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Posts Tagged ‘newsweek’

How the West was won

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

Here’s your reading for the next seven days, folks.

Newsweek magazine had reporters inside the Obama and McCain camps for a year in the run-up to the election - but they were only allowed to be there on condition that their stories would be published after the election was over.

So now you can read these behind-the-scenes reports - and boy, are they fascinating. No, really. From tantrums to tactics, they’re an amazing insight into what the candidates (and those around them) are really like, and what really happened on the campaign trails. And I’ve only read the first three chapters…

Ch. 1: Barack Obama: How He Did It

Ch. 2: John McCain: Back From the Dead?

Ch. 3: The Long Clinton-Obama Siege

Ch. 4: McCain Camp Retools, Targets Obama

Ch. 5: Obama Sweats the Clintons, McCain Gambles on Palin

Ch. 6: Battling it Out in the Great Debates

Ch. 7: The Final Days

Enjoy. It’s like The West Wing - only real.

Everybody loves Barack

Monday, October 13th, 2008

The latest Newsweek poll sees Barack Obama leading 52 percent to 41 percent among registered voters - and leading, or overtaking, John McCain in just about every demographic:

“Obama now leads McCain among both men (54 percent to 40 percent) and women (50 percent to 41 percent). He now wins every age group of voters - including those over 65 years of age, who back him over McCain 49 to 43 percent. Supporters of Hillary Clinton, as many as a fifth of whom had at one point told pollsters they’d support McCain over Obama, now back the Democratic nominee 88 percent to 7 percent.”

The note of caution, however:

“Still, the poll suggests that despite his lead and the extremely favorable conditions for a Democratic candidate, Obama has not yet established himself as the firm choice of swing voters.”

In defence of elitism

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

(And just to clarify: by that, I mean excellence and great achievement. Not looking down your nose at people.)

There’s an excellent article by Sam Harris on Newsweek’s site right now. Entitled ‘When Atheists Attack’ (love it!), he rips into Sarah Palin’s religious beliefs and how they shape her world view (”In what respect, Charlee?”) and talks about the “elitist” slur that taints Obama and Biden and, well, the left in general. An extract:

“Ask yourself: how has “elitism” become a bad word in American politics? There is simply no other walk of life in which extraordinary talent and rigorous training are denigrated. We want elite pilots to fly our planes, elite troops to undertake our most critical missions, elite athletes to represent us in competition and elite scientists to devote the most productive years of their lives to curing our diseases. And yet, when it comes time to vest people with even greater responsibilities, we consider it a virtue to shun any and all standards of excellence. When it comes to choosing the people whose thoughts and actions will decide the fates of millions, then we suddenly want someone just like us, someone fit to have a beer with, someone down-to-earth - in fact, almost anyone, provided that he or she doesn’t seem too intelligent or well educated.”

Which was, of course, George W Bush’s ’strength’ - and one of the reasons why he won. Twice. Well, won once.

I’ve always found the ‘elitist’ tag in American politics interesting, as it doesn’t seem to exist in Britain. Sam Harris asks how it became a dirty word - and it certainly seems to have been around since the Clinton era, as The West Wing devotees will know. It’s a constant battle of the character of Jed Bartlet - an Ivy League educated, Nobel Prize-winning President who is continually being told by those around him that he has to play down his intellect at the risk of seeming ‘elitist’.

What’s curious - and of course, disheartening - is that, as Harris notes, the ‘elitist’ tag in American politics seems to be synonymous not with ‘money’ or ‘power’ or ‘the old boys’ network’ but with ‘intelligence’, ‘education’ and ‘intellect’.

Ergo: despite being raised by a single mother and coming from very humble beginnings, Barack Obama is an ‘elitist’ because he’s a Harvard-educated lawyer who’s written two books.

And despite owning seven houses, 13 cars and being married to a multi-millionairess, John McCain is not a member of the elite.

Any idea where this comes from, anyone? And why it doesn’t exist so much in Britain? Is it because we’ve been used to ‘the elite’ lauding it over us since, ooh, time immemorial? It really is a subject I find interesting and depressing in equal measures.

(Update: here’s an interesting right wing perspective on the issue).