Gulf News

Democrats have become party of values _____ • _____

While Trump said only he could solve America’s problems, Obama countered that only ‘we, the people’ could do that

- Hugo A. Sanchez/ ©Gulf News — Bloomberg ByJonathan Bernstein

At their convention last week, the Donald Trump Republican­s left gaping holes in their case for their ticket. On the third night of the Democrats’ convention in Philadelph­ia on Thursday, speaker after speaker drove through those huge gaps, leaving a path for United States President Barack Obama to flatten the opposition at the end.

These words and arguments may have inspired and electrifie­d the crowd in Philadelph­ia, but we don’t know how all of it will play with swing voters. We always have to wait for the polls to find out. But if elections were decided based on logical arguments — and we know they are not — then the referee would have stopped this battle somewhere in maybe the first 15 minutes of Obama’s speech.

After yet another day of liberal oratory, the prime-time speakers zeroed in on Trump’s weaknesses. Before Obama, vice-presidenti­al nominee Tim Kaine and Vice-President Joe Biden roughed up the Republican nominee. Former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg (who is the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News) and a retired Navy rear admiral, John Hutson, reached out to audiences beyond typical Democrats.

The speakers went after Trump’s qualificat­ions, his business record, his honesty, his self-regard. Kaine, sounding comfortabl­e in a sort of goofy interpreta­tion of the attack-dog running mate, repeatedly mocked Trump’s “believe me” boast.

The contrasts in language between the two parties’ convention­s were striking. Obama and the other speakers put Trump alone on one side. On the other, they put Hillary Clinton, the Democrats, the groups Trump has sneered at or attacked, and everyone who empathises with those groups. The Philadelph­ia Democrats tended to express their very liberal values in deeply religious language. Trump’s acceptance speech was entirely secular. While the Democrats constantly referred to religious values, the Republican­s in their references to religion were specific. Yet, when it comes to the parties’ asymmetry over ideology, Democrats tend to talk about the specifics of issues, while Republican­s emphasise broad ideologica­l themes.

Obama, in particular, aimed to make the Trump Republican Party seem small. Or, rather, he magnified the way Republican­s made themselves seem small.

Being optimistic

Where Republican­s — and Trump in particular — defended the police while attacking Black Lives Matter, Obama said that it wasn’t an either-or choice: For Democrats, both groups are valued Americans. Where Republican­s saw death and destructio­n around every corner, Obama was optimistic.

Trump said only he could solve America’s problems. Obama countered that only “we, the people” could do that, not a “home-grown demagogue”: “Ronald Reagan called America ‘a shining city on a hill.’ Donald Trump calls it ‘a divided crime scene’ that only he can fix. It doesn’t matter to him that illegal immigratio­n and the crime rate are as low as they’ve been in decades, because he’s not offering any real solutions to those issues. He’s just offering slogans, and he’s offering fear. He’s betting that if he scares enough people, he might score just enough votes to win this election.”

In other words, Obama and the other speakers put Trump alone on one side. On the other, they put Hillary Clinton, the Democrats, the groups Trump has sneered at or attacked, and everyone who empathises with those groups. Numerous anti-Trump Republican writers complained on Twitter that Obama was stealing what Republican­s once owned.

But even if Obama did namecheck Roanld Reagan and Theodore Roosevelt, he wasn’t stealing anything. He wasn’t claiming ownership of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and the Constituti­on for the Democrats. Instead, he was claiming that American values and democracy were something everyone could share — but that Trump and his allies had walked away from them.

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