Who is to testify to that? Hillary's husband on night
three did aver that Obama is "ready to lead." However,
he offered not a shred of evidence, let alone personal
experience with Obama. And although he pulled it off
charmingly, everyone knew that, having been suggesting
precisely the opposite for months, he meant not a word
of it.
Obama's vice presidential selection,
Joe Biden, naturally advertised his patron's
virtues, such as the fact that he had "reached across
party lines to . . . keep nuclear weapons out of the
hands of terrorists." But securing loose nukes is as
bipartisan as motherhood and as uncontroversial as
apple pie. The measure was so minimal that it passed
by voice vote and received near zero media coverage.
Thought experiment. Assume John McCain had retired
from politics. Would he have testified to Obama's
political courage in reaching across the aisle to work
with him on ethics reform, a collaboration Obama
boasted about in the Saddleback debate? "In fact,"
reports the Annenberg Political Fact Check, "the two
worked together for barely a week, after which McCain
accused Obama of 'partisan posturing' " -- and
launched a volcanic missive charging him with
double-cross.
So where are the colleagues? The buddies? The
political or spiritual soul mates? His most important
spiritual adviser and mentor was
Jeremiah Wright. But he's out. Then there's
William Ayers, with whom he served on a board.
He's out. Where are the others?
The oddity of this convention is that its central
figure is the ultimate self-made man, a dazzling
mysterious Gatsby. The palpable apprehension is that
the anointed is a stranger -- a deeply engaging,
elegant, brilliant stranger with whom the Democrats
had a torrid affair. Having slowly woken up, they see
the ring and wonder who exactly they married last
night.