NYT: Nowadays, a Candidate Can Seem Too Experienced
By RYAN LIZZA
Published: March 18, 2007
RUNNING a credible campaign for president has always required an elusive mixture of star power and experience. But Barack Obama’s strong challenge to Hillary Clinton and Rudolph W. Giuliani’s recent surge past Senator John McCain in the polls raise an interesting question: How much does experience matter now in presidential politics?
After 9/11 it seemed that high-level government experience would be more important than ever. And yet, neither Mr. Obama nor Mr. Giuliani have the kind of governing experience traditionally seen as a prerequisite for White House service. Mr. Obama spent nine years in the Illinois State Senate and two years in the United States Senate, while Mr. Giuliani has served two terms as mayor of New York.
Mr. Obama’s short résumé is sometimes compared to that of John Kennedy, who is remembered by some as a president who charmed his way into office when he was still a little green. But the comparison only underscores how the bar for experience has been lowered in the ensuing decades. Kennedy, after all, had five years in the Navy, six years in the House, and eight years in the Senate, not to mention a Purple Heart, the Navy Medal and a Pulitzer Prize.
As for Mr. Giuliani, he would be the first president whose last government job was mayor.
Mr. Giuliani and Mr. Obama are not alone. The other major Democratic rival is John Edwards, who served one term in the Senate. On the Republican side, Mitt Romney, though he had a long business career and successfully ran the 2002 Winter Olympics, can point to a four-year term as governor of Massachusetts as the sum total of his governing experience. When Jimmy Carter, the last one-term governor to make it to the White House, ran for president in 1976, his brief stint as governor was considered a major issue, though so far, it’s rarely been discussed as a liability for Mr. Romney....
Mr. Bush came to Washington on a promise of creating the most experienced administration in a generation but has presided over a mismanaged war in Iraq, a botched response to Hurricane Katrina and a capital mired in scandal....
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/18/weekinreview/18lizza.html