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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
08.10.2008
Obama's Professorial Advantage

This was one of Obama's better performances of the campaign (possibly his best), and I thought it had a lot to do with the format. All summer long--really for several years now--we've heard how McCain excels in townhall settings. But tonight he seemed old, cranky, and downright tired as he trooped around the stage. His movements were stiff and herky-jerky--surely a product of his brutal treatment in Vietnam, but nonetheless jarring to watch. Even his eyebrows seemed bushier than usual. My hunch is that McCain has benefited from having the stage to himself in past townhall meetings. Sharing the spotlight with a much younger, more vigorous and agile man really highlighted his physical liabilities in a way that hadn't previously been apparent.

By contrast, Obama really benefitted from his years as a law professor. He was fluent and very much at ease walking and talking at the same time. He had a professor's knack for making eye contact and maintaining it while he walked a questioner through a multi-step response. And his answers were much more concrete and intuitive than I'd ever heard them. It's as though it took fielding questions from ordinary people to remind him of this latent professorial talents.

On the question of health care, for example, Obama was effective at defusing McCain's cheap anti-government rhetoric with tangible evidence at every step of the way. He explained why healthcare should be a right by describing his mother's fight with insurers during the final months of her life. He explained that the reason he mandates coverage for children is that they're "relatively cheap to insure and we don't want them going to the emergency room for treatable illnesses like asthma." And he exposed the shallowness of arguments about government intrusion by pointing out that, without regulators, insurers don't always deliver on what you pay them for. There wasn't an abstraction in the answer. Which is to say, it was professorial in the best sense (a teacher), not in the sense (highbrow and windy) that's often been applied to Obama.

Possibly the best example of this came when the debate turned to Pakistan. The questioner seemed hostile to Obama's approach: "Should the United States respect Pakistani sovereignty and not pursue al Qaeda terrorists who maintain bases there, or should we ignore their borders and pursue our enemies like we did in Cambodia during the Vietnam War?"

In response to which Obama did a number of important things. First, he provided some critical context: We wouldn't even be having this discussion had Bush destroyed al Qaeda before invading Iraq. Instead, Bush allowed al Qaeda to escape to Pakistan, from which they're sniping at our troops and destablizing the region. Next, Obama explained that we'd first exhaust other options--giving the Pakistanis an incentive to do the job themselves--before launching a strike. Only at that point, he said, and only "if we have Osama bin Laden in our sights and the Pakistani government is unable or unwilling to take them out," would he give the go-ahead. It was about as far from gratuitously belligerent as you could get--and all thanks to Obama's soothing, professorial windup.

More importantly, I thought the Pakistan exchange was the moment when son overtook father in the Oedipal drama that's been a subtext of this campaign. After Obama gave his initial response, McCain pressed the absurd line that his opponent didn't understand talking softly while carrying a big stick--that he was, in other words, erratic.

Coming from a candidate whose name has been synonymous with "erratic" these last several weeks, it left McCain dangerously exposed, and Obama didn't miss with his counterpunch. "This is the guy who sang, 'Bomb, bomb, bomb Iran,' who called for the annihilation of North Korea. That I don't think is an example of 'speaking softly,'" he said. "This is the person who, after we had--we hadn't even finished Afghanistan, where he said, 'Next up, Baghdad.'" As if to add insult to injury, Obama nearly straight-armed McCain when he tried to interrupt, underscoring not only his intellectual advantages but also his physical ones.

For his part, McCain was as lacking in coherence as Obama was fluent. He mangled his explanations and stepped on his own canned punchlines. His diction was bizarrely geriatric at times, culiminating with his inexplicable reference to Obama as "that one"--language befitting a grandchild who refuses to eat his broccoli. Though McCain has traditionally been deft at larding his responses with anecdotes, tonight was mostly argument by cranky assertion. I counted over a dozen times (14, I think) when McCain began a sentence or clause with the phrase "I know"--as in "I know how to get America working again" and "I know how to fix this economy." Great, but a lot of voters don't believe you. How about an example or two next time?

McCain faced a tough choice coming into this debate: He could make a dramatic move, which might help close the gap but could also reinforce his unsteadiness. Or he could try to look mature and reassuring, which might ease his perception problem but wouldn't instantly affect the polls. Tonight McCain pulled off an impressive feat: He managed to do nothing particularly dramatic, yet still give the impression that he's old and unsteady. I see very little for him to build on.

