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September 18, 2008
Do We
Have to Talk About the Lapel Pins Again?
by Jean Johnson and Scott Bittle
Authors
of The Voter's Survival Kit, a series of
election guides from PublicAgenda.org
and the book Where Does the Money Go? Your
Guided Tour to the Federal Budget
Crisis
When it comes to international issues, a lot of
Americans aren't on top of the details. In 2007
only 36 percent of Americans could name Vladimir
Putin as the leader of Russia, although maybe he's
raised his profile here recently by pummeling
Georgia into the ground. Let's not even speculate
about the number of Americans who initially thought
there were Russian armies headed to Macon.
Presumably that's been cleared up by now.
But since so much of the voting public is so
hazy on the details of foreign policy, campaign
debates about it often nose-dive into fights over
which candidate is "stronger" and which is more
'patriotic."
Can we just stop it now? Let's just stipulate
that Senator McCain and Senator Obama are both
plenty strong. A spineless person doesn't endure
years in a prisoner-of-war camp and go on to thrive
in a highly-regarded career in public life. A weak
person doesn't rise up from humble beginnings to
head up the Harvard Law Review and become a senator
and candidate for president of the United States.
It just doesn't happen.
And how they've lived their lives suggests, to
us at least, that they're both very patriotic. They
may have gone about it in different ways, but they
have both chosen lives of service to the country.
Senator McCain saw combat in the military. Senator
Obama passed on a lucrative law career to become a
community organizer helping the jobless. These
decisions show that these two men care about their
country, that they're both willing to set aside
personal gain to protect and enrich the lives and
hopes of fellow citizens. As Americans, we should
be proud of them both.
OK. We have two strong, patriotic men running
for president. And most Americans (let's be frank
here) probably aren't going to follow nitty-gritty
discussions over which countries should be in NATO
and which shouldn't. So, does that mean talking
about the country's foreign policy in this election
season is a non-starter? Should we just check it
off the list and let the professionals handle
it?
We don't think so. In fact, we think there are
some extremely important questions the two
candidates could and should be talking about --
ones that don't require the average voter to bone
up on historical relations between the Russians and
Ukraine or be on top of the operations of the World
Trade Organization..
Maybe the candidates could talk about some
questions like these:
Is the U.S. striking the right balance between
using its military power and using diplomacy in
terms of its dealings around the world? Why or why
not?
What makes the U.S. secure? Military strength?
Economic strength? Top-notch intelligence? Having
close allies? Other areas? What do you plan to do
to insure that we're strong in the areas that you
consider most important?
What is a smart, effective strategy for fighting
terrorism aimed at the U.S. and our people? Do we
have it now, or do we need to make some changes?
What are they?
Are we putting too much or too little emphasis
on working with other countries? Are there places
where we need to work harder to get international
cooperation, even if we don't get to do everything
our own way? What are they? Are there issues that
are best addressed by the U.S. acting in our own
way and in our own time? What are those?
As a country, are we striking the right balance
between having a strong foreign policy versus
working on issues here at home? Would you put more
emphasis on our role abroad or less? Tell us
why?
These are all questions of national priorities
and strategy -- things voters can and should be
able to make judgments on without getting a
master's degree in international relations. These
are fundamental choices the next president will
have to make, and the public ought to know how the
two candidates would approach them.
But we're not so optimistic that questions like
these will come up in the debates. Based on what's
admired in the news biz today, the moderators may
plan to invest their time seeing if they can get
one of these strong, patriotic men -- one of whom
will be our president -- to confuse the Sunnis and
Shiites or perhaps slip up on some dictator's name.
Or maybe they'll want to get back to the lapel
pins. That's a real national security issue for
you.
Essay
© 2008 Jean Johnson and Scott
Bittle
Jean
Johnson and Scott Bittle are lead authors of The
Voter's Survival Kit, a series of election
guides from Public Agenda and the book Where
Does the Money Go? Your Guided Tour to the Federal
Budget Crisis (HarperCollins, 2008). Public
Agenda is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization
devoted to helping citizens tackle tough issues.
The Survival Kit is available at www.publicagenda.org.
Public Agenda is a nonprofit organization dedicated
to nonpartisan public policy research and civic
engagement.
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