September 3, 2010 9:54 AM

Hot Questions: What Does Obama Unleashed Sound Like?

By
John Dickerson
Topics
Campaign 2010 ,
White House ,
Tea Party


This post also appears on Slate.


Labor Day traditionally begins the final sprint to Election Day. So starting today, we're going to offer a new end-of-the-week feature. Each week, I'll post some of the questions I'm trying to answer based on news of the week or something that's come up in my reporting. In the following weeks, I'll try to answer some of these questions. Feel free to weigh in with answers--or with more political questions--at hotsheet@cbs.com or in the comments section below. Here are this week's questions:

(Credit: JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images)
What does Obama unleashed sound like? President Obama has been slowly turning up his political rhetoric for months. He's made broad attacks on Republicans and taken specific shots at people like Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. He hasn't turned the dial up to 11 though--yet. Before his vacation, he warned Republicans he's going to start. "They've forgotten I know how to politick pretty good," he said before leaving for vacation.

He's likely to start Monday in Milwaukee, Wisc., at a Labor Day rally. What will the new pitch sound like? Will Obama and his aides fully let go of worries about damaging his post-partisan brand? More important, will the president be effective at rallying Democrats to the polls with more partisan rhetoric? Obama clearly enjoys giving a political speech, but his circumstances have changed since he last gave so many good ones. During the 2008 campaign, he was derided as all pretty words and no substance. Now he faces the opposite problem: He's pushed and passed a heap of big, fibrous legislation but gets criticism (sometimes from himself) for not being very good at communicating.

Enthusiasm vs. ground game. Tea Party activists have given Republicans a huge boost of energy. Polls regularly show an enthusiasm advantage for the GOP. But can the GOP harness that energy and get people to the polls? Democratic officials have been saying for months that it cannot, and this was why the Tea Party was mostly hype. (Unfortunately for their argument, they offered Joe Miller's campaign in Alaska as proof--and look what happened there.) A new Gallup finding suggests the enthusiasm may be linked to turnout. Republicans are following the campaign more closely, which Gallup says is a key indicator of likelihood a person will vote.

The advantage for Democrats is that they have the better organization. Organizing for America, the Obama campaign operation, has been up and running for more than three years. Some of the volunteers have been knocking on the same doors since Obama was just a freshman senator from Illinois running for president. Personal connections are also key to voter turnout, and these volunteers have made multiple trips to the same houses. If the key for Democrats this cycle is turning out the people who voted for Obama in 2008, these volunteers may be in the best position to make the argument to those voters that despite widespread frustration, Obama and the Democratic Party still deserve their support.

Another Tea Party Upset Brewing in Delaware?

Is control of the Senate really in play? For the last several months, political prognosticators and political scientists have inched up their predictions for a Republican takeover of the House. To make Rep. John Boehner speaker, they need to win a net of 39 seats, which everyone acknowledges is a real possibility (notwithstanding the fact that some Democratic officials are not allowed to admit this). But a Senate takeover has always been considered a stretch. Republicans would need to win a net of 10 seats. That would require Republicans winning not just in tossup states like Colorado and Florida, but also seats in California, Washington, and Wisconsin. Now things have changed a little. Two influential prognosticators are more open to the possibility of a Senate takeover--or, at least, moving away from the idea that it is an impossibility. Larry Sabato, the director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, predicts the GOP will win eight or nine seats. "If the Republican wave on November 2 is as large as some polls are suggesting it may be, then the surprise of election night could be a full GOP takeover," he wrote. Charlie Cook increased his Senate prediction to a seven- to nine-seat pickup for the Republicans, arguing that "a plausible case can now be made that ... 10 seats are within their reach."

Washington Unplugged Interviews Larry Sabato on His Predictions
Interactive Map: CBS News Election 2010 Race Ratings

More from Slate:

The Broadening Backlash Against American Islam
An Exclusive Look at the Artwork of Guantanamo Bay Prisoners
How To Nail Blagojevich


John Dickerson is a CBS News political analyst. He is also Slate's chief political correspondent and author of On Her Trail. You can also follow him on Twitter here.


