Inaugural speech was sorely lacking

By CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER   Friday, Jan. 23, 2009
ADVERTISEMENT
 

— Fascinating speech. It was so rhetorically flat, so lacking in rhythm and cadence, one almost has to believe he did it on purpose. Best not to dazzle on Opening Day. Otherwise, they’ll expect magic all the time.

The most striking characteristic of Barack Obama is not his nimble mind, engaging manner or wide-ranging intellectual curiosity. It’s the absence of neediness. He’s Bill Clinton, master politician, but without the hunger.

Clinton craves your adulation (the source of all his troubles). Obama will take it, but he can leave it, too. He is astonishingly self-contained. He gives what he must to advance his goals, his programs, his ambitions. But no more. He has no need to.

Which seems to me the only way to understand the mediocrity of his inaugural address. The language lacked lyricism. The content had neither arc nor theme: no narrative trajectory like Lincoln’s second inaugural; no central idea, as was (to take a lesser example) universal freedom in Bush’s second inaugural.

This is odd because Obama is so clearly capable of more. But he decisively left behind the candidate who made audiences swoon and the impressionable faint. And that left the million-plus on the Mall, while unshakably euphoric about the moment, let down and puzzled by the speech. He’d given them nothing to cheer or chant, nothing to sing.

Candidate Obama had promised the moon. In soaring cadences, he described a world laid waste by Bush, a world that President Obama would redeem—bringing boundless hope and universal health, receding oceans and a healing planet.

But now that Obama was president, the redeemer was withholding, the tone newly sober, even dour. The world was still in Bushian ruin, marked by “fear … conflict … discord … petty grievances and false promises … recriminations and worn-out dogmas.”

But now no more the prospect of magical restoration. In a stunning exercise in lowered expectations, Obama offered not quite blood, sweat and tears, but responsibility, work, sacrifice and service.

When candidate Obama said, “It’s not about me, it’s about you,” that was sheer chicanery. But now he means it because he really cannot part the waters. Hence his admonition to rely not on the “skill or vision of those in high office,” but on “we the people.”

On the issue of race, he was even more withholding, and admirably so. He understood that his very presence was enough to mark the monumentality of the moment. Words would be superfluous—as introducer Dianne Feinstein was apparently unaware—and he gave it very few.

This was surprising, given that the announced theme of the inaugural—“a new birth of freedom”—invited grandiose comparison to Lincoln. Yet in the inaugural address, Obama abandoned the conceit. He allowed that, “a man whose father less than 60 years ago might not have been served at a local restaurant can now stand before you to take a most sacred oath.” When he followed that with “So let us mark this day with remembrance of who we are and how far we have traveled,” you were sure he would trace the journey back to Lincoln and the Second (post-Gettysburg) Republic or to King and the civil rights revolution.

But Obama didn’t. Remarkably, he instead reached back—over King and Lincoln—to George Washington. He rooted the values he cherishes most (and wants us to renew) in the Founders, in the First Republic, the slave-tainted one (as our schoolchildren are incessantly reminded) that had to await Lincoln for its cleansing.

Obama’s unapologetic celebration of Washington and the Founders of the original imperfect union was a declaration of his own emancipation from—or better, transcendence of—the civil rights movement. The old warrior Joseph Lowery prayed for the day when “white will embrace what is right.” Not Obama.

By connecting himself in this historic address to Washington rather than Lincoln the liberator, Obama was legitimizing the full sweep of American history without annotation or mental reservation. If we ever have a post-racial future, this moment will mark its beginning.

Obama did this in prose, not his usual poetry. And he buried it in an otherwise undistinguished speech marred by a foreign-policy section featuring the mushy internationalism of his still-bizarre Berlin adventure.

Perhaps that was just a bone to appease the faithful he had otherwise left hungry. We have no way of knowing. A complicated man, this new president. Opaque, contradictory and subtle. And that’s just day one.

Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for the Washington Post. His e-mail address is letters@charleskrauthammer.com.

reader COMMENTS
Click here to view reader comments
(7)
latinmami2
Jan 26, 2009 at 3:29 p.m.
Suggest removal

i think that obama is going to do just fine as president. he just started and unless he has some majic wand in his back pocket nothing is going to change over night. he certainly can't do any worse than what we have had over the last 8 years. even though the last speech may not of been what most people thought a speech is suppose to sound like he still is a great speaker and i personally think he is just we need right now

rep_of_1
Jan 26, 2009 at 3:22 p.m.
Suggest removal

This won't be the first or last disappointment of many opinions come. However at this point I will keep an open mind. Something that is clearly lacking this early in the fixed game.

support_local_racing
Jan 26, 2009 at 3:13 p.m.
Suggest removal

Obama has never claimed to be "all that". In fact, I'm not sure what "all that" is. He has given a nation of people HOPE. If HOPE is "all that" then, yes, I guess he is "all that". This nation needed a leader that will help pick us up by our bootstraps and walk WITH us. We haven't had that kind of leadership in a looooong time.

snerdley
Jan 26, 2009 at 2:46 p.m.
Suggest removal

You give him too much credit... Gave a so so speech "on purpose?" Are you kidding me Sir? Here's a thought, perhaps he's really only capable of mediocrity and you, in what may be the beginning of withdrawal from your koolaid induced stupor, are just now starting to grasp what many of us already know.... He really ain't "all that."

Kleej
Jan 26, 2009 at 2:33 p.m.
Suggest removal

I've made it clear that I've not been the biggest Obama supporter prior to the election. However, even I believe he deserves better than this garbage in this article! I like the fact that he's going back to the roots of this country with his speeches rather than spewing the BS that's been spewed over the past few years. Rome wasn't built in a day! By roots, I'm talking morality and values! We don't have that going on in our society as a whole anymore. We're not going to turn this around until we have that again and start instilling it in our generations. As the president and LEADER of my country, I've chosen to heed what Mr. Obama is saying and do my part. We all should. We don't need some sugar coated speech that gives everyone this warm fuzzy feeling that everything will just magically be ok. The people need to hear it like it really is! There's HOPE, but, the president and our government isn't the magic here. We the people have to step up and make it happen......... as President Obama reiterated in his "speech"..........

Unidentified
Jan 26, 2009 at 2:03 p.m.
Suggest removal

I think only the most fanatical Obama supporters could have thought that was a great speech. It wasn't bad, but certainly won't rank up their with Lincoln, FDR, or Kennedy. Nonetheless, Obama is a smart politician. He knows he won't be able to deliver on all of his campaign promises. As a result, he's tampering expectations a bit. On the other hand, he has such a loyal following that anything he accomplishes will be thought of as impressive.

Before you post a comment, consider this:

Note: GazetteXtra.com does not condone or review every comment. Read more in our User Policy Agreement
  • Keep it clean. Comments that are obscene, vulgar or sexually oriented will be removed. Creative spelling of such terms or implied use of such language is banned, also.
  • Don't threaten to hurt or kill anyone.
  • Be nice. No racism, sexism or any other sort of -ism that degrades another person.
  • Harassing comments. If you are the subject of a harassing comment or personal attack by another user, do not respond in-kind.  Hit the "Suggest Removal" button on offensive comments.
  • Share what you know. Give us your eyewitness accounts, background, observations and history.
  • Do not libel anyone. Libel is writing something false about someone that damages that person's reputation.
  • Ask questions. What more do you want to know about the story?
  • Stay focused. Keep on the story's topic.
  • Help us get it right. If you spot a factual error or misspelling, email newsroom@gazettextra.com or call 1-800-362-6712.
  • Remember, this is our site. We set the rules, and we reserve the right to remove any comments that we deem inappropriate.

Post Comment

Commenting requires registration.

Username:
Password: (Forgotten your password?)

Comment:

ADVERTISEMENT