--Noam Scheiber 

Posted: Wednesday, October 08, 2008 12:18 AM with 33 comment(s)

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chrismealy said:

Since McCain's returned from Vietnam he's probably never addressed a hostile crowd. Okay, maybe at a Republican debate in 2000, but hardly ever.  Everywhere he goes he's a war hero.

Obama, back when he was a community organizer, must have faced room after room of people who didn't know him, or didn't trust him, or thought he was weird. And again when he was running in Illinois.  That is hard, hard stuff. The reason he's so at ease is because he payed his dues.

October 8, 2008 12:43 AM

psantillana said:

crismealy, that is something I'd never thought of, and it makes sense.

Also, it only just occured to me after reading this post - and seeing this debate - that the war injuries and the age are probably the only thing keeping him from getting all Jim Cramer Mad Money on us. There was one point at which he whipped around and pointed full-armed at Obama - it wasn't the "this guy" or "that guy" or whatever it was, it was something else - at the very end of an answer, and those dials just went down like a waterfall. I think the only thing restraining him from doing more IS his body, and you can see where the spirit hits the limits of the flesh, and that makes his movements seem more dramatic -- and ridiculous.  

If he were dignified, none of this physical stuff would be a problem, I guess is the short version.

October 8, 2008 1:14 AM

ralphnelle said:

"Bizarrely geriatric" is pretty priceless diction in its own right. Hadn't thought of the townhall = classroom idea, but it seems right to me. Obama couldn't have seemed more comfortable.

Have we ever had a candidate who is this self-disciplined? It's pretty inspiring to watch.

October 8, 2008 1:32 AM

thetraytiger said:

Brilliant move on Obama's part, tactically speaking, to avoid the mid-summer town halls and let the anticipation build up for this debate, McCain's Texas/Ohio. Build 'em up, so they come crashing down.

October 8, 2008 1:55 AM

dylanposer said:

Chrismealy,

three cheers!  

October 8, 2008 2:14 AM

Lyn39 said:

Chrismealy said:

"Obama, back when he was a community organizer, must have faced room after room of people who didn't know him, or didn't trust him, or thought he was weird. And again when he was running in Illinois.  That is hard, hard stuff. The reason he's so at ease is because he payed his dues."

********

You have positively hit the nail on the head.  Obama was not welcomed with open arms when he showed up in Chicago.  They found him too lofty, did not have faith in him, thought him naive and too ambitious.  With the exception of a few women who really took a liking to him on a personal level and who were convinced that he was genuine and sincere, many scoffed at him.  

In the end, what most helped him gain steam in Chicago was when he turned to the local pastors and reverends and asked how they felt Obama could best help the community.

I watched segment of an interview with McCain (perhaps on 60 minutes? [not the most lofty of news shows, I admit]) where McCain stated that he was the luckiest man in the world, and it's been that luck that's brought him to where he is right now.  Luck?  Luck?  First, I don't know if I even believe in luck.  Secondly, Obama was on that stage last night and is leading in the polls due to diligence and hard work.  He's not a POW, but he's fought his own personal wars and come out the the victor.  That's an important distinction and one that I find significant.

October 8, 2008 8:10 AM

Lyn39 said:

ralphnelle, I was swooning with respect and admiration for Obama last night.  Swooning!

October 8, 2008 8:12 AM

michael said:

McCain's pride in being a Maverick is an illusion just as he distorts his role as a Reformer. Both were attractive in a superficial way until he ended up in a 1:1 face off. A legislator can oppose his party and he can cite unpopular issues he championed. But working with a committee or making a case in the Senate allows the luxury of choosing a narrow field of battle in a formal process and his opponents play or act out a predictable role.

The further McCain traveled along the campaign circuit the more his deficiencies became evident. He calculated supporting Bush for the past several years was sufficient to gain the nomination but that guaranteed he'd be defending that record when he took his case to a broader electorate. Anyone who read The Audacity of Hope would see Obama's greatest risk was alienating those with entrenched positions but he would find approval as his audience grew.

