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Barack Obama, Deval Patrick and a $46,000 Cadillac
Townhall.com ^ | November 24, 2007 | John Hanlon

Posted on 11/24/2007 6:16:32 AM PST by Kaslin

Here’s a quiz: Which prominent African-American politician famously said: “The politics of fear is no acceptable alternative to the politics of hope.”

If you answered Barack Obama, you’re wrong …

Just two years after Obama’s now-famous Democratic National Convention speech in Boston where he asked: “Do we participate in a politics of cynicism, or do we participate in a politics of hope” --Deval Patrick uttered the aforementioned phrase in a statement to the press.

Barack Obama went on to serve in the U.S. Senate in 2005, and Patrick was elected Governor of Massachusetts in 2006. And while Obama’s impact as a senator is harder to evaluate, Patrick’s already disastrous tenure in the executive branch may serve as a microcosm of things to come if Obama were to be elected president. Regardless of their racial similarities, the politics of hope is not the only thing that the junior Illinois senator and presidential candidate and the then-future Governor of Massachusetts have in common.

Barack Obama’s campaign for the presidency and Deval Patrick’s campaign to become Governor of Massachusetts in 2006 share many remarkable similarities.  And as someone who lived in Red Sox Nation during that campaign, I can attest to how the Deval Patrick playbook is now translating into Obama’s campaign and how that playbook ultimately translates into action or lack there of.

            In 2005, Patrick slowly emerged as a little-known gubernatorial Democratic candidate who gained traction by meeting with individual voters and even speaking at small college classes like at my alma mater Emerson College. In those speeches, Patrick began promoting a grassroots movement in the state that supported his idealistic values in a state that had been governed by Republicans for sixteen years. With two Democratic rivals who had stronger name recognition (one was the state’s Attorney General, the other had unsuccessfully run for Lieutenant Governor four years previous), Patrick built his campaign on young volunteers, grassroots supporters and strong persuasive rhetoric about the politics of possibility.

            In late 2006, because of that campaign, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts seemed to be composed of large blue signs and bumper stickers that had the name Deval Patrick on the top of them and “Together We Can” (his slogan) underneath them. Citizens of the state were standing together to support a candidate whose major claim to fame was his work as Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights for President Bill Clinton.

            In a state that supported John F. Kennedy’s meteoric rise to the presidency, voters were intrigued by “the politics of hope” throughout the gubernatorial race. In the general campaign, several negative ads by the GOP candidate misfired and Patrick easily won the Governorship declaring in his acceptance speech that “This was not just a victory for me. This was not a victory just for Democrats. This was a victory for hope.” He went on to say to his audience that “This has never been my campaign. It has always been yours. “

            Deval Patrick’s anti-incumbent, grassroots-focused, resume-lacking campaign directly mirrors Barack Obama’s presidential campaign (not surprisingly, Barack Obama visited Massachusetts for several well-publicized events for Patrick during the gubernatorial campaign).

            As Deval Patrick ran for office with the backing of grassroots hardcore volunteers to turn the tide against his two better-known Democratic opponents, Barack Obama finds support from a massive network of people who do not accept the ‘inevitability’ of  his stronger Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton. As Deval Patrick devalued his lack of a political resume in the campaign, Obama undermines the experiences of his more well-known rivals arguing that experience does not matter if it is not the right kind of experience. As Patrick’s biggest rival was the female Republican Lieutenant Governor Kerry Healey, Obama’s greatest rival is former Goldwater girl and First Lady Hillary Clinton.

            As Patrick preached grandiose rhetoric about the politics of “Together we Can”, Obama theorizes about the “politics of hope.”

              With the similarities between the two campaigns so blatant, it was not a great surprise (except maybe to Clinton enthusiasts) that Patrick would endorse Obama which he did in late 2007.

            Deval Patrick may have worked for Clinton but he pledged allegiance to the politics of possibility.

            As Patrick said in his endorsement, “I don’t care if the next president is a Washington insider. I care about what’s in his heart. I don’t care whether the next president has experience in the White House. I care whether he understands life in your house.” Aside from the obvious presidential references, Patrick’s speech could have been about the Governor himself and his own campaign.

            The Boston Globe article about the endorsement states that Patrick and Obama share more than just the “politics of hope”. The Globe notes that “Patrick is the second black Governor in the nation’s history and Obama is trying to be the nation’s first black president.” Additionally, “the two also share roots. Patrick grew up on the South Side of Chicago, where Obama lives. The two were also black student leaders at Harvard Law School.”

