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Home Front: Politix
Carter haunts '08 election
2008-05-30
Ramesh Ponnuru, Time

The ghost of Jimmy Carter is haunting the 2008 campaign. Well, let me restate that: the ghost of his presidency haunts the 2008 campaign. As for Carter, he certainly has not passed on; he is an active officious intermeddler freelance diplomat and campaign consultant. In recent days he has told Hillary Clinton to "give it up" in June and estimated the size of Israel's nuclear stockpile. (Other previous Presidents have kept tactfully silent about its very existence.) Earlier, both John McCain and Barack Obama had felt compelled to denounce Carter's meeting with representatives of Hamas. Carter's almost predictable intrusions into the news have done little to sway events, but they have conjured memories of a past that the current President and his two would-be successors are trying not to repeat. . . .

Of the two likely nominees this year, Obama is closest to Carter in background and policy leanings. The parallels between his campaign so far and the one Carter ran in 1976 are striking. Like Carter, Obama had little national experience when he started to run. Neither was given much chance of winning the nomination. Instead of running on a detailed platform, Carter told crowds that what Washington needed was "a government as good as its people"—just as Obama promises "change we can believe in." Carter's message sold well after Richard Nixon's disgrace, and press accounts from the time suggest that people found the born-again Carter to be charismatic. That parallel is a promising one for Obama.

But his Carterish echoes come with two potential dangers. The first is that running as the embodiment of hope can lend itself to a certain self-righteousness—what critics have already started to call elitism. The second danger is that the public will come to see Obama as naive about America's enemies abroad, as it eventually concluded Carter was. Ever since Obama said he was willing to negotiate with those enemies directly and "without precondition," Republicans have been trying to tag him as the son of the Georgia governor. . . .

Go read the rest of it.
Posted by:Mike

#9  LOL Mojo
Posted by: George Smiley   2008-05-30 22:29  

#8  The Ghost of Dipshits Past.

LOL! best description yet!
Posted by: RD   2008-05-30 21:30  

#7  He haunts more then the election...
Posted by: Bobby   2008-05-30 13:16  

#6  The Ghost of Dipshits Past.
Posted by: mojo   2008-05-30 12:25  

#5  "freelance diplomat"?

He should be locked up for that.
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2008-05-30 12:05  

#4  Obama-Carter '08 - "Just when you thought it was safe to go back into the booth again"
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-05-30 12:02  

#3  " both John McCain and Barack Obama had felt compelled to denounce Carter's meeting with representatives of Hamas. "

Somehow I'd bet that McCain didn't need any compelling, but rather, did it with gusto.

Obama probably needed to be compelled.
Posted by: AlanC   2008-05-30 11:06  

#2  We can only hope that the chains of Carter's failure hang heavily around Obama's neck and drag him down too.
Posted by: DarthVader   2008-05-30 09:32  

#1  I can imagine Jimmy Carter as the American equivalent of Jacob Marley, condemned to walk the Earth while rattling his chains of failure.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2008-05-30 09:11  

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