Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Thu Sep 6, 2012, 09:37 AM Sep 2012

CLINTON’S SPEECH: THE POWER OF A HUG

http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/newsdesk/2012/09/bill-clinton-convention-speech-the-power-of-a-hug.html



Bill Clinton’s speech was excellent for all the reasons I thought Julián Castro’s speech the previous evening was weak. In confusing times, good leaders can help the public understand our politics, and as Obama himself has admitted, he has not always excelled at this over the last few years. But it’s long been Bill Clinton’s special gift. Indeed, Clinton’s frustration with his party’s inability to explain what’s going on politically in this country helped encourage him to write his recent book, “Back To Work.” (In it, he tells a story about being rebuffed when he tried to give the Democratic National Committee some advice on talking points for the 2010 election.) This was not so much a speech about Obama, but one about the choice voters face and the framework they should use in making it.

Clinton started with a favorite subject of his: the coöperation that he sees among parties trying to solve problems around the world through his work at the Clinton Global Initiative. However, here in the U.S., despite President Obama’s best efforts, an unreasonable and ideological political faction has made coöperation impossible. From there he pivoted to recent history, making a seemingly dispassionate case for why no President, even Clinton himself, could ever have repaired in four years all the damage Obama found when he arrived in the White House in 2009. But despite that, Obama’s record, told with excruciating but powerfully persuasive detail, has been far better than is popularly understood. Now he just needs his contract renewed to finish the job. Clinton made it all sound so simple.

This was the anti-Michelle speech. While she naturally gave personal testimony about Barack Obama’s character and urged voters to support him on that basis, in the story Clinton told Obama was an ephemeral figure. There were few personal details or anecdotes about the President because Clinton isn’t particularly close to Obama. It was a speech about facts and three and a half years of decisions made and outcomes achieved. By the end of it, the only logical conclusion, Clinton argued, is that Obama would do a better job than the alternative.

In a sense, Clinton’s reluctance to embrace Obama personally, and his own fraught history with the President, which I explored in a piece for The New Yorker this week, makes him the ideal spokesman to appeal to those skeptical former Obama voters that his campaign is trying to win back. In an interview with Brian Williams earlier in the day, Clinton said of Obama, “We haven’t been close friends a long time or anything like that, but he knows that I support him.” I found it an amazingly honest statement considering that politicians often go out of their way to exaggerate their fondness for one another.


Read more http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/newsdesk/2012/09/bill-clinton-convention-speech-the-power-of-a-hug.html#ixzz25hFhy9GO
5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
CLINTON’S SPEECH: THE POWER OF A HUG (Original Post) xchrom Sep 2012 OP
Spot on jsr Sep 2012 #1
I saw that Obama even rubbed Clinton's back in that hug lunatica Sep 2012 #2
This convention is for us Patiod Sep 2012 #3
you could REALLY tell how appreciative Obama was, and impressed. Who wouldn't be...to articulate Laura PourMeADrink Sep 2012 #4
I thought the speech was one of, if not Clinton's best. Uncle Joe Sep 2012 #5

Patiod

(11,816 posts)
3. This convention is for us
Thu Sep 6, 2012, 10:55 AM
Sep 2012

there are a few true "independents" or undecideds to win over.

This convention's biggest job was to remind US, the Democratic faithful, what's at stake, and to fire US up to get to work, get on the phones, get on the streets, get out the checkbook (where possible), and essentially GOTV.

Both Michelle AND The Big Dog did a great job reminding us what we're working for, and why we can't just throw up our hands.

 

Laura PourMeADrink

(42,770 posts)
4. you could REALLY tell how appreciative Obama was, and impressed. Who wouldn't be...to articulate
Thu Sep 6, 2012, 10:57 AM
Sep 2012

so clearly. He covered almost every thing. If I was an independent undecided, this speech alone would do it for me.

Uncle Joe

(58,255 posts)
5. I thought the speech was one of, if not Clinton's best.
Thu Sep 6, 2012, 11:31 AM
Sep 2012

The former President made an excellent case in both highlighting the differences between the parties, recent history and for reelecting Obama to prevent the nation from sliding into Republican induced economic trauma.


Thanks for the thread, xchrom.

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»CLINTON’S SPEECH: THE POW...