Obama and the ‘theory of change’

When it comes to the three leading Democratic presidential candidates, differences on issues have been practically non-existent. When the most serious, substantive policy fight is over one universal-health care plan with mandates and another universal-health care plan without mandates, you know it’s a primary fight that probably won’t be decided on clear policy distinctions.

Instead, we’re dealing with credible, electable candidates — Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, and Barack Obama — who each want to be the superior agent of change. Mark Schmitt explains today that it’s the “first ‘theory of change’ primary I can think of.”

Schmitt takes Clinton’s recent frame and accepts it as an accurate reflection of the different candidates’ pitches — Clinton would achieve change through hard work and experience; Edwards would achieve change through populist demands; and Obama would achieve change through a hopeful agenda based on a sense of common purpose.

Edwards and some of his supporters, most notably Paul Krugman, have argued that Obama’s approach is “naive” because it rests on the premise that a Democratic president can achieve positive results through cooperation with Republicans and business interests with intractable agendas.

But Schmidt has a fascinating rejoinder to the pitch.

Suppose you were as non-naive about it as I am — but your job wasn’t writing about politics, it was running for president? What should you do? In that case, your responsibility is not merely to describe the situation exactly, but to find a way to subvert it. In other words, perhaps we are being too literal in believing that “hope” and bipartisanship are things that Obama naively believes are present and possible, when in fact they are a tactic, a method of subverting and breaking the unified conservative power structure.

Claiming the mantle of bipartisanship and national unity, and defining the problem to be solved (e.g. universal health care) puts one in a position of strength, and Republicans would defect from that position at their own risk. The public, and younger voters in particular, seem to want an end to partisanship and conflictual politics, and an administration that came in with that premise (an option not available to Senator Clinton), would have a tremendous advantage, at least for a moment.

In this sense, the “politics of hope” isn’t about bringing everyone to the table to compromise; it’s about an effective rhetorical strategy to achieve a progressive result.

OK, but how might this “theory of change” actually work? Schmidt offers two answers.

The mundane answer is just congressional math. The most important fact about the next administration is nothing about the president’s character or policies, but simply how many Democratic Senators there are. To get health care passed in 2009, we’ll need 60 votes in the Senate. There won’t be 60 Democrats. So a Democratic president will need to, first, get within range by bringing in Democratic senators from Arizona, Colorado, Virginia, and several other red-trending-purple states. And then, subtract the total number of Democrats from 60, and that’s the number of Republicans you’ll need. If that number is two or three, almost anything is possible. If it’s five, it will be much harder. If it’s eight, impossible.

This is the math of bipartisanship. It’s not a matter of sitting down with thugs like John Boehner and splitting the difference, but winning over just a few Senate Republicans from outside the South. And if the number is small enough, that’s entirely possible. This is not 1993, when the Republicans could see that a majority was just around the corner, and the conservative takeover had given it a coherence and enthusiasm. It will be a party in some internal crisis after losing both houses of Congress and the presidency in short order, and the sense of a “party establishment” will be weaker. There will be an effort to hold the party together in united opposition, but the ties holding a Senator Snowe, Voinovich, Grassley, Lugar or Specter to a strict party line — as they contemplate retirement, legacy, and their own now-Democratic states — will be much weaker than in either the Clinton or Bush eras.

Obama’s approach is better positioned to take advantage of this math. First, I think (though if I tried to prove it, I’d be relying on useless horse-race polls) that Democratic Senate candidates in red/purple states will do better with Obama’s national-unity pitch at the top than with Senator Clinton. I worry about the Senate seats in Colorado (where she polls poorly) and Arizona with Clinton at the top of the ticket, and I think the opportunity to take out Mitch McConnell in Kentucky would be lost. And after the inauguration, I think that opposition to Hillary Clinton will remain a galvanizing theme for Republicans, whereas a new face and will make it harder to recreate the familiar unity-in-opposition.

Now for the cosmic explanation: What I find most interesting about Obama’s approach to bipartisanship is how seriously he takes conservatism. As Michael Tomasky describes it in his review of The Audacity of Hope, “The chapters boil down to a pattern: here’s what the right believes about subject X, and here’s what the left believes; and while I basically side with the left, I think the right has a point or two that we should consider, and the left can sometimes get a little carried away.” What I find fascinating about his language about unity and cross-partisanship is that it is not premised on finding Republicans who agree with him, but on taking in good faith the language and positions of actual conservatism — people who don’t agree with him. That’s very different from the longed-for consensus of the Washington Post editorial page.

