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Edited on Wed Sep-03-03 10:21 AM by VolcanoJen
Wanna take a break from the candidate-bashing around DU? Here's a link to some rather intelligent and thoughful debate about Wesley Clark vs. the current field of democrats, from The New Republic. The debate has Franklin Foer taking Clark, with Noam Scheiber taking the current field (with heavy emphasis on Dean). It's good stuff for us political junkies to chew over, no matter which side you're leaning toward. http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=debate&s=foerscheiber090203Excertps: Franklin Foer: The political case for nominating Clark is inseparable from the biographical case. While Howard Dean skipped the war with a doctor's note, skiing away in Aspen, Clark went to Vietnam, where he was wounded four times and received a Silver Star. Where Bush partied his way through college, Clark finished top of his class at West Point, won a Rhodes, and took a White House fellowship. And unlike Clinton, his fellow Arkansan meritocrat, he had the discipline to thrive within a large organization. By all accounts, he ascended in the military because of visionary qualities. He was one of the first officers to talk about the complexities of modern military life. Where his colleagues were still worrying over the implications of shined boots and cleaned barracks on morale, Clark brought issues like low pay, teenage suicide, and spousal abuse to the fore. In the '80s, he pushed for the Army to use new management techniques that injected a measure of introspection, decentralization, and accountability into the command structure. As a strategist, he understood before almost anyone the limits of air campaigns and the importance of boots on the ground. (In Kosovo, he always argued for ground troops and felt hamstrung by the limited target lists the pentagon approved.)
But there are political reasons for a Clark candidacy that have nothing to do with biography. Because of his calm, competent demeanor and Arkansas accent, he sounds like a maverick even when he defends middle-of-the road Democratic positions on guns, affirmative action, and abortion. When he talks about policy, you get the feeling that he hashed out his positions in bull sessions with his fellow soldiers--not the type inclined to Teddy Kennedy politics. His statements sound nothing like party talking points to mobilize the base, just common sense intended more to persuade a skeptical audience.
Noam Scheiber: And, of course, as long as each of these campaigns can convince themselves they're destined for the role of "anti-Dean" in the forthcoming Dean/anti-Dean smackdown--which, according to the Post, all of them are more than capable of doing--none of them has any incentive to drop out of the race. Even worse for Clark, none of their aides, high-powered supporters, and, most importantly, high-rolling contributors have any incentive to defect to a potential Clark campaign. Needless to say, this dynamic is devastating for someone who needs the party to quickly coalesce around him if he's to have any shot of winning the nomination.
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In fact, you don't even have to buy this analysis in its entirety for the Clark case to come unraveled. All you have to concede is that none of the five top contenders has an incentive to get out of the race immediately after Clark gets in. If the majority of them don't, then Clark lacks the oxygen he needs to fuel his campaign fire.
And that's just the mechanics of the situation. The deeper problem may be Clark's shortcomings as a candidate. All the interest in Clark strikes me as the product of an almost childish desire to be rescued from an admittedly tough situation. (Have I mentioned this in those early morning--alright, mid-morning--office conversations?) Childish because it involves a heavy dose of hero worship, which has the unfortunate effect of romanticizing the object of said worship. ON EDIT: Edited Scheiber excerpt to better reflect the overall gist of his position.
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