mac, French fries and strawberry shake sound so profound” (to cite another columnist).

However, these speeches fall short of the instinctual honesty that Mr. Parris discovered.

Serge Barou
Welllington, NZ

Liz Babcock

March 30th, 2008 8:06pm

Unfortunately, it is impossible to determine how much of any speech is attributable to the person who delivers it, and how much to his or her speecewriter.


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