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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
31.12.2007
Michelle Obama Wows the Seniors

Grinnell, Iowa - I'm here at the Mayflower senior center to see Michelle Obama, as part of a few posts I'll do on the spousal effect this cycle. Michelle seems to be the kind of speaker that attracts tons of people -- aren't old ladies supposed to be Hillary voters? Well, they're here en masse -- but no journalists. (A lot of pols have the opposite problem.) Maureen Dowd is here, and a C-SPAN guy, but other than that, no scribes. I guess the spouses that are getting the attention are either the ones that frequently overshadow their mates (Bill, Elizabeth Edwards), or the trainwrecks (Jeri Thompson).

It's too bad, because Michelle is awesome. She is just so incredibly regal -- unbelievably tall, in a bold striped black suit that only makes her seem taller, with pearls and a swept-back hairdo that almost looks 30s-style. ("She is just so TALL!" some ladies are overheard saying as they leave.) She looks like more of a star than her husband. That said, I'm struck that her argument, in an intimate stump speech she gives entirely from memory, was completely different from Obama's. The first half of her address was about growing up in a humble, "tiny" South Side apartment. "My brother and I are products of the ordinary public schools," she stresses. "There was nothing miraculous about my upbringing." This point in contrast to Barack, whose entire life story is some kind of miracle. 

She uses the word "ordinary" nine times, by my count, in the speech; she doesn't drop the ubiquitous Obama keywords of "hope" until 20 minutes in, and "change" until 10 minutes after that. It's not radical change, an overhaul of "politics as usual," a huge infusion of new hope that people need, she says. Growing up, "my father didn't want much. People aren't asking for much." Just a "little bit of hope," as she puts it the first time she invokes Obama's signature keyword idea. Public schools a little bit better. Seniors who are a little bit healthier, and able to "give our kids a little extra candy now and then" for a few more years. It's not transformative; it's almost a conservative argument.

Perhaps this is why journalists aren't latching onto Michelle -- it's not as easy to square her argument for Obama with his own as it is to, say, match Elizabeth's gist with John's. That said, she's an incredibly effective speaker, great in her ability to make what could be humdrum points exciting. People seem wowed by her -- "If he wasn't running, I'd vote for her!" was one reaction. So maybe she's a good foil for Obama's soaring, transformative rhetoric.

--Eve Fairbanks

Posted: Monday, December 31, 2007 5:14 PM with 5 comment(s)

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ilnoca said:

I was flipping around the channels tonight and I caught the last 15 minutes of the her speech on CSPAN. You're right, Michelle is an amazing speaker: she doesn't mince words, you get the sense that she's not towing the campaign's line and is truly speaking her mind, and she has a presence that is quite different than her husband's but just as powerful.  If anything, her emphasis on the "ordinary" and her very practical call to arms reminded me of TNR's article on Obama's time as a community organizer (I think it was called "The Agitator"); Barack can get caught up in the flowery language of hope and unity, but Michelle's speech reminds you that he's a pragmatic fighter and not just an intellectual who considers himself above the sausage factory. Maybe Oprah's next role on the campaign should be getting people in the door to listen to Michelle.

January 1, 2008 2:22 AM

The Stump said:

Just caught an Obama rally this morning at a Des Moines high school, and Michelle Obama -- introducing

January 1, 2008 2:28 PM

vanwurs said:

I stumbled on that same speech at the Senior Center last night while I was surfing the cable channels....from the beginning.  I was absolutely mesmerised.  I have always been a little ambivalent about Michelle, frankly.   While I certainly neither want nor expect an adoring Nancy Reagan at Barack's elbow, I was often a little put off by Michelle's seeming uncontrollable need to remind us every chance she got how deeply flawed a human being her husband was, almost to the point where it seemed kind of emasculating.  

But this was the first oppurtunity I had to spend some time listening to her and enjoying the full force of her personality and her ability to speak her own, very orginal and compelling, mind.  And I was surprised and amazed and gratified.  She was quite magnificent.  She is as down to earth and tangible as he is eloquent and abstract, and Eve is right, she serves as a powerful counterpoint to him both intelllectually and rhetorically.  They make an effective team.

One idea that she kind of broached, unexpectedly and teasingly, toward the end....was the concept of a kind of "perpetual campaign".  She was talking about change and how Barack  hoped to accomplish the changes he is talking about in energy and health care and other contentious issues, and she seemed to suggest that this movement they were building to elect him should continue as (separate from the regular party apparatus?) an organization that can knock on doors, and call folks, and mobilze public support to put some muscle behind him in the communities across America when he takes on the entrenched forces that might oppose his programs.  This kind of gets back to the vision of community organizing, that she also evoked several times,  that origially animated Obama's first entry into public life back in his post undergraduate days, and gives a whole other dimension and possiblity to the idea a "theory of change" that has been discussed and debated in these pages and in the American Prospect.  i wonder if this is just Michelle musing, or whether it represents the thinking of Barack and his campaign.  I would like to hear more.  And I'm not altogether sure if it's a good idea or bad idea.  It's certainly more radical than anything Edwards or Krugman are talking about.  Structurally radical, for those of you who think he's only talking about process.

January 1, 2008 2:49 PM

The Plank said:

I think the explanation tomorrow morning, of Hillary's implosion and Obama's (unmiraculous) victory

January 3, 2008 10:01 PM

The Plank said:

I think the explanation tomorrow morning, of Hillary's implosion and Obama's (unmiraculous) victory

January 3, 2008 11:54 PM