            The Deval Patrick and the Barack Obama models of campaigning mirror each other directly and indirectly but the major question that Obama supporters and independent voters should ask is does this type of campaign translate into true leadership.

            If the Deval Patrick model is followed, the simple answer is “no” judging from the mediocre opening act of Governor Deval Patrick’s political experience.

            After the “Together We Can” campaign, Patrick held a major public inauguration to celebrate the new open leadership. At the event, he proclaimed, “Today we join together in common cause to…extend a great movement based on shared responsibility from the corner office to the corner of your block and back again.”

            In the beginning of his first term, that ‘shared responsibility’ meant that all Massachusetts taxpayers would be relied on to accommodate Patrick’s February financial missteps (at a time when the state was experiencing major fiscal issues). In his first full month in office, according to Fox News, Patrick leased an expensive $46,000 Cadillac, spent approximately $10,000 for new curtains in his office and hired a scheduler for his wife (which had not been done since Dukakis was in the corner office.) All of those decisions he later regretted. At least publicly. With that regret, Patrick paid back the state for the extra money for the curtains and the Cadillac and the position of scheduler quickly vanished from the payroll.

            Then a month later in March, according to the Boston Globe,  Governor Patrick pleaded, ‘“Don’t give up on me’…following revelations that he called a top executive at Citigroup, which does extensive business with the state, on behalf of a controversial mortgage company.” After the original story broke, “Patrick issued a statement…that said he regrets calling a top official at Citigroup and interceding on behalf of the owners of Ameriquest Mortgage, a subprime lender where he was a board member before taking office.”

            In less than two months, the “Together we Can” and “politics of hope” candidate was turning into the poster child for the politics of hopelessness.

            One can only imagine what blunders Deval Patrick would have been making if his first major foray into public policy was at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

            Or perhaps one does not have to imagine if Barack Obama uses the style and the “audacity of hope” to become the next President of the United States.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: devalpatrick; obama; romneylegacy
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1 posted on 11/24/2007 6:16:33 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
...poster child for the politics of hopelessness.

Hope that phrase catches on.

2 posted on 11/24/2007 6:21:05 AM PST by IllumiNaughtyByNature
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To: Kaslin

As a result of the Cadillac incident our beloved (but not by me) governor will always be knows as “Coupe Deval”.When the final chapter on Coupe is written in Massachusetts (perhaps after President Osama Obama appoints him to be Secretary of Peace) it will be said that he was Mike Dukakis without the charisma.


3 posted on 11/24/2007 6:23:39 AM PST by Gay State Conservative (Wanna see how bad it can get? Elect Hillary and find out.)
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To: Kaslin
Berkshire Eagle:

Patrick and his wife, Diane, bought a 77-acre parcel in Richmond's Furnace District in 2002 for $472,500.

In 2005, they acquired a neighboring parcel for $775,000 that included a house, guest house and a barn.

In June, the Patricks sold the latter 14-acre parcel to Garrett and Mary Moran of Greenwich, Conn., for $1 million.

Politics of Hope - I "hope" someday I'm as loaded as Deval Patrick.

4 posted on 11/24/2007 6:23:43 AM PST by mvpel (Michael Pelletier)
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To: Kaslin
Deval Patrick, Barack Obama, and (to some degree) Harold Ford, junior, are the same thing - a black candidate that guilty whites can happily vote for.

They're so, so, so - CLEAN!

5 posted on 11/24/2007 6:27:24 AM PST by Jim Noble (Trails of trouble, roads of battle, paths of victory we shall walk.)
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To: Kaslin

Deval Patrick

6 posted on 11/24/2007 6:32:06 AM PST by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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To: Kaslin
Lotta hope for me...

Lotta rope-a-dope for you.

7 posted on 11/24/2007 6:33:40 AM PST by Steely Tom (Steely's First Law of the Main Stream Media: if it doesn't advance the agenda, it's not news.)
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To: Kaslin
Anybody can be Governor of Massachusetts. It’s like Zaire here. Just spread the cash. You buy the tribal leaders, penetrate the trinket minds of the voters and then you get to live in the big house with the nice guys in the Luftwaffe uniforms( State Police ). Meanwhile out in the jungles the tribe do what they always have done, attack each other and try to steal each others beer, women, huts and horses.

Dollars to donuts, being Massachusetts Governor is like being parade marshal at a four year clown convention. Nothing really to write home about.

8 posted on 11/24/2007 6:36:10 AM PST by Leisler (RNC, RINO National Committee. Always was, always will be.)
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To: Gay State Conservative
The article was remiss in not pointing out that, as an officer of the court, Coupe failed to have his convicted sex offender brother(brother-in-law?) register when he moved in with the Patrick family.