The reason the conservative power structure has been so dangerous, and is especially dangerous in opposition, is that it can operate almost entirely on bad faith. It thrives on protest, complaint, fear: higher taxes, you won’t be able to choose your doctor, liberals coddle terrorists, etc. One way to deal with that kind of bad-faith opposition is to draw the person in, treat them as if they were operating in good faith, and draw them into a conversation about how they actually would solve the problem. If they have nothing, it shows. And that’s not a tactic of bipartisan Washington idealists — it’s a hard-nosed tactic of community organizers, who are acutely aware of power and conflict. It’s how you deal with people with intractable demands — put ’em on a committee. Then define the committee’s mission your way.

I find all of this quite persuasive, but it requires something akin to a leap of faith.

Kevin Drum has been talking all week about the Democratic primary becoming “more a Rorschach test than an actual contest,” and I think it applies here, too. For a voter who’s sympathetic to Obama, his “theory of change” includes a wink-and-a-nod understanding of his rhetoric — his talk about “hope” isn’t naive, it’s a means to a progressive end. The rhetoric isn’t to be taken literally; this is a strategy.

For a voter who’s unsympathetic, Obama’s “theory of change” should be taken at face value, and dismissed as naive and overly interested in compromise with right-wing forces who don’t play fair and aren’t interested in “hope.”

If there’s more of the prior than the latter, Obama may very well be the Democratic nominee.

I think one thing Obama he is undoubtedly aware of is how you do not want to get into the crosshairs of huge financial interests too early the way Howard Dean did when he said flat out that he intended to break up the media conglomerates. You have to be smart enough to make them think you’re not a mortal threat to them, or they will kill you. Unfortunately that also makes you sound like an industry apologist, and we won’t know for sure until you sit in the big chair.

As for Hillary being a candidate who would fire up the Republicans, well duh.

  • This piece illustrates precisely why I’m supporting Obama.

    So, yes, I fall into the prior category.

    All approaches require a leap of faith. However, Obama’s record demonstrates success by using this approach. While Edwards has to little to show for his populist rhetoric.

    And Hillary? Well, there’s ample room for disagreement about whether she’s been working tirelessly for progressive change.

  • To accomplish change means subverting opposition from the status quo. It seems to me that Obama is proposing a mix of carrots and sticks, starting with carrots: we go from “you’re either with me or against me” to “it’s up to you whether you’re with me or against me.” The premise is that if you’re with him, you get a seat at the table and you’ll be able to protect at least some of the things you’re most committed to; if you’re against him, maybe you win it all and maybe you lose it all, but he’s going to try to rally the country against you and exert an unbearable political price for opposition.

    Edwards seems to be proposing a frontal assault. This is emotionally satisfying to those of us who’ve been enraged over the last seven years, but it strikes me as unlikely to work. While Obama wants to peel off some “soft opposition” among electeds, interest groups, and voters, my hunch is that Edwards will harden that soft opposition through his explicitly confrontational approach.

    I have no idea what Hillary Clinton’s MO would be here. (I also seriously doubt her commitment to the fight, as Vermonter notes; she’s just taken too much money from those people for too long, and the whole DLC model is predicated on concessions to the same interests who are in the way of positive change now.) Nobody’s in the middle on Hillary; she won’t change any minds in the country. Maybe the theory is that the Republican electeds like her better than they’re willing to admit–but this strikes me as a thin reed on which to hang hopes for progressive change.

  • The obstructionist Republicans are licking their chops and drooling at the prospect of Obama coming in and wanting to work “together” with them.

    The elections are when we try to compute just how much of each candidates postions are lies designed to fool the enemy, how many to appease their base and how many they actually mean. On both sides.

  • I actually think Clinton, as a Senator, has a pretty good history of (a) working in often improbable combinations across party lines and actually getting those same R’s who would seem to have the most to lose by association with her to nonetheless join hands and (b) has done well in garnering support and improving her standing in Republican upstate New York. I’m not quite sure why there is such doubt she would do the same in a different capacity.

