The Other McCain makes a point.
The primary campaign was about convincing Democrats that Obama had a better chance than Hillary to win in November. This is why I have been so skeptical about the ability of Axelrod and Plouffe to translate their successful primary strategy into a win in November. A general election is not a primary. A general election is about swaying independent voters, who are profoundly different from the type of hard-core partisans who walk through January snow to participate in a caucus in Iowa.
Maintaining an image of insuperability was what that European tour was about -- convincing the True Believers that their belief is valid. But while seeing Obama feted in Berlin excited hard-core progressives, it produced an entirely opposite effect in independent voters, who perceived it as a grandiose overreach by a candidate long on confidence and short on credibility.
In other words, the O-and-Savior is campaigning against his last opponent--HRC--instead of against his current opponent.
Grandiose "I have come to save the world" speeches simply do not persuade; most Americans recognize that the President still has to deal with Congress and a bureaucracy which (frankly) does damn near whatever it wants to do, no matter.'
Few people actually believe what a politician says, and the more fantastic the promise, the less credibility the candidate has. It's kind of like resume-puffing. At some point in time, people catch on.
Good luck with that, O.
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