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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
07.08.2008
David Broder Self-Parody Watch

David Broder, Dean of the etc., etc., has a column today on the negative tone of the presidential campaign, in which he comes to the conclusion that both candidates are to blame--but the young, outsidery Democrat somewhat more so than the older, established Republican. Knock me over with a feather.

Broder manages the remarkable feat of writing on negativity in the campaign without once mentioning McCain's "troops" smear (which his own paper led the way in declaring untrue), any of his ads deriding Obama as a Paris-Hilton-like celebrity or self-imagined Messiah, or the GOP's hilarious tire-gauge antics. (Apart from that, Mrs. Lincoln....) The only actual attacks Broder cites are the charge that Obama was "playing the race card," and McCain's suggestion that Obama would be willing to lose a war in order to win an election. (Moreover, he backs into this latter attack, citing Obama's complaint about it rather than the smear itself.)

Broder spoke to both candidates for the column and basically framed it entirely in the terms offered by McCain, which should be no surprise given that those terms concerned that lifelong Broder obsession, process. The harsh tone of the campaign, McCain suggested, is not due to, say, decisions made by his campaign team to relentlessly skewer, distort, and belittle his opponent (decisions which have been widely second-guessed even by fellow Republicans); no, the harsh tone is due to Obama's refusal to appear in a series of 10 town-hall-style events. Of course!

But never fear, debates are on the way, and American politics will no doubt once again come to resemble a civics textbook. At least, that is, for commentators paying as little attention to the campaign as Broder.

Update: I belatedly see that Mike has already pointed out why, apart from the question of who's to blame for the recent nastiness, debates are unlikely to be the cure-all Broder imagines.

--Christopher Orr

Posted: Thursday, August 07, 2008 11:18 AM with 9 comment(s)

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icarusr said:

Does anyone actually read Broder's Bromides?  And isn't he, like, a wrinkly old dude viagriaing himself for one last charge into electoral breach in support of yet another WOD?

August 7, 2008 11:32 AM

tnmats said:

Is Broder so senile where he can't see that McLiar is responsible for the harsh negative tone of this campaign season?  Just asking.

August 7, 2008 12:17 PM

Wandreycer1 said:

Remember what a hilarious old bitty Broder was when the Clinton's first came to town? He and the incomparably lame Sally Quinn spent years huffing and puffing that their incestuous, entitled little social set was ignored (I always loved the Clintons for that).  Broder has no credibility with anyone under 50.  Now its Richard Cohen's turn to be the frightened, offended old bitty.

Border and Co seem to me to be exactly the type of dead wood Obama is trying to flush out of the system, no wonder Broder is fawning over McCain - he's much safer for him than Obama ever will be.  

August 7, 2008 12:30 PM

drozenson said:

To borrow from Mark Twain, Broder's columns are chloroform in print.  After reading one or two sentences, my mind wanders or I escape to the Toles cartoon. His writing is verbal Muzak.  

August 7, 2008 12:46 PM

blackton said:

Broder isn't the only one who peddles this crap. I think all the media wants to be "fair" and say both sides are at fault.

McCain calls Obama a traitor, Obama denies it. The press claims Obama is calling McCain a liar.

August 7, 2008 1:03 PM

perkowitz said:

You know, I've never read Broder. But I've often read people describing him as the dean of something or other and then going on to point out what a goo-goo-head he seems to be. Is he actually an opinion-maker? among whom? is this, like, an old-MSM-guy-vs-young-bloggers thing?

August 7, 2008 1:27 PM

scire said:

It was the same way in the primaries, remember? When Hillary said the media was unfair, they went overboard in their relentless reporting of all things negative re: Obama. And remember the ABC debate with Gibson and Stephanopolous where instead of those two supposed moderators moderating, Obama was ganged up on by the three of them?

McCain whines that the media no longer kisses his butt, and they all go negative in their coverage of Obama. The analysis of Obama starting the race card was overdone. Where was the equally scathing analysis of McCain's ads? It's Obama's fault that his opponenent made all the negative attacks, and when he defends himself -- he's even worse. And if he doesn't defend himself? THe media laments he's not doing so. He's in a catch-22 of the media's making.

If there were two people drowning and Obama only managed to rescue one of them, McCain would criticize him for not being heroic enough, and the media would criticize him for taking the risk.

Obama gets more coverage, but he gets more negative coverage.

August 7, 2008 1:46 PM

maldini said:

At best Broder's column gives the impression there's equal blame - and also that McCain is deeply saddened at being forced by Obama to smear Obama. Unreal. This kind of reporting is indicative of the larger problem with press coverage, which typically means shrugging off perspective and instead treating both arguments with equal validity. That breaks down rather quickly when one side is full of shit.

August 7, 2008 1:59 PM

jhildner said:

Broder is big old poo-poo head.

August 7, 2008 5:57 PM