    That said, I think one of the hardest parts of the sale for Obama is this:

    The chapters boil down to a pattern: here’s what the right believes about subject X, and here’s what the left believes; and while I basically side with the left, I think the right has a point or two that we should consider, and the left can sometimes get a little carried away.

    Sure the left gets carried away sometimes, but when the Rethugs have spent years berating the left, we don’t really need more of it from one of our own seeking to give rhetorical reassurances to the right. I still think Edwards will do well in the caucuses in part because those active enough to go to the caucuses want to feel like someone out there understands their frustration. In the words of the Dixie Chicks, we’re not ready to make nice. Of the top three candidates, Obama seems to least give voice to that — in fact, he seems to place himself above it, almost scoldingly, as though the left’s frustration is a character flaw.

  • At the moment I intend to vote for Dodd in DC’s primary (assuming that it even matters by that time). But in the general I can easily cast my vote for Edwards, Obama or Clinton. No problem.

  • Sticking to healthcare, Obama’s approach will work if the pressure on the Republican Senators to work with Obama is greater than the pressure to obstruct Obama. I just can’t see any scenario where their won’t be massive pressure on Republican Senators from all parts of the right wing infrastructure (the GOP leaders, the major donors, the pundits) to kill universal healthcare.

  • Based on the history of this republican obstructionism in the senate it doesn’t matter if the dems win over 4-6 republicans when only one of them is all that is necessary to kill the bill.
    This is the flaw in this math. How many times has legislature come into the senate with a majority of bipartisan support only to be filibustered or a hold placed on it successfully killing the bill in spite of having a majority including many republicans.

    Obama has his head in the clouds much of the time especially when he starts in with how many republicans he would put in his cabinet before even considering equally qualified dems. Notice how many dems are in the current cabinet? Republicans are known for taking advantage of the hand that feeds them, including biting it off. Obama’s good faith is not based on the track record set before him…It’s based more on what he ‘wishes’ could be. It’s more realistic to believe republicans will act as they have acted the past 12 yrs. irregardless of which dem sits in the oval office.
    The “money party” will seek to protect their ‘investments’ and ending the reign of the top 1-3% in favor of the the rest of the nation will be just as difficult for any of these candidates.

    I resent that the press has handed us our 3 primary candidates to choose from. Knowing that a Kucinich administration represents the only real change while watching the press try to bury him is extremely painful. I will always be immersed in what could have been if only Kucinich had $50 million to campaign with. Ending the press’ campaign money train is the only way we will ever have a fair election process. Just one more stump in the way of getting big money out of politics and the FCC is trying to make sure it gets worse rather than better. Just pathetic.
    I know that all the dems running for president are electable and 100X better than their republican counter parts but I feel like Obama and Clinton are being shoved down our throats. Just saying…

  • Vermonter said… All approaches require a leap of faith. However, Obama’s record demonstrates success by using this approach

    I don’t mean to be at all confrontational with my question. I sincerely want to know. What is it about Obama’s record that demonstrates this? In fact, what is his record? What are his achievements?

    I currently lean toward Edwards. His years in national office are as thin as Obama’s but I know that as a trial attorney he won fight after fight for sympathetic clients. I’ve heard about Obama’s past as an organizer and state legistator but I haven’t heard anything, even now, about any significant fights he has won.

    Again, I’m open to voting for Obama. Somebody help me out here.

  • Look at what happened to S-CHIP, and then let’s have a conversation about the math. Here was legislation with broad support, across party lines, including fairly entrenched conservatives. The country was overwhelmingly in favor of it. Oh, it passed in both houses, but was not veto-proof, so – *poof* – that was the end of that. Twice.

    In both instances, the expansion of the program was reduced from what Dems originally wanted. It was trimmed and parsed and changes were made to appeal to as many members of Congress as possible without losing sight of the bill’s purpose, and still, it failed to win a veto-proof majority.

    This was a bill to insure children, a group that ought to be sheltered from the kind of in-fighting and mud-slinging that regularly takes place. Not only was it not sheltered from that assault, but actual children – Graeme Frost and his sister – were raked over the coals with their families.

    You think that kind of thing isn’t going to happen when the revolution in health care and insurance hits the table? Ha!

