As I alluded to the other day, the debate between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton has shifted to a debate between models of the presidency. Those that argue Barack Obama should be president insist that experience is overrated and that the office is more about agenda-setting and uniting the country and world behind a common purpose. Obama himself elaborated on this presidential model yesterday in an interview with The Reno Gazette Journal editorial board and in the process gave what I suspect will go down as an enormous gift to the Clinton campaign.
"I have a pretty good sense of my strengths and my weaknesses," he said Monday during a meeting with the Reno Gazette-Journal editorial board."I am very good at teasing out from people who are smarter than me what the issues are and how we resolve them," he said. "I don't think there is anybody in this race who can inspire the American people better than I can. And I don't think there is anybody in this race who can bridge differences ... better than I can.
"But I'm not an operating officer. Some in this debate around experience seem to think the job of the president is to go in and run some bureaucracy. Well, that's not my job. My job is to set a vision of 'here's where the bureaucracy needs to go.'"
This is exactly the debate Hillary Clinton wants to have because at the heart of her experience pitch is her own philosophy of what the presidency should be; as she put it in an interview with Bloomberg News in the wake of Obama's comments yesterday, she feels the president needs to "run the government."
Watch it (h/t TPM):
She used the same phrasing on a conference call with press earlier today to promote her economic stimulus package. We've all seen the details of her stimulus plan, it was clear that the point of the call was more about injecting this talking point into the dialogue rather than discussing the finer points of the economy. The danger of the debate taking this turn for Obama is evident in a response Clinton made to a question late in the conference call.
The president needs to run the government and manage the economy. You can't have a hands off approach, especially after George W Bush who has adopted that sort of governing philosophy. We have seen the disastrous consequences of that kind of approach.
When Barack Obama says "I am very good at teasing out from people who are smarter than me what the issues are and how we resolve them" voters' minds go immediately to George W. Bush's reassurance to voters that he'd be surrounding himself with smart experienced people. Shorter Clinton: we all know how that worked out.
This is dangerous territory for Barack Obama and I suspect is something that is going to have to be dealt with. She's making a very strong argument against a sort of hands off presidency and is presenting herself as the antidote to that; in other words, that she would constitute a greater change from George W. Bush than he would. What is Obama's argument against a hands on presidency? Everyone agrees that he's the guy to unite and to inspire, but what's the case for why that's the type of president we need right now versus one who will, as Clinton might put it, roll up her sleeves and work hard for the American people every day? That's an argument I suspect Barack Obama is going to have to make, and fast.
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