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Issues, shmissues

Never mind the complaints about how the media are not focusing on the issues. Historically, they never have.
By STEVEN STARK  |  May 21, 2008

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During the past few weeks, we’ve heard yet more media laments from our self-appointed guardians of political civility, warning us that this campaign is about to go over a cliff. The usually sensible James Fallows of the Atlantic reiterated his complaint about “the way press coverage seems biased not against any particular candidate but against the entire process of politics, in the sense that politics includes the public effort to resolve difficult issues.” The often astute Joe Klein of Time warned that the election was becoming so trivialized — with discussions of flag pins and the like — that we would lose our chance to have “a big election this year.” The frequently insightful E.J. Dionne of the Washington Post concurred, arguing that what once looked like a big election, focused on the big issues, “has given every sign in recent weeks of becoming a small one.”

The eloquent Hendrik Hertzberg of the New Yorker went even further. He described a recent debate moderated and televised by ABC, in which the questioners asked Barack Obama about Reverend Jeremiah Wright’s patriotism and other assorted personal issues, as “akin to a federal crime . . . [featuring] new benchmarks of degradation.”

Boys, get used to it. After all, it’s rather un-American to have an election that focuses on the “big issues.”

It helps to remember that this is the nation that chose in 1884 between the competing slogans of “Ma, ma, where’s my Pa?” (attacking Grover Cleveland for fathering an illegitimate child) and “Blaine, Blaine, James G. Blaine, the continental liar from the state of Maine.” (When Cleveland won, his supporters sang, “Hurray for Maria! Hurray for the kid! I voted for Cleveland and I’m damned glad I did.”)

What was an issue in the campaign of 1860 — one that should have focused on the “big issues” like no other? It was how ugly Abraham Lincoln was, with one paper describing him as “a horrid looking wretch . . . a cross between the nutmeg dealer, the horse swapper, and the night man.”

As to elections that have focused on other trivialities, Paul F. Boller’s Presidential Campaigns: From George Washington to George W. Bush and a number of similar works have recounted how political enemies went after Andrew Jackson’s wife, FDR’s dog, Martin Van Buren’s clothes, and James Fremont’s drinking habits. Thomas Jefferson’s failure to fight in the Revolution was a big issue in 1800, and one Connecticut paper warned that, if he was elected, “murder, robbery and rape, adultery and incest will all be openly taught and practiced.”

Even when we’ve purported to have a discussion of “big issues,” it’s not clear how elucidating it has been. Woodrow Wilson promised to keep us out of war in 1916, and then led us right in — a path followed, more or less, by Lyndon Johnson in 1964 with Vietnam. FDR’s program to deal with the Depression in 1932 bore little resemblance to what he actually did after he took office. John F. Kennedy’s victory in 1960 was hardly due to his discussion of “big issues,” since one of the principal issues he exploited was a completely fabricated missile gap between us and the Russians.

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  Topics: Stark Ravings , Barack Obama, Elections and Voting, Politics,  More more >
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Comments
Issues, shmissues
Politicians have been getting away with discussing small issues because voters have are lower-educated working class people who too often buy into slander, pander, spin and lies. Unfortunately, big corporations are not really concerned about the little guy either. First they ship their workers abroad, next will go the executives.
By ToySoldier on 05/22/2008 at 1:24:48
Issues, shmissues
As optimistic as it may be, Mr Stark, this column is quite cogent. The one thing it seems on the verge of suggesting, is that it doesn't matter ultimately who the nominee is, if, as you say, "things will end up all right for the nation as a whole" Ever since Kennedy, we have had chiefs of state who left something to be desired--Johnson's belly flop into the war, Nixon's scandal, etc. It takes a great spirit to rise above such snafus, and Obama more and more is proving himself such a one, in every way the equal, it may well be, to Kennedy himself. When a leader like that presents himself to us, it is like when a great musician--Coltrane, say--leads a band. Everyone plays above themselves.
By gordon on 05/22/2008 at 1:49:37

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