The Spectator on Barack Obama and the Democratic nomination
But the challenge for Obama has only just begun. The polarised results of the Democratic primaries show that voters either ‘get’ Obama or they don’t. It should be a matter of utmost concern to his campaign that from 4 March to the end of the primary process on Tuesday night, Obama won only seven of the 16 contests and polled half a million fewer votes than Clinton. This reluctance amongst Democratic primary voters to unify behind the candidate who was clearly going to be the party’s nominee provides John McCain with an opportun-ity he must and will exploit. Worryingly for Obama, the demographic groups that he has problems with — white working-class voters, seniors and to some extent Jews and Latinos — are concentrated in the swing states that will determine this election.
The next president, moreover, will be responsible for commanding American troops in two wars, wars that will determine the geopolitical contours of this century. It is this responsibility that Obama has yet to show that he is ready to shoulder. In 2002, Obama opposed the Iraq war. Contrary to what is often said, this was not the politically courageous thing to do in a Democratic Senate primary in Illinois. (Dick Durbin, a Democratic Senator from Illinois, voted against the war with no political ill-effects.) Obama, though, has shown positive cowardice in the way that he has talked about the war in recent months. He has shown a Bush-like refusal to allow the changing facts on the ground to influence his thinking. Iraq is in a very different, and much better, condition than it was when the Democratic primary process started last year. But one would struggle to find anything but the most grudging recognition of that in Obama’s speeches. Instead, he is happy to talk in crude nationalistic terms about this most subtle of issues. This smacks not of the new politics but of the worst of the old.
The Democratic primary has dominated the headlines this election season; even McCain’s remarkable comeback from near political death has not been able to compete with the drama of the Clinton–Obama contest. The fight between the two Democrat contenders has already injected into the political bloodstream poisons that could be fatal for Obama in November: the problem with white working-class voters, his life-changing friendship with a racialist preacher, the radical milieu in which he moved in Chicago and policy views that have hewed ever more closely to the traditional Democratic orthodoxy. But it has left him the dominant figure in this election and thus the master of his own destiny.
This is Obama’s election to lose. The historic nature of his candidacy, his eloquence and the enthusiasm he engenders mean that he will be able to dominate the news at will in the coming months. In that time, he must persuade Americans that he has the character to be Commander in Chief — the one area where he trails McCain in the polls. If he fails, McCain, the only Republican who could win in a political environment where his party is at a historic low in public esteem, will be waiting in the wings. We have backed McCain because of his imaginative Republicanism and his superb record on national security. But the reality is that for him to succeed, his opponent will have to fail. This is Obama’s time.
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