Monday, September 8, 2008

Now the Debate Begins: 57 Days & Counting


From the Baltimore Sun


Political conventions have become extended infomercials for presidential candidates and their running mates. The slick videos, the inspirational speeches, the compelling biographies, the feisty finger-pointing, the rousing music and the celebratory confetti were all present, first in Denver and then in St. Paul, Minn.


And the party faithful loved it: The Democrats were lifted up, the Republicans energized. But the shows are over now, and the audiences that Barack Obama and Joe Biden, John McCain and Sarah Palin have to reach - the votes they will vie for - should require more than platitudes and angry rhetoric.


Both the Democrats and the Republicans have deficits to overcome as they set out across America.Change is coming, Mr. McCain assured convention delegates last week. But neither he nor his pick for vice president has explained how their stand on the war in Iraq, plans to revive the economy and energy proposals significantly differ from the policies of the Bush administration, eight years during which oil prices have skyrocketed, home foreclosures have soared and billions have been spent defending Iraq.


Mr. McCain, the self-described maverick whose bipartisan legislative successes have cost him Republican support in the past, seemed less the independent in the weeks before the convention as he tried to win over his party. He played to the GOP's restive conservative base in choosing Governor Palin of Alaska, who was little known on the national scene but was swiftly embraced by the Christian right for her views on abortion and her decision to raise a Down syndrome child along with her four other children.


But Mr. McCain's independent spirit resurfaced at the convention, notably when he called on Republicans to reinvent their party after acknowledging that they had been seduced and corrupted by Washington.On the campaign trail, Mr. McCain can't keep rehashing his personal story. No one disputes his service or heroism. To win the presidency, he must show how he will return America to prosperity, manage a postwar Iraq and secure the country from terrorist threats; he can't expect Americans to simply trust in his love of country. Nor can Mrs. Palin be shielded from serious questioning any longer if voters are to believe she is more than Mr. McCain's pit bull with lipstick. She should be able to explain the relevance of her role as commander of the Alaskan National Guard to overseeing U.S. foreign policy; that was her comparison, after all. Voters should know where she stands on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and Russia's expanding power, two issues critical to the country.


"Change we can believe in" is the mantra of Mr. Obama and his choice for vice president, Mr. Biden. But while their approaches to ending the war in Iraq, solving the country's energy woes and improving the economy differ from their opponents, they also resemble Democratic platforms of the past. Mr. Obama says his tax policies will improve the lives of the middle class, not the rich, and he has offered support for failing schools and wider access to quality health care. He also promises a strong national defense and a responsible withdrawal from Iraq.Voters don't want more of the same from either party. Mr. Obama insists change comes from the bottom up, but that requires him to lead by example and show how he would break the gridlock in Washington.


Mr. McCain promises to shake things up, but it's his party that's been in power for the past eight years. Mr. Biden, among the Senate's most senior foreign policy hands, may have the most difficult task ahead - forcefully challenging Mrs. Palin's preparedness to serve without offending female voters. But Governor Palin is tough - or so she says - and she should be able to take it.


This election presents voters with a critical choice about the future of the country, and they shouldn't be distracted by Mrs. Palin's future grandchild or jokes about Mr. Obama's years as a community organizer. The convention podiums have been taken down. The confetti swept up. The funny hats put away. Now it's time to critically examine what the candidates are proposing to do on the issues that matter most to Americans.


So what issues do you want to hear the candidates talk about?

What questions would you ask if you had the chance?

6 comments:

BaiJiXie 1 said...

So... Obama promises lower taxes for the middle class. Well, it is easy to promise;therefore, gain public support and hopefully their votes, the actual plans and policies still remain unclear.

The withdrawal of troops from Iraq. Obama promises a strong national defense and a responsible withdrawal from Iraq, but how strong is strong? How responsible is responsible? These things should be clarified to the public.

McCain's stand on the Iraq war. Will McCain really manage the situation of a postwar Iraq better than the current Bush Administration? If so, how? What's the exact plans, more troops? More spending? Will these new policies arouse the anger in the U.S. people? Or perhaps put a peace of mind in the people's security from harm?

If McCain is willing to lead the U.S. into prosperity, what are his exact ways of achieving such a onerous feat?

In the midst of all these promises, the public can only see a optimistic scenario that "can" and "promised" to be carried out. The public can not gain a true understanding,a comprehensive knowledge base of the omnipresent issues;therefore,the public is unable to make a straight and coherent choice when voting comes around.

Dylanowens1 said...

I want to hear something about two continuously growing problems here in the U.S. Illegal immigration and our astronomical national debt. These two issues in particular have been on my mind for quite some time and I think it's about time for some sort of reassurance, don't you.

ashleybrimeyer01 said...

As everyone knows in retrospect our vision is always 20/20 and now more than ever we are faced with a decision that is set to change the face of this country. But how are we to know what is the right decision? I guess we'll find out of we as Americans have the capacity to make the right decision soon enough.

I would like to know if each candidate truely wishes to enforce every aspect of their proposals once in office. What is the first item of business on the agenda on the first day in the White House? How important is the truth in keeping Americans informed about their country? And I would also like "experience" to be defined for me.

Is anyone really ever ready to be the president?

JenniferWang3 said...

I would like to hear McCain give more detail about his plan to overturn Roe v. Wade, specifically, what will happen after the decision is overturned. Surely one can't believe that such operations will end overnight, and many know how well abstinence-only sex education works. What do we do about underground abortions? Arrest the doctor? Arrest the women? What will the punishment be?

To Obama, I would like to ask what exactly is his stance on cloning, human, animal, or otherwise. Cloning could greatly help those who are in need of organ transplants, but how much can be cloned before it is called cloning a human? One organ? An organ system? Would it be ethical to grow a human without a brain?

Courtney Cox 3 said...

i would like to know how Obama plans to improve health care and make it higher quality, and improve taxes for the middle class.
People believe that it is the "higher" classes that benefit the most from the current tax system. But studies also show that they are also the class that gives the most to charities and organizations to hepl the welfare of the poor. I llove the idea of improving the circumstances for the middle class, but i just dont know how Obama would do it and keep it mostly fair for everybody.

Mr. P said...

Ashley, according to former President Bill Clinton, who would know, says that no one is really ready to President on day one!

I think that's an interesting insight.