Omg idina.
seen from United States
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Omg idina.
I cannot with these boys π
I’m reading through a Puck newsletter, sent out under the heading “The...
Iβm reading through a Puck newsletter, sent out under the heading βThe Vibes Election.β Some of this is similar to what I discussed in yesterdayβs Backchannel βΒ Happy v. Mad, etc. But most of it zeroes in on the idea that Harrisβ campaign is all vibes and no substance, a sugar high, something that canβt last. Will it be enough to carry her to Election Day? Hereβs one snippet.
Put another way:Β Vibes, baby! Harris has not outlined any specific economic agenda, speaking only in generic terms about corporate greed, standing with labor unions, protecting Social Security and Obamacare, and fighting for the middle class. She is framing the election simply as βthe choice about what direction this country will go inββconveying an agreeable set of center-left values against Trump rather than a 10-point plan for this or a white paper for that.
In his defense, the author, Peter Hamby, follows this paragraph by saying that elections are about symbols and images and many voters are okay with that. But I think we can say more about this. Because this conversation is of a piece with the complaints about Harris not yet giving any major press interviews, not having released a sufficient number of policy white papers, not yet having a fully fleshed out policy section on her website.
To start, we should note that major national campaigns take months, even years, to put out fleshed-out policy programs. Those are hugely complex projects with myriad policy, coalitional and campaign dependencies. Youβre not going to do that from a cold start in three weeks. But thereβs a different point here. For years on this site Iβve discussed the Democratsβ problem with what Iβve called βpolicy literalism,β the idea that campaigns are won or lost on the basis of fleshed-out policies ready to be implemented on day one as opposed to directional signals about values and goals. Of course, thereβs nothing wrong with having those fleshed-out policies. Thatβs one of the good things about Democrats. Thereβs a big cultural priority on policy work in Democratic politics. Those are important when it comes time to govern, and you can routinely see that in how each party governs. In Republican politics, policy is often backfill to service campaign slogans. And it shows. Having the people who do the serious policy work is great and important as long as you donβt confuse yourself into thinking itβs part of campaigning. Itβs not. Campaigning is about directional signals about values and goals. Way too often Democrats and Democratic campaigns get confused about this. βWe have all these great policy proposals. And when we explain them to people, they say they support them. So how did we lose the election?β
Thatβs not what campaigns are about. Repeat it to yourself three times. Thatβs not what campaigns are about.
Even that line above in the Hamby quote sets out something very clear: she is speaking about protecting Social Security and Obamacare, supporting labor unions. Hamby was talking about economic policy, but the Harris campaign is also saying just as clearly: protect abortion rights everywhere, continue Bidenβs climate policies. She also keeps saying on the campaign trail that sheβll sign the border bill that Donald Trump killed earlier this year. Not everyone in the Democratic coalition is crazy about that. But thatβs very specific, both directionally and in policy terms. And letβs be frank: sheβs the incumbent Vice President. Unless there are specific statements to the contrary, we should and the public unquestionably does assume her policies will be generally the same as Bidenβs.
Harrisβ central campaign slogan and message is βfreedom,β which she is using as a catch-all to bring together fighting right-wing efforts to restrict personal privacy and autonomy (abortion), the MAGA threat to democratic government itself and support for bread-and-butter economic policies (unions, Obamacare, tax support for families with kids, etc.) which allow working people to live dignified and secure lives. This is a rhetoric that is progressive and rooted in ideas venerated in American political culture. Many have recommended something like this. Pete Buttigieg, interestingly, was one of the first I saw employing this rhetoric way back when he was still a little-known midwestern mayor. Now Harris is doing it. Itβs working.
We could make a separate point that itβs risible to be demanding policy particulars from Harris when Trump changes his policies from one day to the next. Even calling them βpolicies,β as opposed to impulsive grunts, is charitable.
At present, Trumpβs mainβs policy action is disclaiming Project 2025, which until a few months ago was widely believed to be his de facto governing document, as embraced as such by the campaign itself. But we donβt need to grade Harris on a Trumpy curve. Presidential campaigns are about defining choices about the direction of country.
Having people getting excited about your campaign and your vision about the future of the country is a good thing, not some frivolous sugar high. Iβm sure Harris will do some sit-down interviews. But we should remember that the purpose of a campaign is to win an election. Itβs not an exercise in civics education. Campaigns do interviews when they want to get a message out or in response to popular demand. Journalist push for interviews. Thatβs their job. Campaigns respond when they deem it in their interests.
From Republican partisans these cries are expected. You hammer on what you think might be potential vulnerabilities. Itβs the business of reporters to be pushing for more access and interviews. But more generally thereβs a kind of impatience with a fairly dramatic shift in the trajectory of the election. It must not be real. It must be emotion and not reason. It must be cheap. Weβre almost two and half months before Election Day. Given how much has happened in the previous six weeks, a universe of things can happen in ten. But thereβs nothing cheap or vibesy or anything less than robust about the campaign Harris is now running. Sheβs putting out a vision and creating a choice and the public is responding to it. Itβs working. Why on earth would she shift gears or respond to anyone trying to break her stride?
A modicum of respect.
Β Β βΒ Β πππππ ππ ππ ππππππππ πππ πππππππππ πππ ππππ π ππππ. Β πππππ , Β π ππππππ ππππππ ππ ππ πππππ ππππ ππππ πππππππ ππππ ππππππ..Β β
Β Β Β personals / non mututals do not reblog !
I saw a time magazine in the grocery store and it was in remembrance of Barbara bush and in recognition of the First Ladies of America and guess who wasnβt on the cover
Hereβs an article I enjoyed this morning, as a West Wing geek, that compares the early Clinton administration to Trumpβs chaotic one in terms of staff structure and focus. ItΒ even snarks mildly about a fact that never fails to tickle me every time I am reminded of it:Β
βThe leaks have become such a problem that Press Secretary Sean Spicer took to checking White House employeesβ phones to plug the holes. That, too, leaked.β