    The “theory of change” is all well and good, but why is Obama’s theory-as-strategy any different from Edwards’? Edwards is arguing to the jury – the jury being the American people – about why the health care industry should be made/persuaded to acknowledge that the benefits of what they provide are not supposed to accrue just to stockholders and CEO’s, but to the people who pour hard-earned and considerable dollars into their coffers every month.

    It is all well and good to talk about hope – but talk, as they say, is cheap. I see the American people as feeling – and being – so beaten down by the corporate juggernaut that hope – even if it is part of some amorphous strategy – is not enough. I think we need someone who understands how the system works, who has taken on insurance companies, who knows how to fight – to give them the confidence and the courage to participate, perhaps in a way they never have before, in this struggle for fairness. If Edwards seems to some like he is being too hard-assed where the industry is concerned, I think it is because there are a lot of people who don’t want to hear that this will eventually just be more of the same – a fight only in theory, which in practice will be dividing up the bones the industry throws our way.

    I think most people are smart enough to know that no candidate is going to be able to give us everything we want, but I think what Edwards is establishing is that he is on our side – and we really need someone to be on our side. The insurance companies have infinitely deep pockets – they already have what they need on their side – cash.

    Given that Obama’s “plan” is not designed to cover everyone anyway, he’s already talking about being willing to depart down from that, and then factor in the Republican opposition, one has to wonder about the strategy, and how much change is really going to result.

    (sorry for the length!)

  • How well has Obama done so far in the Senate with his “theory of change”? Seems to me as if that’s encountered a brick wall made up of non-compromising Republicans.

  • When most people say they want to see an end to partisanship, what they really mean is that they want the other party to stop being so darned disagreeable. If the next president is a Democrat, I can pretty much guarantee that any time they actually try to meet Republicans half way on anything, most of the same people who are whining right now for an end to partisanship, will be calling them a spineless coward/corporate puppet/warmonger/every other nasty name they now call Democrats in Congress every time they try it.

    The fact is, none of us really want compromise, we want things our way. And I’m not even saying that’s necessarily wrong, just that we should be honest with ourselves about it. As for the folks in the middle try talking to a few and you’ll soon find out they’re no more in love with us than they are with the evil Republicans. They frankly wish we’d both grow up.

    So given the fact that none of our candidates have any sort of magical power to make Republicans stop being so darned Republican, nor will the next president be entering office with a broad mandate regardless of who it is, seems to me like your best shot at actually achieving change comes with either the person best able to work the system, and/or the person most willing to take on the system. Nobody’s going to make the system want to change. Sorry.

  • Good points. My concern is that Obama is being viewed as a savior. Of course, that response may come from the fact I think Edwards would be the best fighter. I want someone to fight for my rights.

  • It is plans like this that define the difference between someone who plays at being “leader” and someone who actually demonstrates a “field marshal” philosophy. Obama is looking beyond the primary and weighing the final opponent’s ordnance. Offering such a plan at this stage sets the groundwork for not merely a political campaign, but a governing blitzkrieg that could, if implemented and exploited quickly enough, would leave the GOPer leadership on the Hill literally “rocked back on their heels.”

    Imagine, for a moment or three, that it’s December 2008. Obama, fresh off a victory, begins back-door discussions with GOP members on the Hill to implement an agenda that meets the needs of the nation—without going through the conventional channel of discussing the issues with GOP leadership. Would someone the likes of Boehner survive the political consequence of telling the House GOP caucus that “you’re not allowed to talk to the President Elect without my permission and presence?” Would whoever the Senate Minority Leader turns out to be risk the same form of political suicide?

    Were Obama to pull an “end run” on the GOP leadership, and enter into direct discussions with individual Senators and Congressmen, he could possibly secure a bipartisan majority in the House that would undermine the BlueDogs, while simultaneously assembling a guaranteed cloture vote in the Senate. It wouldn’t take very many of these to effectively break the back of both the GOP and the hyper-conservativism of the Southern States….

  • So, you think that a GOP that may well be bruised and battered, and whose ranks in Congress may be even thinner than they were after the 2006 elections, is going to be ready to sit down and negotiate with President Obama? I’m sorry, but I am having a hard time imagining that. And, do you really think the voters, who expected so much more than they got after 2006, are going to take much heart from an Obama presidency that seeks to establish itself in the good graces of Republicans who have done nothing to engender that approach?

