Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Dangerous complacency

I hope Martha Coakley will win the Massachusetts Special Election today, I really do.

As I voted for her this morning, I was struck by a feeling that she needs all of us to pull her feet out of the fire and that, to some extent, she has earned this close race through her lackluster campaign. This is not to say she won't be a good senator - she's been a good attorney general. She simply isn't experienced as a politician running for election, and she appeared to somewhat take this election for granted once she'd cleared the primary.

To the Coakley campaign, Scott Brown probably appeared at first  to be an upstart without a chance. Martha Coakley's campaign missed the mood of many Massachusetts residents - residents tired of the bad economy, worried about what health care reform will actually mean to them and impatient with the Obama administration. Brown painted Coakley as an insider and himself as some odd combination of good lookin' cowboy and down-home neighbor. In fact, he's more conservative than is a match for Massachusetts. Boston.com published a January 10 article citing important examples: "Last week he embraced waterboarding. Last month he expressed skepticism that climate change is being caused by humans. He has even denounced two national proposals that he supported in Massachusetts as a lawmaker - mandatory health care coverage and a cap-and-trade system to cut global warming gases." Great.

Martha Coakley, I hope you win... despite yourself.

2 comments:

  1. Brown is another W.

    Cute and hazardous. Vote Coakley.

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  2. So... energy triumphed over complacency. The election of Scott Brown serves as a reminder that, while people don't universally tune in to the details (if they had, I suspect Massachusetts would not have elected this man) but DO tune in to concepts of change and personal attention to their needs and concerns. The Democratic party, the nation - and frankly, many of us in business - can learn something from this political upset in "blue" Massachusetts.

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