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Gut v. Head

28 Dec 2007 02:19 pm

In attempting to aggressively to shape the political afterquakes of Benazir Bhutto’s assassination to their closing argument, the Obama campaign may have deliberately violated their “Never Let Them See You Sweat” rule.

The Clinton campaign wanted to let the story speak for itself, betting that the general atmospherics are more potent than the specific type of precipitation – that anything that speaks to the need to have a credible Commander in Chief helps her, even when the specifics – a resurgent Al Qaeda, Middle East chaos, -- might remind Democrats of her war vote. It's a distinction between gut and head; if you're a Democrat, your gut sends you to safe harbors; your head sends you to the candidate who got it right.

If the atmospherics benefit Hillary Clinton, it's because the assassination itself is less important to voters than the general feeling of instability that emanates from the Middle East; War is the ultimate existential threat. Nuclear terrorism is the existential threat of our age.

If the atmospherics benefit Barack Obama, it's because voters went beyond their gut feelings and engaged their brains; listened to Obama's argument and then recalled their anger (another emotion!) at Democrats in 2002.

If you want to know why pundits are suggesting that Clinton might find the circumstances more congenial, it's because an affective response is instantaneous, and an affective response like fear is usually indelible; it takes a few more microseconds for that prefrontal cortex to engage, to call on those arguments stored in the hippocampus, and to cogitate.

Comments (13)

I think the electorate voted for their "gut" last time and got Bush! -- a guy who apparently sees someone's gut through their eyes. peh!

We have been here before; many times. Fear being a variable for changing votes. I believe--in my head not in my gut--that this time it will be different and vote Obama.

I don't see the point of the 'seeing you sweat', bit, but i totally agree with you.

Obama should be pointing out that he got it right on Iraq, Iran, and Pakistan, and Hillary didn't. Hell, Bhutto AGREED WITH OBAMA before she died, when she agreed that if the Pakistani government refused to act against terrorists, that it made sense for the US to.

And cry me a river, Hillary, but the truth is the truth, and if we weren't tangled up in the war that YOU approved, we might have actually been able to squelch the very people who assassinated Bhutto.

I don't see the point of the 'seeing you sweat', bit, but i totally agree with you.

Obama should be pointing out that he got it right on Iraq, Iran, and Pakistan, and Hillary didn't. Hell, Bhutto AGREED WITH OBAMA before she died, when she agreed that if the Pakistani government refused to act against terrorists, that it made sense for the US to.

And cry me a river, Hillary, but the truth is the truth, and if we weren't tangled up in the war that YOU approved, we might have actually been able to squelch the very people who assassinated Bhutto.

I don't see the point of the 'seeing you sweat', bit, but i totally agree with you.

Obama should be pointing out that he got it right on Iraq, Iran, and Pakistan, and Hillary didn't. Hell, Bhutto AGREED WITH OBAMA before she died, when she agreed that if the Pakistani government refused to act against terrorists, that it made sense for the US to.

And cry me a river, Hillary, but the truth is the truth, and if we weren't tangled up in the war that YOU approved, we might have actually been able to squelch the very people who assassinated Bhutto.

oops. sorry about the multiple posts.

I think you and the media are overblowing the extent to which this is capable of producing a gut level response. Of course, if we had a terrorist attack here, that would create a vwery visceral reaction. The terrorist attackes in London and Mardrid had similar, but lesser, impacts because they occured in western countries. The fact that this was muslim-on-mulsim violence in a muslim country makes it a bit less powerful to moving the fear needle at the expense of reason. It's kind of like why most of America gets much more riled up about about black on white violence than black-on-black violence, which just fades into the background on most evening local newscasts. To the political intelligensia this is a big deal, of course, but I think they are totally overestimating the degree to which this scares the average voter. We are used to bad news coming from far away places - we've had years of it in iraq and in that case US troops were involved. In this case, this is an assasination in a far away place of somebody most have never heard of. I think it might have been a bigger deal if it had been Musharaaf who was assassinated. I think (and hope) that reason has a chance to win out. The smugness of the Hillary campaign that they fully expect you in the media to fan the emotional gut response over the correct rational response...and in the last 24 hours most of the punditocracy is dutifully playing along even though the rational argument is that our misadventure into Iraq, backed by the media-crowned beneficiaries of this - HIllary and Mccain - allowed the extremists to regroup and get out of control under our hapless puppet Musharraf. The other thing the media is doing irresponsibly is grossly exaggerating the risk that Pakistan's nukes will fall into Al Qaeda's hand - our pentago says that they are secure - the army is secular and in control of that country and the moderates there are 70% of the population. But the media are irresponsibly gining up fear to get Hillary nominated, just like they ginned up fear to support the Iraq war, another gut-level fiasco.

