General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhat's in a Name?
Lets try a little mental exercise here. Suppose that you were competing in DU Jeopardy. You pick Democratic Presidents for 1,000. The question requires that you provide a name for Grover Clevelands presidency.
Tick-tock-tick-tock
..
The New Freedom? New Deal? Fair Deal? New Frontier? Maybe the Great Society? Nope. These were, of course, the names associated with the democratic presidents that followed Cleveland, up through 1968. (The republican scoundrel Richard Nixon is, of course, remembered for Watergate. )
After winning the presidency in 1976, Jimmy Carter became the first democrat in the White House since Cleveland to not have a name for his overall program goals. I think it is fair to say that both at the time, and looking back, his presidency did not have the focus of those before him. While neither Clinton or Obama have had labels for their agendas, it has been easier than with Carter to identify what their focus has been.
Thus, I am curious if you think there is any advantage to having such descriptions of intent? Does it help the various factions within the party to identify with what an administrations goals are? Might it highlight what the true agenda of the republican opposition is all about?
There is no right or wrong answer. Rather, it is simple a matter of opinion.
tk2kewl
(18,133 posts)this is true regardless of whether there effects are positive or negative, which may of course depend on ones point of view.
Thanks for your response.
I'm not sure exactly why, but this thought popped into my mind late last night, when I was reading a couple threads here regarding Mondale and the 1984 democratic primary. One of the aspects being discussed was getting registered democrats to buy into and support our candidate -- a dynamic that could well be in play in 2016.
I know that the concept I discussed in the OP might sound unimportant, or even shallow. But when I was thinking of how the media is used by corporations and republicans to define various politicians -- "Morning in America" and Reagan being the grossest example -- I started thinking back to some of the more important presidencies.
tk2kewl
(18,133 posts)so if there is a way to convey a broad collection of ideas in short descriptive terms, i think it's important. of course i wish more people would dig deeper and deliberate on/discuss/debate the issues, but the republicans have proved that branding is unfortunately more influential than substance