“It’s time to put our cynicism down. Put it down. Stand with me
and take that leap of faith. Because I’m not asking you to take a chance
on me. I’m asking you to take a chance on your own aspirations. Take a
chance on hope.”
Barack Obama,
right?
Wrong.
These are the
words of Governor Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, the first
African-American to move into the Governor’s Mansion in the commonwealth’s
218 year history after defeating his opponent, a woman, Kerry Healey, the
former Lieutenant-Governor of the state under Republican Governor Mitt
Romney.
Deval Patrick and
his good friend Barack Obama have much more in common than their prosaic
words, the depth of the color of their skin, their Harvard backgrounds,
and their female political opponents. Neither man can/could claim a
mountain of legislative experience prior to their runs, although Patrick’s
credentials were far more impressive than those of Senator Obama’s.
Patrick had served as an assistant attorney general in the Clinton
Administration, best-known for heading the Civil Rights Division of the
U.S. Department of Justice. Still, he had no experience in Massachusetts
politics, and since all politics is local, and Patrick was seeking the
Massachusetts governorship, his inexperience should have
been an issue in the campaign. It wasn’t.
The electorate was too mesmerized by Patrick’s charm offensive, his
promise of the politics of hope, and his “Yes we can,” campaign slogan to
care about the particulars.
Where have we
heard that before?
It is no
coincidence that Patrick’s rhetoric is eerily similar to that of
Democratic party presidential contender, Barack Obama. Both men's campaigns were/are
conducted under the genius of political operative David Axelrod.
Studying the
genesis of Patrick’s win has to be disheartening for Hillary Clinton's campaign.
Patrick not only won the election through a grassroots campaign that
touched the people’s hearts but he won big, seducing the party apparatchik
into his camp as he manipulated the delegate count in ways it hadn’t been
played before.
And, much like Senator Obama is doing, Patrick campaigned under little if
any scrutiny, the electorate jumping on his soaring train of roaring
rhetoric and inspiring message of hope for a better tomorrow, exactly the same style grassroots
campaign that Senator Obama is mounting today.
Here’s a
description of Patrick’s primary campaign from Frederick Clarkson of
The Daily Kos posted September 2, 2006:
“While Reilly
(Patrick’s opponent in the primary) continued to raise massive amounts of
money, Patrick patiently played his own game; defied the odds and the tsk
tsking of The Conventional Wisdom. He inspired people to get serious
about electing someone different -- someone who could and would make a
difference.
"He was and is a candidate who actually talks with you when you meet him;
not just serving up premasticated sound bites. Out of the initial
enthusiasm, he forged an effective grassroots organization that won more
than enough delegates to be the official nominee of the Democratic state
convention. He gave an oration at the convention that brought people to
their feet, cheering.”
But it is what
happened to Governor Patrick following his election that is relevant
to the story. It
is a cautionary tale of an unvetted candidate getting his win and then
finding himself woefully unprepared for the position he secured in a
brilliantly run campaign. America take heed.
Patrick’s first
year in office has been a train wreck. But that’s what happens when a
politician runs as an “idea” as much as a “human politician,” these the
words of journalist Charles Pierce in his must-read piece The Mis-Education
of Duval Patrick in The Boston Globe.
Pierce goes on to
say: “Because of the nature of the campaign he ran. Patrick has spent his
entire first year walking a thin line between two cliches of the
established political narrative.
"There is the reformer who spends all of his time at loggerheads with the
culture of The Building, watching his cherished proposals vanish in the
Legislature like a bowling ball dropped into a vat of oatmeal. And then
there is the reformer who "sells out" to the established power against
which he ran, thereby disillusioning the primary base of his support.”
I point this out
for the obvious reason, and more. I am thinking of Senator Clinton’s big
win in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on Super Tuesday, when everyone
was certain that Barack Obama would win Massachusetts having the weight of
his friend the Governor, the Kennedy machine and the Commonwealth’s junior
Senator John Kerry behind his candidacy.
I’m wondering if
Senator Clinton’s stunning Massachusetts victory wasn’t only a vote for
her but equally a redux of the vote for Governor Patrick. And a warning, a
cautionary tale, for America’s voters, not to fall prey as Massachusetts
did to the empty rhetoric of inexperienced but charming and poetic
politicians.
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