You can feel the tedium by now. It hangs over the country like a wool
blanket in August. Even if it's masked by the kind of pointless commotion
signifying nothing that only a hopeless political buff would stay interested
in. Normal people tuned out long ago in search of something, anything, more
intellectually challenging. Like gin rummy.
But this campaign just won't quit. It just goes on and on, like the drone of
Fox and CNN. The endless speeches and speculation bring to mind HEAD-ON, the
headache remedy whose pounding commercials are sure to give you what they
claim to cure.
The oh-so-dramatic coverage on television has much the same effect when
applied directly to the forehead. Boring but excruciating. All the more so
when dressed up with fancy electoral maps and basso profundo, capital-A
Analysis. Anything to fill up all that dead air.
As one primary comes after another, election nights begin to sound like
replays. The pundits have given the nomination to Barack Obama, but Hillary
Clinton insists on waiting for the delegates to decide. How technical. And
so the grand march to anticlimax continues. The band plays on, if at a less
exciting tempo, as what's left of the crowd drifts away in search of a real
issue.
Dance marathons, aka walkathons, were all the strange rage in the '20s, but
they might mercifully end in weeks. This one's gone on for months. It
started last year and shows every sign of continuing forever, or seeming to.
The last two contenders on the floor - in accordance with the current
politically correct, diversity-mandated mode, one each black and white, male
and female - cling to each other like boxers in a clinch, unable to break
free. The dance to exhaustion must continue. It's the democratic, and now
the Democratic, way.
At last report, the two Great Thinkers in the Democratic race have been
reduced to debating whether the federal gasoline tax should be lifted for
the summer. That's the Big Issue between them now. This is what the republic
of Jefferson and Adams, Washington and Hamilton, has come to.
One of the candidates, Barack Obama, is still capable of expressing
occasional dissatisfaction with the level of the campaign before succumbing
to it. The other seems to be back in her natural, war-room habitat. Hillary
Clinton almost glows as she repeats every threadbare talking point with
strange new enthusiasm. Again and again she repeats that she's the only
candidate who can win in the fall - while losing in the spring.
Mrs. Clinton does seem to have solved or at least minimized her biggest
problem: What do you do with hubby? Bill Clinton has been relegated to the
back of the platform on election nights, where he looks on silently but
beneficently, or tries to. During the rest of the campaign, he's assigned to
the boonies, where he can still draw a crowd without drawing too much media
attention to the gaffes that have made him a regular embarrassment to the
missus. There is a certain pathos to the whole spectacle, like an aging
matinee star reduced to playing a bit role.
But the show must go on, however ploddingly. You can almost hear the great
god Demos, aka The People, drumming its fingers on the table as the
Democrats' demolition derby proceeds. To where? Why, to West Virginia this
week, and to Kentucky and Oregon the week after that, and then - ta da! - to
crucial, decisive, climatic Puerto Rico! come June 1, followed by
all-important Montana! and South Dakota! two days after that. In short, to
inconclusion.
In the old undemocratic days, which begin to seem an almost Periclean Age in
nostalgic hindsight, the party bosses - they had names like Daley and Farley
and Pendergast and Crump - would convene in some, yes, smoke-filled room and
pick a nominee. Sometimes they'd hit on a winner (McKinley, Harding) and
sometimes not (James M. Cox, John W. Davis) but matters would be settled. And everybody would be happy and united, or
pretend to be, as they surely will do again at the end of this long trail
a-winding. Continued... |