Cheney's Dour Tone and Dismissive Attitude Will Sink Republicans

May 22, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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By Robert Schlesinger, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Forget the specifics of their arguments for a moment—who got the better of the national security speech-off yesterday, tone-wise? Obama did (perhaps not surprisingly given his well-known rhetorical talents). In fact in purely tonal terms (and yes, things like tone matter in modern politics), the Republicans would be hard-pressed to find a worse spokesman.

Obama was poised, professorial and appropriately passionate. One of his rhetorical strengths is the ability to, as he put it in his speech at Notre Dame, make his case with passion and conviction but without "reducing those with differing views to caricature." He also projected optimism and confident strength. As I've argued before, I think the national mood is turning from the fear-and-anxiety-soaked post-9/11 years, and I think Obama is in tune with the new mood.

I'm not the only person to think so. Dick Cheney agrees with me. And he's irked about it. The Bush administration took criticism, he said, especially in its waning years, when "the sense of general alarm after September 11th, 2001 was a fading memory." Ah, how we all yearn for that sense of general alarm.

The fact that Cheney and Obama conveyed starkly different views of national security yesterday has been noted repeatedly (and their supporters, I wrote earlier, likewise had starkly differing interpretations of them). So too were their presentations almost mirror opposites. If Obama aims to argue without reducing his opponents to caricature, Cheney seems incapable of doing otherwise. His logic, as TNR's Jonathan Chait put it, can be summed up thusly: "To object to the methods of torture used against terrorists is to declare them innocent. You're either with them or against them." If Obama is optimism and confident strength, Cheney is snide anger and fearful strength: The danger we face is too dire for anything less than extreme, preventive measures to deal with it.

His tough talk, dour tone and dismissive attitude toward those who would disagree with him undoubtedly plays well among true-believers, but won't do as well among people not already in his camp.

Cheney's gloom-doggling (to use a word I borrowed from Dwight Eisenhower in my column in this week's digital edition of U.S. News) cuts against the direction in which the national mood is moving. And so to the extent that Cheney makes good points (and he makes a few—a very few, but the Obama administration needs to release the rest of those memos or explain why not), they are overshadowed by his miasma.

It's unclear whether the White House knew about Cheney's speech when they scheduled Obama's, so the timing was either a stroke of luck or a stroke of genius. But to the extent the GOP wants to take on Obama on these matters, they need a better spokesman.

But what do you think: Was Cheney or Obama more effective?

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Every time I see a leftist howling long and loudly about the likes of Dick Cheney or Sarah Palin,I know we're listening to voices of truth.Isn't it funny how the libs arguements always boil down to the "tone"of the speech,not the facts contained therein?Keep up the good work,comrades.When you are bleating 24/7 about the evils/dumbness/patheticness/ect.of a Republican,I know they are doing their job,And you help make choosing our real conservative candidates much easier.Any Republican that scares liberals to death is a guy I want speaking for me.

Bill of OH 9:11AM May 24, 2009

Dick Cheney looks and sounds like he is ready to bite the fender off a moving truck. Every time he speaks he riles up the red meat yahoos who slaver at his heels. Are we really supposed to take this wierdo seriously?

charles odell of MA 4:08PM May 23, 2009

This whole "torture" mess is nothing but Obama's political distraction while OUR "freedoms" wain away. Mr Obama threw out this bomb and has continuously waffled back and forth about how far it will go. The USA (us) currently HAVE "boots on the ground" that ARE at DAILY RISK.

(OUR?) Favorite Jr Senator has naively chosen to take a "high moral ground" and declare that throwing water in a Terrorist's face is "torture" while condoning AND supporting with OUR Federal tax dollars the systematic murder AND harvesting of un-born Americans. I see this as blatent hypocracy.

Mr Obama has chosen political advantage over United States Security in order to attack his rivals including Ms. Pelosi.

Chicago Attorneys have no "high moral ground", only personal gain.

Meanwhile we have an un-elected tax cheat running the Treasury with the authority to fire CEO's of OUR banks, the US government has taken control of the PRIVATE US auto industry after throwing Billions of OUR dollars into them, OUR medical AND personal information is about to be thrown onto a National Database (we all know how secure THAT is), credit cards are now "sharing the wealth" by redistributing their costs to the responsible holders, a second wave of Mortgage foreclosures is looming because IF you still hava a job and pay your bills YOU cannot re-finance your home, YOUR state government is being "strong-armed" IF they accept Federal money to do fiscally irresponsible things, AND the US DEBT has risen at a RATE UNPRECIDENTED IN HISTORY and NOBODY can tell the difference. YET!..the bill's in the mail.

Freedom to disapprove,STILL...American Idol, I vote thumbs down.

Chris Petty of GA 9:50AM May 23, 2009

Robert Schlesinger

Robert Schlesinger

Robert Schlesinger is managing editor for opinion at U.S. News and World Report, overseeing all opinion editorial content. He is the author of "White House Ghosts: Presidents and Their Speechwriters." E-mail him at rschlesinger@usnews.com. Follow him on Twitter: @rschles.

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