POWER MODE. The Campaign for America's Future will be posting the 2008 Democratic presidential candidate speeches online later today. Like Addie, I'd particularly recommend Barack Obama's to those who have been worried that he has been playing things a little too cool of late, or been chastened by inside-the-Beltway campaign consultants into adopting too cerebral and dispassionate a pose. He was anything but that this afternoon. Indeed, watching him at the TBA conference, I started to wonder if perhaps the best way to understand his campaign style is by reference to energy-efficient appliances, which spend a few moments a day in masterful and electric action, and the rest of the time whir along in quiet stand-by mode. Not every stump appearance can be the best one of a candidate's career, but this was a speech that truly mattered, and Obama knocked it out of the park.
I suspect we're going to see a lot more of that as the campaign progresses. He'll be low-key on a day-to-day basis, and just when people start to wonder if he's changed, turn on that big Obama grin and electrify the crowd. By conserving his energy he may well also escape that curse of challenger-candidates everywhere, peaking too early. Today he had the audience hopping to its feet from his rock-star entry to the thunderous applause that met the close of his remarks. Tomorrow, he may well be back to his quieter workaday style.
--Garance Franke-Ruta
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COMMENTS (2)
but this was a speech that truly mattered
Really? Why? What was so special about it?
Neither you nor Adele have said anything about the substance of his speech but both of you are gushing over it as though he were giving the Sermon on the Mount.
I doubt Obama's speech compares to this:
What I want to know is what in the world so many Democrats are doing supporting the President's unilateral intervention in Iraq?
What I want to know is what in the world so many Democrats are doing supporting tax cuts, which have bankrupted this country and given us the largest deficit in the history of the United States?
What I want to know is why the Congress is fighting over the Patient's Bill of Rights? The Patient's Bill of Rights is a good bill, but not one more person gets health insurance and it's not 5 cents cheaper.
What I want to know is why the Democrats in Congress aren't standing up for us, joining every other industrialized country on the face of the Earth in providing health insurance for every man, woman and child in America.
Obama sounds more like a demagogue based on your description.
Posted by: corinne | June 19, 2007 9:39 PM
It's all about the audience. Like any good communicator, Obama taliors his speaking approach to the audience and the venue.
He's not going to speak the same way as yesterday in a town library in Iowa to a crowd of 300.
Posted by: Chuck Miller | June 20, 2007 9:18 AM