Dr. Keith: No Bounce - Why Biden Hasn’t Helped Obama
According to the latest Gallup Poll, Barack Obama’s selection of Joe Biden as his pick for vice president hasn’t yielded the bounce most candidates enjoy after announcing their running mates. In fact, the poll shows the opposite: McCain has erased Obama’s lead and is now ahead, 46 percent to 44 percent.
Psychologically, the drama of a candidate for president teaming up with another leader to do battle in the last months of the election should provide a burst of enthusiasm among voters, however short-lived. The Democratic National Convention, playing like rock music in the background, should add plenty of fuel to carry more people into the next chapter of the Obama-Biden story.
Engagements and weddings and political conventions are times for unbridled optimism. The audience, which includes the American public in this case, is predisposed to believe that human beings joining together can be much more than any single person could ever be alone, that the glistening start of a partnership predicts sure success.
But something is wrong, and I think I know what it is. The Barack Obama story itself is the stuff of big, big dreams. We’ve watched a first-term U.S. Senator capture the imagination of the nation with eloquence unparalleled in recent times, harking back to the kind of excitement John F. Kennedy generated. We’ve watched him defy the odds again and again, to stand at the zenith of the Democratic Party. He has stood, in fact, somehow above and beyond traditional politics, a larger than life figure, a phenomenon. Those who embrace him hope for—maybe even expect—miracles from him.
So it should come as no surprise that selecting a respected, tested running mate like Joe Biden would slow Obama’s momentum a bit. While the choice may reassure voters that a steady hand with vast experience will be helping chart a course through increasingly stormy economic and political seas, it also reminds us that Obama is himself a politician facing momentous challenges. Joining hands with a longtime U.S. Senator anchors Obama, and voters, to reality. It brings Obama back down to earth. It makes him seem human, where he once seemed superhuman.
Only one pick would have taken Obama further beyond the normal gravity of the political universe: Hillary Clinton. In inviting his former rival onto the ticket, in trying to help bring the first female vice president into the White House, he would have been reaffirming the notion that he cannot be defined or limited by tradition or expectation. He would have been saying that he could achieve anything.
Hillary Clinton joining hands with Obama was the chapter that many Americans had already written into their collective imaginations, and those imaginary pages had much more energy than the real ones we’re reading about Obama and Biden.
As we wind our way toward November, Obama has come face-to-face with this reality: America’s expectations of a phenomenon are quite different than its expectations of a candidate. They are limitless. And they require constant feeding.
Dr. Keith Ablow is a psychiatry correspondent for FOX News Channel and a New York Times bestselling author. His newest book, “Living the Truth: Transform Your Life through the Power of Insight and Honesty” has launched a new self-help movement. Check out Dr. Ablow’s website at livingthetruth.com.
Tags: Barack Obama, Democratic Convention, Democratic Party, Dr. Keith Ablow, hillary clinton, joe biden
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Sen. Obama would have taken the election by a wide margin if he had chosen Sen. Clinton as the VP. So, the 2008 presidential fight would have been over. However, then Sen. Obama would have had a four-year presidential fight with “VP” Clinton.
I’m getting pretty tired of Obama being tagged as being so “eloquent”. Unless he’s reading platitudes off a teleprompter, he’s anything but eloquent.
My wife and I had the opportunity to hear Obama speak in person and he was unimpressive. After 15 to 20 minutes of time we realized he’d shared the bulk of ideas he had to drawn on probably because he has little or no executive governing experience. At the time we noted he did not once mention fulfilling personal responsibilities although there were multiple opportunities to do so.
Without a teleprompter, Obama is an empty suit, just fluff, kind of like Cool Whip. We saw that at the Saddleback Church Forum. I’m sure he’s a nice guy, and a great husband and father, but America needs someone who is ready from day one, and Obama is not ready for primetime.
When Joe Biden was announced to be Sen. Obama’s V.P., my first thought was that there is absolutely no chemistry between these two men. Instead of stepping up the momentum, the momemtum seems to have come to a stand still. Joe Biden is John McCain - age-wise anyway. Obama picked what he thought the public wanted - not what he really wanted. In the long run, it’s not going to work and the public will see right through that.
I find US election politics interesting. Like every other i see a people with opinions “inbtwix” (what we got is not what we need). Dr. Keith’s article on Sen. Clinton being the “ought to have been the best choice for vice president” ’shaish’ is shallow. Maybe he is swayed and hello dead. are they the best combination for the greater America. America wants to start righting the Obama it has not gotten yet. Was Martin Luther’s dream for America good? it was not good then but what about now. right now my beloved America is between Obama and McCain. make a choice make up your minds America and live with it.