-
ADD TIME NEWS
- MOBILE APPS
- NEWSLETTERS
Breaking: McCain Suggests Summer Series
We may as well further overextend the metaphor of the morning: if the hit series of the regular season just ended, how do you hang on to the viewers until fall? With summer reality programming!
In a speech this morning, John McCain suggested a series of ten joint "townhall meetings" with Barack Obama throughout the summer, starting next Thursday, June 12, in New York. The inspiration, McCain said, was the never-realized proposal—much cited lately by pundits—that President John F. Kennedy and Barry Goldwater do a barnstorming debate tour in the election of 1964. (Though as historian Michael Beschloss just pointed out on MSNBC, the proposal was never formalized then, and there's a good chance JFK would never have agreed to it if he had gone into summer '64 leading Goldwater heavily in the polls.)
Anyway: good idea, bad idea? (By the way, I'm sure this is a political strategy to seize attention for McCain today—but that itself does not make the idea more or less valuable. Update: And for all I know, the McCain campaign may expect, or want, the Obama campaign to reject the idea, which comes with an awfully short deadline—but again, that doesn't make this a good or bad idea in principle.) As always, it depends a lot on the details, and I'm sure I'll post more about it in the future.
On the one hand, I think the value of debates is a little overrated in politics anyway. At least the debates we're used to—which is why the significant part of McCain's proposal is that it cuts out media moderators, whom a lot of viewers on all sides have gotten sick of this campaign cycle.
Instead, McCain suggests, vaguely, to "maybe have 200 to 400 people chosen by an objective organization" attend the meeting and ask questions. Among the many issues that finesses, though, is who decides which ones of the regular-folk get to ask the questions.
Which brings me to my first gut reaction: why not cut the voters out of the questioning process too? Not to be insulting, but "regular people," especially those very interested in politics, can ask useless stunt and gotcha questions too. And as we saw in the YouTube debates, even if some of them have good questions, you're putting most of the power in the hands of the people who select their questions. Might it not be better to have the candidates simply question one another?
[Update: Obama's campaign counter-offers exactly such a "Lincoln-Douglas" format. Proving that my bias is not only pro-Obama, but psychic!]
Still, I'd watch. For now, what do you think of the idea? And what would you add to it?
Add Your Comment:
Most Popular »
- Best of the Decade: Sci-Fi Movies
- "How Will Dave Ever Make Fun of Sex Scandals Again?"
- CNN Poll: Man Made Global Warming Takes a Hit
- Is Harry Reid Burning Out?
- How Will Obama Pay For Stimulus 2.1? (or 3.0, 3.1, whatever you want to call it)
- Why Wells Fargo isn't paying back TARP
- War of the Supermen: Q&A With Matt Idelson
- The Health Reform Abortion Wars, Part Deux
- Economists Growing More Wary of the Senate Health Bill
- Quinnipiac: Obama Gets Bump on Afghanistan
- The Truth Behind the Leaked Climate-Change E-Mails
- Mexico Witness Protection: Corrupt Program, New Killings
- Tiger Woods Must Face His Fans' Moral Outrage
- Helicopter Parents: The Backlash Against Overparenting
- Taiwan: World's Lowest Birthrate Could Affect Society
- Creating Jobs: Can Obama Government Boost Employment?
- How Strong Is the Evidence Against Amanda Knox?
- U.S. Doesn't Know Where bin Laden Is; Time to Let Go
- Suspect Headley: Pakistani Terrorist Group Going Global?
- Humanure: Goodbye, Toilets. Hello, Extreme Composting













RSS