Barack became better in the debates as the field narrowed and is superior to McCain because Obama benefited as the contrasts became starker. Or, Barack knew where he was going and how to get there while McCain assumed he'd arrived. I see it at the micro level when McCain is critical or challenging. Barack is listening and thinking and even when his response is predictable he tailors it and re-sells an idea so it's logical, reasonable but also more personal. The easiest way to convince is when people understand and McCain never makes that effort. Everything flows from duty and honor in John's world and McCain found comfort in the structure of the Senate. Barack knows that leading is more than an exercise in authority and trusts that finding the common and basic interests is possible if one is patient.

October 8, 2008 9:34 AM

satyendra said:

P. Santillana, I noticed that at one point, too, where it seemed McCain wanted to come to blows with Obama.  They've said before the 1st debate that one of Obama's strategies might be to try to make McCain mad.  I think this time he succeeded, McCain looked like he could barely contain himself.

October 8, 2008 9:37 AM

frilz1 said:

Months ago I read somewhere that 2008 would give us our first HDTV election, where every physical attribute of a candidate would be greatly multiplied. This would make the appearace deficit that Nixon suffered in comparison to JFK in their 1960 debate become an even bigger liability for the less attractive candidates of 2008.

A lot of economic stimulous checks received earlier this year were spent on HDTV's, many nearly the size of living room walls. Watching John McCain last night on these stunningly clear and vivid TV screens made the poor old guy appear about as handsome as the Frankenstein monster, while Obama look as hot holding his mic as Marvin Gaye.

October 8, 2008 9:53 AM

AlanSP said:

Noam is exactly right.

One thing I'd add is that, even though audience members were asking the questions, this wasn't the sort of informal town hall format where McCain supposedly excels.  The format was actually far more constrained than the first debate, and the audience wasn't allowed to even react, let alone follow up, which made for a very strange dynamic in terms of interaction.  Whoever negotiated the rules for McCain's side didn't do him any favors.  They put him in a situation that superficially looked like one where he's supposed to be good, but with an underlying structure far less suited to his strengths.

October 8, 2008 9:56 AM

Mozier said:

I think this about sums up the debate.  I've been an Obama supporter and volunteer since the primaries and was continually pleased last night as I watched – it was clear to me that Obama was doing better than McCain.  

HOWEVER, I have to say that I am really uncomfortable with all this talk of McCain’s inferior physicality.  Even if that is partly how these debates are judged by the electorate, I find it very disrespectful (yes, even given my disgust with McCain on many fronts).  I mean McCain was tortured for God’s sake – that explains most of it.  I think he deserves a national pass on his physical appearance.  It’s very disrespectful of his real sacrifices – and such disrespect certainly doesn’t help the Democrats in the ongoing culture war…

October 8, 2008 10:03 AM

icarusr said:

chrismealy: the most perceptive call I have read in these pages for a long, long time.

Sat: the old coot almost came to blows with Sen. Cornyn, a fellow Repug, over immigration; the man is a wound-up ball of rage and entitlement and it would surprise me to hear that he went home after the debate, drank half a bottle of Single Malt and broke Cindy's Russian porcerlain doll collection.  Unsound, ill-mannered, ill-tempered: the true POWPOW is yet to reveal himself.

October 8, 2008 10:09 AM

icarusr said:

Mozier: the CNN panel discussion on his physical attributes mentioned precisely the point you did, and I think a lot of people have sympathy for him on that score.  At the same time, the CNN panellists noted that the problem was with McCain's jerky, nervous and aggressive-looking movements, not with his "physicality" as such.  

For example, at the outset, he could have said, "Let me in advance apologise to Senator Obama if I have to walk around when he speaks - I can't sit for long."  That would have demonstrated a certain respect for Obama, for the medium, while at the same time underlining that if he gets up and paces, it is because of the old war injuries and not other reasons.  Or his hand movements in the direction of Obama, his gestures and so on - they all belied aggression and *in that context* his physicality became a handicap.  

October 8, 2008 10:16 AM

The Plank said:

Professor Obama Schools McCain , By Noam Scheiber Barack Is Finally Getting Comfortable With The Idea

October 8, 2008 10:19 AM

satyendra said:

Mozier, you're right about how disrespectful, even ageist it is to talk about McCain's appearance.  I'll talk about it anyway only because I think the inside matches the outside.

I understood his appearance was due mostly to his three bouts with skin cancer.  His torture resulted in many orthopaedic problems that to my eye aren't noticeable, e. g., a noticeable limp, rickety appearance.  Bob Dole's hand was much more noticeable.  I heard that McCain looks like Frankenstein naturally, and that his cosmetologist gets something like $5,000 a month to make him up.

