
It's
jolting and ominous. Indeed, the dueling
Clinton-Obama "red phone" ads are a throw-back
to previous eras, a time of the cold war, a
bear in the woods, daisies and detonation. The
red phone is an icon of fear, often used when
other arguments fail. But that's just it: the
red phone is about the past. I want to look to
the future, one rooted in our present-day
reality.
This campaign has given us
Senator Obama, who has captured many people's
imagination; Senator Clinton, who has
demonstrated just how tough she is; and Senator
McCain, an American hero. But my concern here
is not about media buys, "get out the vote"
operations, or how to excite people and
motivate them to vote. I have no problem with
tough-minded ads.
My concern is that I
want candidates who call us to look to the
future by genuinely reflecting and
understanding the present. We're squarely
barreling into the 21st Century, whether we
like it or not and things have changed
dramatically from the 1990s, or even from 2004.
For instance:
• In just the past
few years the auto industry has undergone a
total makeover, well beyond changes in the
1980s and 90s. With tens of thousands of
workers recently laid off or bought out, the
auto industry of the future is not the one of
our childhood.
•
The Internet has altered how we get
information and news and with whom we connect,
changing what and who we know, and how
communities function.
• While
younger Americans are re-entering politics, the
huge baby boomer generation is retiring and
seeking meaningful things to do; yet no one is
clearly proposing how to tap into this energy,
other than to say, "Vote for
me!"
• National
security issues have fundamentally changed in
the last eight years, with terrorism, the
further emergence of China, an increasingly
testy Russia, just to mention top-of-the-head
issues.
With fundamental shifts
taking place in this country and around the
world, old discussions about the same old
issues won’t work. Nor will simply updating
various policy proposals, arguing endlessly
about who voted for NAFTA and what they think
today, or talking about speeches vs. solutions.
I remember sitting in a
restaurant in New Hampshire in 1995 with a
group of citizens I was interviewing for a
project with the Pew Center for Civic
Journalism. The project was built around
listening to Americans talk about their
concerns and hopes. People talked movingly and
with deep frustration about how their factory
jobs had gone overseas. They were clear
that something was changing in America, but
weren’t exactly sure what, and they were
holding on for dear life to the past. Of
course, that's not uncommon, we all do that.
But there's little doubt today that the
world has gone through a major transformation
and that we are not returning to the 1980s, or
even the 1990s. What's more, no president alone
can shape the future, or craft a new, complete
and cogent narrative for the nation. Such
changes emerge only over time. And yet, a
candidate for the presidency and future
president can help us "turn" toward the future,
so that we can begin to see it and address it.
You see, the fundamental choice before us is
not simply a matter of debating one policy or
another, but a choice about our orientation
concerning the next leg of our common journey.
When I was 23 years old, several
presidents ago, I was a young aide to senior
staff for the Mondale for President Campaign.
That campaign also produced a red phone
television ad, one used against Senator Gary
Hart (D-CO). Just a few short years later, in
1987, I made the decision to start what has
become The Harwood Institute for Public
Innovation, in part because I felt that
politics had become more about striking fear
into people's hearts, than tapping into their
aspirations and solving problems.
In
many respects, politics is on the upswing this
year. The positive changes have been a
long-time in the making, a manifestation, I
believe, of Americans' long-held aspirations
for a better politics and public life. Which
leads me back to the red phone: this year's
race, I believe, is the first in recent times
to be squarely about the new century, about an
era already upon us, one which represents a
fundamentally different trajectory for our
nation. If, as I believe, our trajectory is
fundamentally different from eras past, then I
want a campaign which talks about that
different path and how we can take it.