Why Obama's Iraq Speech Won't Win Over the Left
Obama's biggest political problem is the disillusionment of his liberal base. But Tuesday's Iraq speech is unlikely to win them back.
David Corn asks a good question: Why is the president speaking tonight?
[P]olitically there's little or no payoff for an Iraq war address. Obama can't brag, "Mission accomplished." (In fact, on Monday, press secretary Robert Gibbs said Obama would not be using those words.) He can't declare victory. He can only declare a murky end to a murky war.
Just guessing, but here's why:
The president's biggest political problem is the disillusionment of his liberal voters. Contra Fox News, they do not see a liberal president doing liberal things. They see a consensus president rescuing Wall Street. The job situation remains dismal, the administration is deporting illegal immigrants, and where are the gays in the military?
What Obama needs to do between now and November is pound home the message: I have kept faith with my voters on their big concerns, healthcare and the Iraq war. Now those voters must keep faith with me.
Ronald Reagan could count on a cadre of conservatives to defend his actions against any and all critics. A friend once teased Bill Rusher, then publisher of National Review: "Whenever Reagan does something awful, you defend it on one of two grounds: either that Reagan had no choice, or that the full wisdom of his action will be disclosed to lesser mortals in God’s good time.” According to legend, Rusher answered, “May I point out that the two positions are not necessarily incompatible?”
Nobody seems willing to do for Obama what Rusher did for Reagan. So Obama must do the job himself. Tonight's speech is part of that job. Message: I ended George Bush's war. Vote Democratic.
The trouble is: This message seems unlikely to work in the way Democrats need. Obama's speech is much more likely to alienate marginal voters than to galvanize alienated liberals, and for this reason:
Obama's liberal voters will not abide any whiff of triumphalism in the president's speech. For them, Iraq was at best a disaster, at worst a colonialist war crime. (Elsewhere on the Politics Daily site, David Corn's colleague Jill Lawrence specifies what she'd like to hear the president say: "Never again.")
But most Americans want and expect triumphs. "Americans love a winner. Americans will not tolerate a loser." So said George Patton on the eve of D-Day, and he was right. And if President Obama declines to declare himself a winner, guess what alternative remains? Exactly.