The Pragmatists’ Primary

/ 5 February 2004

Michael Kinsley has an amusing essay up at Slate today, that argues that part of the Democrats’ problem is defining what we mean by electability, and hence what our pragmatism should look like.

Among other things he notes: “Democrats cheated and looked into their hearts, where they found Howard Dean. But he was so appealing that he scared them. This is no moment to vote for a guy just because he inspires you, they thought. If he inspires me, there must be something wrong with him. So, Democrats looked around and rediscovered John Kerry. He’d been there all along, inspiring almost no one. You’re not going to find John Kerry inspiring unless you’re married to him or he literally saved your life. Obviously neither of those is a strategy that can be rolled out on a national level. But he’s got the résumé. And gosh, he sure looks like a president (an “animatronic Lincoln,” as my Slate colleague Mickey Kaus uncharitably described him.)”

Comments