Oh, he ceaseless crusade to have that rapist released to continue to prey upon old women. Given the heat Romney is taking over "his" judge's release of that murderer that continued to prey upon people, maybe Patrick will shelve his criminal incompetence until the end of his tenure.

9 posted on 11/24/2007 6:50:57 AM PST by Calvin Locke
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To: Kaslin

I can never keep his first and second names straight. I thought it was Patrick Deval.


10 posted on 11/24/2007 7:01:14 AM PST by Past Your Eyes (You knew the job was dangerous when you took it.)
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To: Calvin Locke
Oh,the ceaseless crusade to have that rapist released to continue to prey upon old women.

Yes,Coupe Deval has so much compassion that he'll always help out a perv of color.In fact I read just that other day that that filthy perv friend of Coupe's is applying for an official commutation or pardon (can't recall which) from Mr Compassion himself.

I'll bet everything I own that it's granted.

Quietly

11 posted on 11/24/2007 7:01:26 AM PST by Gay State Conservative (Wanna see how bad it can get? Elect Hillary and find out.)
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To: Past Your Eyes
I can never keep his first and second names straight. I thought it was Patrick Deval.

Common folks like you and I call him Mr Compassion.

12 posted on 11/24/2007 7:02:35 AM PST by Gay State Conservative (Wanna see how bad it can get? Elect Hillary and find out.)
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To: Kaslin

“The Reign of the Incompetent”.

It seems more and more our elected officials are nothing more than hollow figures with nothing to offer except running for office.


13 posted on 11/24/2007 7:15:38 AM PST by freekitty ((May the eagles long fly our beautiful and free American sky.))
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To: Gay State Conservative
My mind is going.

The second paragraph should have read "Or, his ceaseless..."

I need coffee. Probably Ritalin too. Then Ritalout before bedtime.

14 posted on 11/24/2007 7:17:24 AM PST by Calvin Locke
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To: Kaslin
The two were also black student leaders at Harvard Law School.

Affirmative action at work?

I once taught a summer course for an Evangelical Scholars program at Notre Dame, to help them get into graduate schools. I got to pick the students out of all the applicants, and as it turned out, the smartest one of the whole bunch was a black student. He went on to Yale Divinity School, where I hope he was not too corrupted.

But the problem is, you also get black kids who are given scholarships purely and only because they are black, so you can't tell which is which until you have a chance to talk with them and read their stuff. Being a Harvard Law School graduate means nothing in itself if you belong to a designated minority group.

It's the difference between Clarence Thomas, a great American and a brilliant Justice, and Anita Hill, affirmative action recipient courtesy of Yale Law School.

Barrack Obama is slick, but I don't think there's a whole lot of substance there.

15 posted on 11/24/2007 7:18:54 AM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Kaslin

mark for later


16 posted on 11/24/2007 7:26:59 AM PST by Christian4Bush (DriveByMedia: Good news, no party affiliation: Republican. Bad news, no party affiliation: Democrat.)
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To: Kaslin
Oh no! Being somewhat uninterested in Massachusetts politics, I didn't know til now that Deval Patrick is Governor there! OH NO.

The Clinton crime family now runs that state.....doesn't matter that he now supports Obama. Of course he does. But is roots are those of a Clintonista which means, first of all, that he is simply a member of the organized crime "family" that has polluted America for the last 15 years and polluted Arkansas before that for 20 years.

My sympathies for my beloved sister and all who live in that state.

Of course corruption would follow Obama into the White House as it would follow John Edwards.

But the Queen of crime, corruption, and destruction will destroy this country.

The people of Massachussetts should find a way to kick the Deval Patrick OUT of OFFICE NOW before more serious harm is done.

17 posted on 11/24/2007 8:41:50 AM PST by Freedom'sWorthIt
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To: Kaslin

“Coupe Deval” has since retreated to a Bunker Administration. He sees no one, goes nowhere, and screens all contacts with the public. He is said to complain constantly. He is the perfect example of what we will get nationally if we elect a Dem next year.


18 posted on 11/24/2007 9:01:08 AM PST by pabianice
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To: Leisler
Dollars to donuts, being Massachusetts Governor is like being parade marshal at a four year clown convention

LOL! That;s wonderful!

19 posted on 11/24/2007 9:03:26 AM PST by pabianice
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To: Kaslin

To quote Flip Wilson: “The Deval made me do it.”


20 posted on 11/24/2007 9:05:29 AM PST by reg45
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