I wanted to briefly lay down a thought on 'consistency' here, if any one is interested, since so much of the GOP debate last night orbited Mitt Romney's revolving record.
Regardless of who I am voting for, and who I agree with, I increasingly see two type of candidates in this race: the candidates whose presence I welcome, and those who I think are doing the political process a disservice. It boils down more or less like this:
Glad they're in the race
Ron Paul
John Edwards
Mike Huckabee
Barack Obama
John McCain
Bill Richardson
I guess, like Hunter
Dennis Kucinich
Ruining the processMitt Romney
Hillary Clinton
Rudy Giuliani
Here's my rational.
For a while, I've been thinking about why a consistency matters: I
expect politicians to change their positions as they age into the political process. Faaar two many 20, 30, even 40 year olds think America is either a monolithic force for evil in this world... or on the other side, there are those 20, 30, 40 year olds who think America is the greatest, most innocent, freest nation on earth (but have yet to leave their own state's border). Anyone who, upon entering congress, does not refine and modify their viewpoints is to me, too dogmatic and too willfully ignorant to be a true leader. Adaptability is as important as conviction.
Last night Hillary attacked Barack for changing his position on a couple issues... good! He was a state senator when he came up with some of those positions. I would hope his time in the senate has informed his opinions.
But there is a different brand of inconsistency I have seen exhibited by the candidates in my "ruining the process" category. They are the candidates who, upon reading a fact sheet that "voters want change" suddenly change their tune, and insist that "change" is what they've been offering all along. If Iowans polled that they wanted above all else, a leader with some strawberry sherbet, Mitt Romney would be working in a Baskin Robbins tomorrow morning in front of a fawning media junket. He would be wearing a crisp, clean apron.
Take
John Edwards, for example. Like most of us, I think that the classist prism through which he views economics would make him a radical, yet ultimately limited president. But -- and this is an important but -- class inequity is
his issue. It's something he feels strongly about, knows about, and it's an issue that I don't think democrats would be discussing so much if it wasn't for his campaign. Economists can disagree about his premise, but he's putting it out there, and we can reasonably assume that part of his reason for running is that he would like to alleviate some of the homelessness, poverty, and inequity in this country. Fine and well.
Likewise
Ron Paul. I think of Ron Paul as a kind of Karl Marx in the mirror: someone with a beautiful-sounding platform in which workers of all creeds will put aside their identity politics and take back their livelihoods from the elites who pick their pockets. A wonderful, self-actualizing manifesto that I believe would be disastrous if we ever tried to implement it. But that's my opinion, I could be wrong, and I'm very glad he is bringing those issues to the table for voters to consider. Like John Edwards, he presents ideas and realities that should be considered. Hooray!
With
Hillary and Mitt, however, why are these people running? What are they adding other than their physical presence and a desire to modify their message in whatever way takes them into the oval office? I'm sorry, I'm sure Hillary deeply believes that she would be a great president, as does Mitt, and maybe they'd suffice. But when the rational for your presidency goes from having a "let's have a national conversation" to "ready to lead" to "the change we need" in one campaign cycle, what are you offering voters other than yourself?
Likewise,
Mitt Romney -- Mitt Romney was not at all about change: he even criticized Mike Huckabee for criticizing the exact commander-in-chief who everyone wants a "change" from. Then, suddenly, he and Mark Penn (Hillary's campaign chair) read the writing on the Iowan wall... next day, he barrels into the debate claiming he can "change america because he's changed many corporations."
My brother.
I don't mind inconsistency... I love it. I'm glad John Kerry voted for that body armor, but then voted against it for the complex senatorial reasons that senators handle legislation. Senators often trap other senators between Iraq and a hard place.
But when you change the rational of your presidency purely out of a desire to stomp Barack out of New Hampshire you add nothing to the process. You sully it up. Campaigns should be about ideas, things this country needs, directions we need to go. It's a perfectly logical argument that we should go back to the 1990s, but that argument gets lost in the din of desperation when your message revolves around the expediency of the moment.
Finally, take
Barack... Barack, unlike Ron Paul or Rudy or Edwards doesn't really have a signature issue. He has a theme, and a series of variating policies (like supporting nuclear power and conducting diplomacy with rogue nations), but for the most part he is presenting himself as someone whose leadership style most qualifies him for the presidency. Great and valid point--
Bill Richardson makes a similar argument.
But I suspect, that tomorrow, if voters said they wanted their leaders more 'cynical' or more bitter, Barack wouldn't drop the hope thing and co-opt bits and pieces of his opponent's theme in a blind act of personal desperation/ambition. For example voters say his inexperience is a concern, and that Hillary's is her strength... he hasn't gone around insisting that he is "ready to lead," or citing some bogus experience that doesn't qualify.
He ended his victory speech Thursday talking about -- what else? -- hope:
QUOTE
[Hope] is what we started here in Iowa and that is the message we can now carry to New Hampshire and beyond. The same message we had when we were up and when we were down; the one that can save this country, brick by brick, block by block, calloused hand by calloused hand that together, ordinary people can do extraordinary things.
That's what I'm looking for: adaptability, but essentially the "same message when we were up and when we were down." I want to know that if Barack changes his position it's not out of desperation or a desire to stomp out his opponents. I want to know that he has intellectual, personal, respectable reasons for taking his stance. I want to know that, if he was in congress in late 2002 when they voted on an "authorization to use military force against Iraq," he would have voted/not voted on it for as many non-political reasons as possible.
That motive makes all the difference.