    Do we ever stop bowing and kow-towing to Republicans who have no compunction about selling us out after we have given them what they want?

    I’m sure some of what I feel is coming from the frustration of seeing the Democrats bamboozled by Republicans no matter whether they hold a majority or not – but if we win, and if that win is reasonably big, I think there would be a lot of very angry people if Obama immediately appeared to start catering to Republicans.

  • As I see it, Obama’s approach is not about catering to Republicans. It is about returning STATESMANSHIP to the Whitehouse. Remember that? Yeah, that’s the idea that you can sit down at the table with someone you disagree with and talk. Sure, your not going to agree on much, but NO ONE is absolutely “conservative” or absolutely “liberal.” Every human being has certain things about which they find themselves leaning one way or the other. A good statesman is willing to find those point where they agree. THAT is what I see in Obama.

    Some of you might call me naive, but haven’t we all seen enough of politics as usual? Wouldn’t we rather try something new? I sure would.

    And yes, I would support either Clinton or Edwards if they got the nomination, but for me Obama is the statesman and that is what I want in the Whitehouse.

  • I think it’s hilariously ironic that we’re discussing this while Hillary Clinton is one of the most conservative Senators we have, and has authored more actual bipartisan bills…

    Oy. But at any rate, I hope it shakes out that we get two of these three as our pair. If only because my goals for this election are much shorter than normal: Just get us back to being the Free World.

    I wonder how many others have dropped their normal flags to the side to push back against the tide of unlawfulness?

  • People keep whining about how the republicans have been so awful to us over the years. But, no one takes into concideration is that the democrats have let them. Because we spend endless amounts of time worrying over what the republicans will do and then, we see the democrats caving every single time whenever the republicans get testy, what do you expect them to do. Be nice. They are bullies because democrats have let them be.
    Maybe if our leaders grew a spine, got alittle clever and savvy and knew how to stand up then the republicans would not have done what they have over the years.
    Democrats are the opposition and are suppose to oppose them, not lay down and cry.
    So, while you may want the gratification of revenge for what the republicans have done, you cannot do so without holding our leaders responsible for the awful job they have done in leading and standing up.
    Obama has figured out how to beat them at their own game. You don’t have to shout and make noise. You have to be savvy and know how to go around them and beat them.
    Seems to me that Obama does that very well when you concider how he’s run HRC’s campaign off the tracks.

  • Ann, you and I both know that the status-quo practice of discussions between the WH and the Hill has always—ALWAYS—been for the President to negotiate with the Congressional leadership. What I’m suggesting, via what Obama seems to be talking about here, is eliminating the middle-man. Take the GOP leadership out of the matrix; make a cave-troll like Boehner irrelevant by entertaining discussions directly with individual members of the GOP caucus. I mean, what are they going to do—tell every Republican on the Hill that if they go to the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue without permission from the leadership, that they’re expelled from Congress?

    The same thing could work in the Senate, giving individual members the opportunity to develop an anti-commonality ‘clique” similar to the one that BlueDog Dems have today. There’s been no opportunity to exploit such an event-scenario up to this point due to the heavy-handedness of the Senate GOP leadership. Imagine the absolute disaster in the GOPer side of the aisle if three or four of their own suddenly decided to support Dems on several major issues. Without crossing the aisle; without morphing themselves into Democrats, they could effectively incinerate Lieberman’s quasi-Republicanism in a single stroke—and become a major power themselves within their own caucus.

    Sort of a BlueDogs-in-reverse….

  • How amazing that after more than two centuries of presidents and congresses, no president ever thought of talking directly to individual congresscritters, without going through their party leadership. And all this time, the solution was right there in front our noses. It’s so simple, and yet so…

    …oh, wait. Never mind.

  • I agree with Steve, in the last comment about ‘what is the GOP going to do, expel them if they talk to the new president?”

    That was their plan for Senator Craig. They even made a HUGE big deal about it… Last time I checked, Craig is still the Senator from Idaho, and will be until the end of next year.

    So…. yes talk to individual Senators / Congressmen regardless of what the GOP leadership thinks about it.

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