I think you and the media are overblowing the extent to which this is capable of producing a gut level response. Of course, if we had a terrorist attack here, that would create a vwery visceral reaction. The terrorist attackes in London and Mardrid had similar, but lesser, impacts because they occured in western countries. The fact that this was muslim-on-mulsim violence in a muslim country makes it a bit less powerful to moving the fear needle at the expense of reason. It's kind of like why most of America gets much more riled up about about black on white violence than black-on-black violence, which just fades into the background on most evening local newscasts. To the political intelligensia this is a big deal, of course, but I think they are totally overestimating the degree to which this scares the average voter. We are used to bad news coming from far away places - we've had years of it in iraq and in that case US troops were involved. In this case, this is an assasination in a far away place of somebody most have never heard of. I think it might have been a bigger deal if it had been Musharaaf who was assassinated. I think (and hope) that reason has a chance to win out. The smugness of the Hillary campaign that they fully expect you in the media to fan the emotional gut response over the correct rational response...and in the last 24 hours most of the punditocracy is dutifully playing along even though the rational argument is that our misadventure into Iraq, backed by the media-crowned beneficiaries of this - HIllary and Mccain - allowed the extremists to regroup and get out of control under our hapless puppet Musharraf. The other thing the media is doing irresponsibly is grossly exaggerating the risk that Pakistan's nukes will fall into Al Qaeda's hand - our pentago says that they are secure - the army is secular and in control of that country and the moderates there are 70% of the population. But the media are irresponsibly gining up fear to get Hillary nominated, just like they ginned up fear to support the Iraq war, another gut-level fiasco.

Look at the RCP 6 poll average. Look at the trends.

Why do you think Obama looks so skiddish? Why do you think he launced the bizzare attacks on 527's? Why do you think he started attacking Edwards? Why do you think he jumped and did his "closing" speech before Edwards or before Clinton?

It is because Obama peaked 3 weeks ago. Edwards and Clinton are moving up. Obama is fading and he knows it.

It remains to be seen whether his campaign loses it rutter as it seemed to yesterday when a sweaty, tired looking David Axelrod launched a senseless attack at Clinton, or whether they will simply put their heads down, fight the good fight for another week and accept their third place finish with grace.

Obama was destined to lose. You don't win Democratic contestes running as an independent. He never courted the bed rock Democratic base support of women, unions, working people, older voters. He was content with the thin slice of affluent liberals and younger voters who fawningly gazed at him like he was a movie star.

Furthermore, he never addressed the internals of poll after poll which said that Clinton, and sometimes Edwards, were better prepared to handle security / foreign policy issues, better able to lead from day one, and better suited to beat the Republicans. Obama banked on "change" being enough. But it isn't.

the trend is and has been for the past three weeks that clinton, obama and edwards are in a stastical tie. Edwards benefitted with all the mudsling Clinton was directing at Obama. Clinton has peaked and stablized at 28%. The key to Obama success is that the third of undecided Iowans are breaking to him inaddition the polls were taken during christmas break when students had return to their home states. Because the Iowa caucus is right after New Years, it has been difficult for pollsters to get an accurate feel for Iowa which has always been difficult to poll but so much more during this holiday. I also think that the 527 issue is hurting Edwards and will hurt him on the 7th, but he will come in second and Clinton third.

JDS,


I could not agree with you more! For the life of me, I can not understand why Senator Obama's team isn't emphasizing that he made Pakistan a major issue in this campaign. Pakistan wasn't being discussed until his foreign speech caused all the uproar. Agree or disagree with position on miliary strikes, he brought the brewing crisis of Pakistan to the fore front. It shoes that his attention will be where it is most needed.

JDS,


I could not agree with you more! For the life of me, I can not understand why Senator Obama's team isn't emphasizing that he made Pakistan a major issue in this campaign. Pakistan wasn't being discussed until his foreign speech caused all the uproar. Agree or disagree with position on miliary strikes, he brought the brewing crisis of Pakistan to the fore front. It shows that his attention will be where it is most needed.

The good thing about this is (1)there are seven days til the caucus and (2) there are seven news cycles. Iraq and Afghanistan and Pakistan are arguments Obama can "win" over time; the depth of the argument to be had is what is at stake. That and the press also goes with its guts and the experienced hands too: jumping towards Clinton, McCain, and Biden as beneficiaries.

But this wasn't an attack directly at the USA. It harmed USA interests and that is important; but the average person doesn't know what is exactly is wrong with the picture here. And those that do have seven days to process the Obama campaign's arguments.

I don't think this campaign has been altered fundamentally; and I think the disasterous results with Kerry in going with convention to fight Bush in 04 is also a trend line that is going against Clinton.

It's remarkable, actually. And protends a difficult election if she is nominated.

But the media are irresponsibly gining up fear to get Hillary nominated...

Don't be absurd. Any objective analysis of coverage demonstrates the media have been much tougher on Clinton in the last couple of months than Obama. Besides, I hardly think political instability in a failing state armed with nuclear weapons constitutes something we're wrong to be afraid of.

It is because Obama peaked 3 weeks ago. Edwards and Clinton are moving up. Obama is fading and he knows it.

Yup. Maybe to get back his momentum he can come out with a proposal to invade Pakistan to go with his early calls to bomb it.