O’Malley Speech well-delivered but not reality-based
From MarylandReporter.com
O’Malley Speech
well-delivered but not reality-based
For those of us
who anticipated that Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley would establish a more
statesmanlike persona in his address to the Democratic National Convention, we didn’t
reckon with his likely reaction to the reaction to his misstep on CBS
Sunday. In that venue he had made a
major political error in answering CBS reporter Bob Schieffer’s erecting
of the famous Ronald Reagan challenge to then-president Jimmy Carter in 1980:
are you better off than you were four years ago?
“No, but that’s
not the question of this election,” O’Malley replied, and then his answer
trailed off, and the Republicans focused on the “No” reflex, with Republican
Vice Presidential nominee Paul Ryan, along with others, arguing that O’Malley’s
answer demonstrated that not even a Democratic partisan could argue that their
president was anything but a Jimmy Carter reborn, at least in economic
policy. It didn’t help that Obama
spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter quickly rebuked the Maryland governor.
Thus in his
speech – nearly perfectly delivered – the Governor gave no quarter: the
president had inherited a situation comparable to what President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt had inherited from Herbert Hoover – a depression?
He paid homage, as one might expect quite
reasonable, to the “Forward, not back” mantra of his party in a rousing, if
somewhat worn responsive exchange with the Democratic conventioneers.
O’Malley focused on the consecutive
months of job growth, rather than the extent of job growth – rhetorically
acceptable selectivity in the convention venue.
There was no reference to the unemployment statistics, the deficit or
the debt, not really required in a supportive convention speech.
In his most over-the-top rhetoric, Gov.
O’Malley stated, “Instead of
investing in America, they hide their money in Swiss bank accounts and ship our
jobs to China!...
let’s ask the leaders in the Republican party--without any anger, meanness or
fear: How much less, do you really think, would be good for our country? How
much less education would be good for our children? How many hungry American
kids can we no longer afford to feed? Governor Romney: How many fewer college
degrees would make us more competitive as a nation?”
Governor O’Malley may have righted himself
with his Democratic brothers and sisters, and especially the Democratic
principals and donors he will need for national office, but he surely was not
the reasonable, reality-based Howard Baker of his party.
Professor Vatz teaches Political Persuasion at Towson University and is
author of The Only Authentic Book of
Persuasion (Kendall Hunt, 2012, 2013)

No comments:
Post a Comment