October 8, 2008 10:26 AM

Lyn39 said:

icarusr, before I respond to your last comment, I'd like to ask permissionto go low-brow.

October 8, 2008 10:26 AM

satyendra said:

Icarus, regarding Sen. Cronyn, that's right! I think it was that Rolling Stone profile that reported McCain had to be peeled away by aides.

October 8, 2008 10:30 AM

icarusr said:

Lyn, the Palin has set the bar pretty low ... ask yourself, "What would the Palin do?", and go lower, if you wish ;-) ...

October 8, 2008 11:01 AM

wagonjak said:

Even SITTING DOWN while McC spoke Obama won the night!

He looked unperturbed, restful, and relaxed while McKrusty attacked him...

And when O spoke, and McC was shown in the background he was fidgeting around, twisting his body back and fourth, and clearly uncomfortable and angry!

October 8, 2008 11:39 AM

purcellneil said:

"Tonight McCain pulled off an impressive feat: He managed to do nothing particularly dramatic, yet still give the impression that he's old and unsteady."

Exactly.

October 8, 2008 11:51 AM

blackton said:

I appreciate what Mozier is writing as well, but people are just expressing what pretty much everyone is thinking anyhow, and besides there is also a subconscious reaction. How many people will want to vote for someone that deep down feel is just too old? Senator, yeah, but President? If Biden were heading the ticket the Dems would be up by 20% now.

One thing I noticed is Obama still has that affectation of pausing in debates. He is naturally eloquent but his eloquence is best expressed on paper and then read aloud. I think he is always seeking the best way to phrase things, but if he were to tone it down his hesitancy would go away, but then so would some of this eloquence.

I will say one thing, I do like the McCain of both debates much better than the a-hole outside of it. Yes, he doesn't hide his dislike well, but it is a campaign after all. I think he could have won this race if he appealed to centrists and didn't worry so much about the base. If he wins because of out and out racism than he didn't need the base and will win despairingly ugly, so it would have been better for him to at least have run and up and up campaign so no one would blame him for it.

October 8, 2008 12:39 PM

austinexpat said:

I appreciated the fact that the Obamas stuck around the venue to take pictures and exchange handshakes with the participants.  I'm not sure what McCain hoped to gain by an early exit, but it's almost as if somebody didn't tell him that he was sitting in a room with, as Tom Brokaw told us before the start of the debate, 50 or so "uncommitted voters from all over the country."

Why not take a few minutes to make a connection?  From the grins he was getting, Obama probably won a healthy chunk of those uncommitted votes -- and McCain didn't even attempt to compete for them.  Maybe he had a schedule to keep, but seriously -- how can you decline an opportunity to do that retail politics stuff with an audience of receptive *uncommitted* voters?  People who are going to go home to their communities and brag about how they were on TV and Barack Obama even stuck around to shake their hand, and show off the picture they took with him?

It boggles my mind.  Mac just plain dropped the ball, as far as I can tell.

October 8, 2008 1:01 PM

Lyn39 said:

For icarusr's  eyes only:

Your comment:

"For example, at the outset, he could have said, "Let me in advance apologize to Senator Obama if I have to walk around when he speaks - I can't sit for long."  That would have demonstrated a certain respect for Obama, for the medium, while at the same time underlining that if he gets up and paces, it is because of the old war injuries and not other reasons."

My low-brow response:

McCain might have said at the outset, "My friends, I'd like to say in advance that adult diapers are not as comfortable or absorbent as the advertisers lead you to believe.  If you notice me pacing, it is only to prevent leakage.  And, my friends, allow me to point out that the false promises of Depends are exactly the same kind of lies that we hear coming from "that one."

October 8, 2008 1:13 PM

cspencef said:

The professorial/community organizer examples both work.  Both involve holding a large room (quite large in the case of some big lecture classes) where eye contact with everybody is physically impossible yet somehow necessary; persuading folks who are somewhere between reluctant and downright hostile; sustaining a train of thought or argument over an extended time without losing your listeners; and earning some level of trust.  There is some aspect of performance to it, but if that's all there is you're dead.  If Obama is tapping into that particular skill this can only be a good thing for him.

