“Dear Senator Obama…” By Newt Gingrich

May 14th, 2008 Posted By Bash.

1

Dear Senator Obama;

Your campaign has been brilliant. It has given you more support and more momentum than most analysts expected a year ago. Keeping things simple and vague has worked so far, and it might work all the way to the White House. “Change you can believe in” is a great all-purpose slogan. It allows every person to fill in his or her own interpretation of what it means. In some ways, it’s reminiscent of Jimmy Carter’s 1976 promise to run “a government as good as the American people.”

The challenge you will face in the next few months is stark. Do you want to remain vague? You might win–but you might find that, in winning, you have a “victory of personality” with no real policy consequences. Or do you want to provide specifics? If so, your victory could be a clarion call from the American people to Congress to join you in achieving your goals.

I participated in two successful “change” campaigns: the Reagan revolution of 1980 and the “Contract With America” in 1994. Both were built around a limited number of powerful, specific proposals. As a freshman congressman in 1980, working in coordination with the Reagan presidential campaign, we selected five popular themes we knew would help our candidates get elected and create momentum for President Reagan’s bold agenda. The clarity of these five positions (the two most important were a three-year, 30 percent tax cut and strengthening the military) helped our candidates in the closing weeks of the campaign. We won the presidency, six seats in the Senate, 33 in the House–and joined with a minority of Democrats to pass the key measures into law.

In 1994, House Republicans had been in the minority for 40 years. We needed to do something dramatic. So instead of a traditional platform of vague commitments (”We believe in. . . .”), we offered a clear program of specifics (”In the first 100 days, we will. . . .”). We also enjoyed the advantage of positive historical trends. Already, there was an emerging consensus in favor of welfare reform, tax cuts, a stronger military and a balanced federal budget. Every item in the “Contract With America” had support from the vast majority of Americans.

Can you find five big changes that are substantive, popular–and can rally Democrats from the House and Senate to join you on the Capitol steps in September or October? If you cannot, you should question if you’ll be able to deliver on your “change” slogan. Your campaign advisers may not care about that. Their instinct will be to win the election and leave the difficulties of governing up to you. But if you want to be a genuine historic agent of change “we can believe in,” then you have to look beyond Election Day.

President Carter never understood this. When his vague campaign of “trust me” and “a government as good as the American people” came to Washington, it ran into a Democratic Congress that didn’t trust him and that wanted a government that was good for the Congress. Carter, like many outsiders who become president (including the current White House resident), greatly underestimated the institutional strengths of the Congress. Many state legislatures meet very rarely. Georgia was like that when Carter was governor, and the Texas legislature only meets every other year. This gave Governor Bush a considerable misunderstanding of the depth of institutional trouble he would face in Washington.

By contrast, Congress is a permanent institution with a 225-year history of challenging the president. Carter learned even before his Inauguration that Speaker Tip O’Neill was happy to stand up to a newly elected president. President George H. W. Bush painfully learned that his “read my lips, no new taxes” pledge was a target for the Democrats rather than a problem for them. Hillary Clinton learned as First Lady that she could cut a healthcare deal with Republicans Bob Dole and John Chaffee, but she could not get several key Democrats to go along. Her plans foundered on the unwillingness of House Democrats to give up their core values for a presidential “win.”

One final caveat: after four years as Speaker, the one lesson I learned is that the problem with being specific and real is that you become specific and real. Your opposition has new ammo–or, if you pick good enough changes, the Republicans might even decide to deliver on them in September, and the president might be willing to sign them. Then you will have delivered change, but probably not in the manner you had intended.

Newt Gingrich
Senior Fellow
American Enterprise Institute For Public Policy Research


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3 Responses

  1. sully

    “In some ways, it’s reminiscent of Jimmy Carter’s 1976 promise to run “a government as good as the American people.””

    No. Obama’s campaign is virtually identical to Carter’s because Carter is his idol.

    I usually like Newt but the rest of it is just a put up or shut up diatribe. Just say it Newt or one of you fuckers that are supposed to be Republicans… make the Howdy Doody lookin’ prick tell America what the fuck “change” means to him.

  2. 0311inOHio (typical white person)

    ROTFLMFAO….. As soon as I saw the pictures..

    I love this site.

  3. Irish Gal

    Yeah, it’s night like our party couldn’t use a little direction in Congress. When the last Republican left in Congress stands there scratching his f’ing head, maybe they’ll stop blaming Bush and do what their base elected them to do. The next time I read that we are losing seats because of an unpopular President, I’m going to scream. That is typical liberal shit, “oh it can’t be me”, its “somebody else causing this”… :roll:

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