We need a Centrist President

Both Barack Obama and John McCain came to national prominence as centrists. Obama seized the lyrical center - Reagan style with a multicultural twist - thanks to his 2004 Democratic National Convention Speech, and McCain won the Republican nomination because he was the Republican candidate most independent of his party leader, George W. Bush. Nevertheless, partisans from both extremes are insisting that their respective candidates run away from the center. Many liberals, especially in the blogosphere, claim that Obama's defeat of Hillary Clinton repudiated Democratic centrism; conservatives keep warning McCain to shore up his base. Amid this struggle, where are the passionate moderates, the people who believe in a principled center, both as the shrewd place to be - and the right place to be?

Unfortunately, the gravitational physics of American politics, especially during election time, tends to polarize. Our culture and our politics reward the loudmouths, the partisans, the controversy-generators, rather than the bridge-builders, the centrists, the peacemakers. And, in fairness, moderates are frequently too reasonable, too passive. It is easy to see the forces pulling the candidates to particular extremes; where are the forces pushing toward the center?

As I argue in my latest book, "Leading From the Center: Why Moderates Make the Best Presidents," (http://www.leadingfromthecenter.com), America's greatest presidents were maestros of moderation, who understood that the trick to effective leadership in a democracy is finding the middle, or creating a new middle. George Washington viewed his role as more of a referee than a crusader. He preached repeatedly to his squabbling subordinates, Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson, about finding common ground. Abraham Lincoln spent most of his time in office, negotiating, compromising, cajoling, and conniving to keep the badly divided North united against the South. That is why he emphasized fighting to keep the Union together rather than liberating the slaves, despite his personal dislike of slavery. Theodore Roosevelt, although temperamentally immoderate, proved to be an adept arbitrator, ending the Anthracite Coal Strike of 1902, and even earning a Nobel Peace Prize for his diplomatic skills in resolving the Russo-Japanese war. Franklin Roosevelt, though often denounced as a radical, in fact tacked carefully between the extremes of the radical left and the complacent right, inching America toward a modified welfare state.

Americans have a tradition of muscular moderation, and if we don't figure out how to push our candidates towards the centre, rather than to the poles, we are going to deeply regret it.

-gt



Display:


Re: We need a Centrist President (none / 0)

also, feel free to read my recent interview with US News:

http://www.usnews.com/articles/news/poli tics/2008/07/14/in-praise-of-moderate-pr esidents.html


-gt
by Leading From the Center on Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 08:21:43 AM EST

Re: We need a Centrist President (none / 0)

Presidents need a vision in order to lead. McCain's only vision is that he doesn't want America to lose another war since after spending 5 years as a POW he felt betrayed by his country when they gave up even as he was sacrificing everything. And Obama? Well Obama is the ultimate politician. His vision is what ever the winds of the moment bring and that does not make for a great president.

Yes the ability to negotiate is one of the most important a president can have. And you left out William Jefferson Clinton in your list or great negotiators. But FDR had a vision to bring social justice to the masses and to put limitations the powers of his own class. That is why he was a great president, his negotiating skills were a means to an end.

Neither McCain nor Obama have that kind of vision and that is what we so sorely lack and what the american electorate seems to not be able to either see or choose when it is right in front of them.


by Bornagaindem on Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 10:05:09 AM EST

Re: We need a Centrist President (2.00 / 1)

I disagree thoroughly with your subjective opinion of Obama lacking vision.  Of course, we are all entitled to hold our own opinions and they are formed through the prism of our own perspective.  I hope that after he secures the Presidency and begins to turn this morass around, you will view him with a slightly less jaundiced eye.  Of course, he will continue to make mistakes, being mere mortal and not perfect, but I for one will not allow those errors to override my estimation for the things he gets correct.  


by whognu on Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 10:29:53 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: We need a Centrist President (none / 0)

So what is his vision? Hope?  Change? Elaborate. What did he do that shows us that he can accomplish anything. How is his district better in Chicago after he was senator for 8 years.


by Bornagaindem on Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 11:30:57 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: We need a Centrist President (none / 0)

wow ~ a drive-by diary and a trollish comment ~


by pholkhero on Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 10:54:08 AM EST

We do not need a President who supports FISA (2.00 / 1)


Welcome to a Landslide without white Working class, Latinos, Women, Seniors and holding-on sweeties
by engels on Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 11:07:47 AM EST

Excuse me (none / 0)

but, booo!


by linc on Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 11:38:36 AM EST

Re: We need a Centrist President (none / 0)

I agree with Engels. To be centrist is one thing but to spontaneously alter one's positions on the issues for political gain is another. Not trolling here, just making an observation.


by Ignored and Disgusted on Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 08:00:08 PM EST

Can we cut with the troll bs? (none / 0)

Every time someone doesn't march in lockstep with whatever the talking points du jour are around here, it's "a troll comment", or "a troll diary".

America is about, or should be about, a true dialectic.  Debate.  If someone doesn't think Obama has demonstrated a "vision", why is that a troll comment?  Are you afraid to have an honest debate?  

I have yet to hear a set of coherent reasons to vote for the guy, save for the fact that he's not George Bush or John McCain.  Sorry; that's not enough.  The presidency, as we've seen over the past seven and a half years, is too important to waste on themes and talking points.  

No one really knows what this guy is all about.  I don't give a damn about his oratorical skills.  Big F'ing deal, he can get a crowd going with his teleprompter proficiency.  Wow.  

He may be the potentially greatest president we've ever had, but I'll be damned if I can get a good read on him.  That bothers me.  

Change?  What the hell does that really mean? A guy who wants to push a progressive agenda, but says he can and will work with the other side of the aisle?  Does no one else see the inherent contradiction there?  Does he think the GOP is going to rubberstamp progressive initiatives?  Hardly.

The only way (and this brings us back to the subject of the diary) this man will effectively govern is in the center.  And that, folks, is going to piss a helluva lot of the 'roots off.  It's amazing that many can't see that.


by DaTruth on Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 09:48:31 PM EST


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