October 8, 2008 1:30 PM

zaiquiri said:

What I stood out in my mind about McCain's movements and gestures were not the indications of physical frailty, but the myriad "tells" indicating a fundamental lack of sincerity, coupled with the insecurity that results from not having anything more than the most superficial understanding of what he's talking about on most issues.  

Ironically, he seemed never more insincere than when he was trying to appear most sincere by adopting this manner of "inspirational" soft-toned pleading for the greatness and potential of this or that.

His quick temper too, comes off not as a sign of pugnaciousness coupled with strength, but rather, as the defensiveness that so often forms the third leg of the insincere/insecure/hostile personality triangle.  McCain can't seem to stay on point or on message without reaching for the same tired quips and one-liners that he's been replaying VERBATIM for months.

I think people are starting to see that his penchant for cliche is not simply a rhetorical style, it's a symptom of a fundamental intellectual weakness.  He seems perpetually stuck on the bottom rung of Bloom's Taxonomy ladder.

Obama, meanwhile, convincingly demonstrates that he has mastered comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation, through his ability to riff and improvise on a theme.  He can explain and expound in a flexible manner.  He's demonstrated that he can re-invent an argument starting from first principles, and I think anyone who's ever mastered a difficult subject, and experienced his or her own progression from knowledge to understanding, from understanding to application, etc... knows firsthand that that ability stems from having a deep comprehension of the issues under discussion.

In response to the notion that American technological superiority had been the key to victory in the first Gulf War, I once heard Norman Schwarzkopf say that if the American army had been equipped with Iraqi hardware, and the Iraqi army had been equipped with American hardware, that the casualty count might have been a bit less favorable to our side, but that the ultimate outcome would still have been the same.

I think a similar thing holds true here.  Put Obama's heart and brain in McCain's body, and McCain's heart and brain in Obama's body, and replay last night's debate...   the guy with Obama's heart and brain would still have won.

I think that on balance, people are starting to perceive that McCain's style is a reflection of his lack of brains and character.

October 8, 2008 1:32 PM

icarusr said:

Lyn39: You go too far. :-) But it was funny.

October 8, 2008 1:36 PM

Lyn39 said:

Okay.  I'll attempt to be more mature in the future.  Give me about 2 years and I'll come back.

October 8, 2008 2:13 PM

icarusr said:

Lyn: um, you mean "*less* mature in the future", right?  'Cause "more mature", as in "McCain mature", results in juvenile fratboy antics and unfunny jokes.  Any way, sadly, even as I stepped into my forties a while ago, it did nothing whatever to my level of intellectual maturity.  I blame it on my students and the long hours of drinking in the student pub; "Depends" jokes, especially as they relate to aging profs, are a dime a dozen and always funny. :-)

zaiquiri: Well said.  

Are there any professional speech coaches or rhetoricians around here?  I'd like to ask them about the "hushed emphasis".  That's how my dad talked to me when I was nine and he caught me - well, nevermind, but the point is, the "I am serious, therefore I whisper" tone works well with Dad, or in horror movies.  But do we have any historical or psychological reference to its effectiveness in national political discourse?

I don't remember Kennedy or Churchill ever speaking in hushed tones; FDR's "day of infamy" rings with authority not the Tone of Doom.  Reagan never lowered his voice - not when called the Soviets the Evil Empire, not when he dealt with the Challenger crisis, not even when he admitted to being a senile no nothing who handed over dealing with terrorists and breaking US law to a couple of low-level crooks and criminals; and Cuomo's Keynote speech - one of the most eloquent in my memory - was vigourous and manly throughout.  Even the "I am not a crook" speech was not hushed.  What gives?

October 8, 2008 2:41 PM

GSpinks said:

"Okay.  I'll attempt to be more mature in the future.  Give me about 2 years and I'll come back."

Nonsense, Lyn, don't you dare change a wit! (I admit, I peaked. It was funny!)

October 8, 2008 4:29 PM

satyendra said:

Icarus, McCain is probably speaking in hushed tones based on some advice he got in anger management class.

October 8, 2008 10:21 PM

Lyn39 said:

GSpinks, thank you.  I may be the least erudite subscriber to TNR, but it is heartening to know that my nonsensical contributions are appreciated.

October 8, 2008 11:45 PM

The Stump said:

I guess you can't exactly blame Team Obama after Clinton's recent performances . Still, this

October 9, 2008 2:05 PM