Politics

At last, McCain scrutiny

In his acceptance speech, Democratic vice presidential nominee Sen. Joe Biden commenced the assault on Sen. John McCain with an effective, point-by-point deconstruction of the GOP candidate. But possible McCain running mate Mitt Romney is in the wings and already on the offensive. It's going to be a

At last, McCain scrutiny
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Ted Van Dyk

In his acceptance speech, Democratic vice presidential nominee Sen. Joe Biden commenced the assault on Sen. John McCain with an effective, point-by-point deconstruction of the GOP candidate. But possible McCain running mate Mitt Romney is in the wings and already on the offensive. It's going to be a hard-fought battle between now and November.

Finally, on the third night of their national convention, Democrats Wednesday began to concentrate on the economic issues that will be their greatest strength in the upcoming campaign. Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, their vice presidential nominee, did it effectively in his prime-time acceptance speech.

Sen. Barack Obama, the presidential nominee, will address a huge stadium crowd Thursday night. That will launch the Obama-Biden ticket on a fall campaign that promises to be hard fought and, perhaps, another election-night nail biter.

Reactions to Wednesday in Denver:

Although former President Bill Clinton's speech, earlier in the evening, was highly praised by pundits, I was disappointed by it. He gave a soup-to-nuts partisan speech which underscored his, as well as Sen. Hillary Clinton's, support of Obama-Biden. But I expected a two-term president to present something more thoughtful and statesmanlike — perhaps an examination of political history leading up to Obama's ground-breaking nomination and references to Democratic presidencies and their achievements. Where were Roosevelt, Truman, JFK, the Great Society, and historic breakthroughs? Instances of past international and domestic leadership. Strangely absent.

The speech seemed to begin with the Clinton presidency and end with Obama's nomination. Clinton closed on an odd note, saying that he was challenged in 1992, as an Arkansas governor, as being unprepared to handle foreign-policy issues in the White House, just as Obama was being challenged now. Clinton had proved them wrong, just as Obama would. (Trouble is, Clinton's first presidential year was marked by questionable foreign policy decisions and stumbles, including those in Somalia and Haiti. Clinton was unprepared but, in year two, began to get it.)

As they had throughout the convention, Democratic speakers bore down on their devotion to Iraq and other military veterans. A Spielberg film, narrated by Tom Hanks, paid tribute to wounded vets — the implication being that Democrats cared more about them than Republicans. A panel of Iraq vets told in primetime why they were supporting Obama. This seemed a curiously oblique response to polling data showing McCain and Republicans to be more trusted on national security/foreign policy issues than Obama and Democrats.

Caring about and honoring vets is not about to convince swing voters that Democrats would handle dangerous war-peace issues more effectively than Republicans.

As a lifelong Democrat, and an Obama supporter since 2007, I have gotten an upward jolt from the convention and look forward eagerly to Obama's speech Thursday night. At the same time, I recognize that neither I nor others like me will decide the outcome of the 2008 election. It will be decided by on-the-fence, often independent, not intensely political voters who are only now beginning to pay close attention to the campaigns. All kinds of unforeseen domestic and international events could change the political climate between now and November. My gut feeling continues to be that Obama-Biden will win a close election. But gut feelings must be discounted. Stay tuned.

Ted Van Dyk

By Ted Van Dyk

Ted Van Dyk has been active in national policy and politics since 1961, serving in the White House and State Department and as policy director of several Democratic presidential campaigns. He is auth