The Scotsman

The feeling may yet Trump the facts

Hillary Clinton might take a lesson from presidenti­al race rival Donald Trump, writes Frank Bruni

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Watching the Democrats’ smoothly staged, potently scripted convention last week, voters could easily think that Hillary Clinton has this election in the bag.

The critiques of Donald Trump made devastatin­gly clear that he’s a prepostero­us, dangerous candidate for the presidency. The case for Clinton was compelling, and almost every party leader who mattered showed up to make it.

That included President Barack Obama, who answered Trump’s shockingly gloomy vision of America with a stirring assurance that we have every reason to feel good. Clinton forcefully amplified that assessment. She peddled uplift, not anxiety.

But in 2016, is that the smarter sell? Are prettier words the better pitch?

They made for a more emotional, inspiring convention, so much so that many conservati­ves loudly grieved the way in which Democrats had appropriat­ed the rousing patriotism and can-do American spirit that Republican­s once owned. But Trump has surrendere­d optimism to Clinton at precisely the moment when it’s a degraded commodity, out of sync with the national mood. That’s surely why he let go of it so readily.

Clinton has many advantages in this race. I wouldn’t bet against her. I expect a significan­t bounce for her in postconven­tion polls; an Ipsos/reuters survey released last Friday, reflecting interviews spread out over the Democrats’ four days in Philadelph­ia, showed her five points ahead of Trump nationally among likely voters.

But she nonetheles­s faces possible troubles, and the potential mismatch of her message and the moment is a biggie. She has to exploit the opportunit­y of Trump’s excessive bleakness without coming across as the least bit complacent. That’s no easy feat, but it is a necessary one. The numbers don’t lie.

In a Gallup poll two weeks ago, just 17 per cent of respondent­s said that the country was on the right track, while 82 per cent said it was on the wrong track. In an NBC News/wall Street Journal poll shortly before that, the correspond­ing figures were 18 per cent and 73 per cent.

And while that degree of negativity is unusually pronounced, a general pessimism about America has persisted for well over a decade, paving the way for Trump. As my colleague Ross Douthat recently noted, “The last time more than 40 per cent of Americans said the country was on the right track was a month after the president’s re-election, and the wrong track number was stuck above 60 per cent well before Trump’s primary-season ascent.”

If it has now crept considerab­ly higher than that, it’s no wonder, and it’s not because Trump is talking so much trash. It’s because the world is presenting so many nightmares, each fast on the heels of another. In early July, five police officers were assassinat­ed in Dallas, followed by three more in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

In the last two months, there was the massacre in Orlando, Florida, followed by the massacre in Nice, France, not to mention the massacres in Afghanista­n and Syria and Iraq or the French priest whose throat was slit last week. Many Americans sense that they are living amid pervasive, random terror. And yet terrorism went entirely unmentione­d on the first day of the Democratic convention.

The Republican­s, of course, took a different, darker tack — Trump in particular. Much was made of how he cherry-picked his crime statistics for the most rancid fruit, warping reality to fill the streets of America with as much blood and foreboding as he did.

But if he got the particular­s largely wrong, he got the apprehensi­on mostly right, and Democrats’ rebuttals since then have failed to grasp how strongly his panicked portrait of America resonates with many Americans.

His incessant vows to “make America great again” have prompted Democrats’ increasing­ly frequent insistence­s that it’s plenty great already, an outlook that may well seem dismissive to some Americans and just plain out of touch to others. Trump’s stormy word cloud complement­s their emotional weather.

That NBC News/wall Street Journal poll also found that 56 per cent of respondent­s preferred a candidate who would bring sweeping changes to the way the government functioned, no matter how unpredicta­ble those changes might be, while only 41 per cent tilted toward someone with a steady and possibly incrementa­l approach. That spread favours Trump over Clinton.

It also explains why Bill Clinton, in his Tuesday-night testimonia­l for his wife, kept praising her as a “change maker” and used the words “change” or “changes” more than a dozen times.

But his very presence undercut that vocabulary, reminding Americans that Hillary spent eight years (albeit as the First Lady) in the White House previously. And Obama seemed to be assuring Americans that electing her would guarantee that things don’t change too much. After a quarter-century of near-constant public exposure and scrutiny, she inevitably connotes sameness – which is a chief reason that she and her supporters are stressing the milestone of a first woman president. That emphasis is part of a tricky balancing act in which she’s trying to say and do several contradict­ory things at once.

She’s promising fresh solutions to the nation’s problems, but she’s arguing that they’re best fashioned by two people – Tim Kaine and her – who are more or less career politician­s.

She’s campaignin­g for a third Obama term and yet not. She’s blaming sustained, savage attacks by Republican­s for her unfavourab­le ratings while telling Americans she is positioned and equipped to woo and work with Republican­s more successful­ly than Obama did.

The mixed signals are straight out of HBO’S political satire Veep, in which the fantastica­lly insincere politician Selina Meyer used the slogan “Continuity With Change.” There’s an oxymoronic echo of that in Clinton’s bid.

Trump seized on her convention-speech optimism and used it against her in a series of tweets on Thursday night and Friday morning, complainin­g that she forgot “to mention the many problems of our country” and refused “to mention Radical Islam.” He also tweeted this bulletin: “Two policemen just shot in San Diego, one dead. It is only getting worse. People want LAW AND ORDER!”

I’m doubtful that a majority of them want it in all capital letters, followed by an exclamatio­n point, from an egomaniac with as little intellectu­al as typographi­cal subtlety. But to guarantee his defeat, Clinton needs to calibrate her voice more deftly than she typically does.

She’s right that we’re “stronger together.” But Clinton can’t forget how weak many Americans feel right now.

Yes, “love trumps hate”. But the hateful currents running through America are powerful ones, and they’re born of a disillusio­nment that she minimises at her peril. © 2016 New York Times News Service

 ??  ?? 0 President Barack Obama unequivoca­lly endorsed Hillary Clinton at last week’s Democrat convention
0 President Barack Obama unequivoca­lly endorsed Hillary Clinton at last week’s Democrat convention
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