Add a Comment See all 43 Comments
by 1notrub11 September 9, 2010 1:12 PM EDT
"They've forgotten I know how to politick pretty good,"

Tell you what - you will get much better mileage blowing less smoke and focusing on more action. People, rightly or not, will be very leery of rhetoric.

Sometimes even young, old dogs refuse to learn new tricks.
Reply to this comment
by troutfishyman September 9, 2010 12:16 PM EDT
by September 3, 2010 5:00 PM EDT

I will never consider this Socialist my President! He's a snake oil salesman in a suit!



Who cares? He is still president, regardless of your hatred.
Reply to this comment
by 1notrub11 September 9, 2010 12:16 PM EDT
"They've forgotten I know how to politick pretty good,"

Tell you what - you will get much better mileage blowing less smoke and focusing on more action. People, rightly or not, will be very leery of rhetoric.

Sometimes even young, old dogs refuse to learn new tricks.
Reply to this comment
by troutfishyman September 9, 2010 12:14 PM EDT
by September 3, 2010 5:00 PM EDT

I will never consider this Socialist my President! He's a snake oil salesman in a suit!



Who cares? He is still president, regardless of your hatred.
Reply to this comment
by Kahuna_HOG September 9, 2010 12:14 PM EDT
Obama unleashed? Wouldn't his sound be like Woof, Woof, Woof? Slurp, Slup...it's BACON!!!!!!
Reply to this comment
by debmw September 3, 2010 5:18 PM EDT
I agree with miami_don.........For those of you who think the Republicans are going to swoop in and save the day, you are sadly mistaken....we have the GOP to thank for our current lot of problems.....I was a Republican because my parents were Republicans....I woke up a few years back thanks to your beloved Bush and his continued stupidity.....I switched parties and will contine to support Pres Obama in his efforts to get this country back on track. I abhor the GOP and their efforts to generate hate and fear among citizens as an avenue to get what they want.....greed and ignorance rules the GOP....just look at the players on their team...idiots!!!!!
Reply to this comment
by JV1970 September 6, 2010 3:59 AM EDT
You are forgetting who has been in control of the house and the senate for the last four years! It's not the Republicans!
by dibbs977 September 3, 2010 4:49 PM EDT
I love our President. He has the intelligence, education, grace, goodness and heart to lead us through these difficult times. I pray that American will see his goodness and support him.
Reply to this comment
by Kahuna_HOG September 3, 2010 5:00 PM EDT
Are you kidding me? He's led us to more spending of taxpayers money to bail out Wall Street and in bed with the ACLU and La Raza! The difficult times we're in contributed to his decision as well.

I will never consider this Socialist my President! He's a snake oil salesman in a suit!
by jschmidt27 September 3, 2010 5:42 PM EDT
dibb- you have the sarcasm down right.
by jschmidt27 September 3, 2010 4:38 PM EDT
What I really want to know is if Bozo doesn;t accomplish something positive in his four years, and he hasn't so far, does he have to give back the Nobel Prize he got based on what he was going to do?
Reply to this comment
by debmw September 3, 2010 5:21 PM EDT
Idiot
by jschmidt27 September 3, 2010 5:43 PM EDT
debmw= I presume that your idiot comment was about Obama.
by scottyusa September 3, 2010 4:19 PM EDT
Bush made the big mistake of invading Iraq and the democratic party made the big mistake of not supporting Hillary Clinton. I am not a really big fan of her's but she would have done a much better job than this bozo is doing. Democrats, you brought this mess upon us by electing a small fry senator with no experience who voted "present" most of the time when the country needed experience and leadership. Now we really ARE hoping for change!
Reply to this comment
by scottyusa September 3, 2010 4:12 PM EDT
He sounds exactly like a snake oil salesman in the old west.
Reply to this comment
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