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Authors: Calvin Trillin

Dogfight (9 page)

BOOK: Dogfight
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Obama on Immigration and Gay Marriage

    He led among them going in,

    And this, the White House thought, would lock it.

    Announcements that Obama made

    Put gay Latinos in his pocket.

The Dems were busy shoring up support

From women (moms and any other sort)—

Reminding them the GOP had made

A promise to repeal Roe versus Wade.

They also built the teams that had displayed

In ’08 how a ground game should be played.

The teams were not the same from sea to sea.

Electoral College voting being key,

A voter’s vote would hardly mean a thing

Except in states referred to now as swing.

The citizens of swing states would decide

Because of where they happen to reside.

In states where red- or blueness is conceded,

Your vote for president’s not really needed.

The total vote the winner can ignore.

The total doesn’t help. Just ask Al Gore.

    
Ohio

    
(A 2012 version of the
Wonderful Town
classic)

With the rest of the states either solidly red or solidly blue, the election will be decided in nine or ten swing states.

—News reports

    Why oh why oh why oh?

    Why did I ever leave Ohio?

    Why did I locate where, since it’s no swing state,

    
Pollsters don’t trouble to track?

    Zero is my vote’s weight.

    Reason to vote? That’s what I lack.

    Oh why oh why oh

    Did I leave Ohio?

    Maybe I better go O-H-I-O,

    Where I could have my vote back.

22.
 
 
The Race Shapes Up

Though housing showed some slight signs of recovering,

The unemployment numbers still were hovering

Above a pretty dismal eight percent—

A figure causing widespread discontent.

Unless the ranks of jobless started thinning,

The President could hardly count on winning.

Obama, it was said, should just accept

The fact his policies had proved inept.

And he could only answer in reverse:

Without my actions, this would be much worse.

    
A Rejected Campaign Slogan

    With confidence low and firms still not hiring,

    “It could have been worse” is not too inspiring.

He now faced Mitt, and one opponent more:

The promise he’d portrayed four years before,

When his campaign had promised change and hope.

By now, Obama’d given up that trope.

Mitt Romney did have troubles of his own.

Withholding his returns became a bone

That newshounds chewed away on any day

There didn’t seem to be much else to say.

They theorized on what he had to hide,

They wrote about reluctance to abide

By rules obeyed by everyone below

His customary rank of CEO.

    
Mitt Romney’s Tax Returns

    Demands come from left and from right.

    Mitt Romney, though, says he’ll sit tight.

    We’ve given you people enough,

    Says Ann, sounding suddenly tough.

    
Conspiracy theories abound.

    Mitt’s critics relentlessly pound.

    Why go through this sort of ordeal?

    What doesn’t Mitt want to reveal?

    Some shelters far off from our shore?

    Well, sure, but there has to be more.

    And, really, we already know

    His tax rate is terribly low.

    Could some corporate losses have meant

    That one year he paid not a cent?

    What’s in there to make voters squeal?

    What doesn’t Mitt want to reveal?

    What deed was so sleazy that he’ll

    So desperately try to conceal

    Exposure with such stubborn zeal?

    What fiddling did Romney feel

    Showed even a wealthy big wheel

    Who feels some gray areas’ appeal

    Is slippery, just like an eel?

    What doesn’t Mitt want to reveal?

In polls, the man the voters thought most fit

To manage the economy was Mitt;

In business Mitt had proven his agility.

He finished, though, way back in likability.

(Although, despite Obama’s mass appeal, he

Could hardly be described as touchy-feely,

Most folks would to the pollsters volunteer,

“Sure, he’s a guy with whom I’d have a beer.”)

What voters saw in Romney was, all told,

That at his warmest he was rather cold.

They couldn’t really feel enthusiastic

About a man who might be made of plastic.

Obama, also guarded as a rule,

Did not strike folks as cold; he just seemed cool.

    
The Likability Factor

The polls agree: President Barack Obama is likable. The question is whether he’s likable enough to get re-elected.

—Politico

    It’s said, as a rule, the most likable guy

    Is likely the guy who’ll pull through.

    And given the candidates now set to try,

    The Democrats hope that is true.

    Though voters, polls show, think Obama is cool

    And Romney is colder than ice,

    More likable’s not an infallible tool.

    Remember: Dick Nixon won twice.

23.
 
 
A June Surprise

Quite late in June, the nation’s highest court

Was, in its final session, to report

Its finding on Obama’s health-care act.

The betting odds against the act were stacked:

When looking at the Roberts court, one saw

The sway of ideology, not law.

Though Kennedy would now and then demur,

Four right-wing justices were always sure

The right-wing course was what the Framers meant.

The liberals—four—were usually in dissent.

Not many thought the justices would say

The act was constitutionally okay.

Force purchasing by mandate! Five would glower,

And then agree no Congress has that power.

    
We Hate It ’Cause It’s His: A Republican Sea Chantey

[The individual mandate had] been at the heart of Republican health-care reforms for two decades. The mandate made its political début in a 1989 Heritage Foundation brief titled “Assuring Affordable Health Care for All Americans,” as a counterpoint to the single-payer system and the employer mandate, which were favored in Democratic circles … . The mandate made its first legislative appearance in 1993, in the Health Equity and Access Reform Today Act—the Republicans’ alternative to President Clinton’s health-reform bill.

—Ezra Klein,
The New Yorker

    Oh, why do we so loathe this thing?

    We used to love it so.

    We used to say “For health reform

    This is the way to go.”

    We said it was free enterprise

    (And we explained just how).

    If this was our idea back then,

    How could we hate it now?

    We hate it ’cause it’s his, lads. We hate it ’cause it’s his.

    We hate it ’cause it’s his, lads. That’s what our hatred is.

    You needn’t be a whiz, lads, to ace this simple quiz.

    We hate it ’cause it’s his, lads. We hate it ’cause it’s his.

Surprise! John Roberts left his usual cluster.

He ruled the health law’s mandate did pass muster.

Comparing health plans, it was now less credible

To say Mitt’s mandate’s fine since it’s not federal

But this Obama plan, we know quite well,

Is sure to put us on the path to Hell.

From what some analysts could ascertain,

John Roberts made the issue less germane.

But it remained a dragon to be slain;

The act had not been demonized in vain:

The right thought Roberts’ ruling on the case

Might be a way to energize the base.

    
A Sea Chantey Reprise

    If Mitt’s plan was the model here,

    What caused this great upheaval?

    If Mitt’s makes sense, then why is this

    Such socialistic evil?

    If this approach once seemed so good

    That all of us were for it,

    Just why is it so wicked now

    That all of us abhor it?

    We hate it ’cause it’s his, lads. We hate it ’cause it’s his.

    We hate it ’cause it’s his, lads. That’s what our hatred is.

    
You needn’t be a whiz, lads, to ace this simple quiz.

    We hate it ’cause it’s his, lads. We hate it ’cause it’s his.

A lull for the Olympics coincided

With what developed into a misguided

And goofy journey that Mitt took abroad,

Where by his gaffes the foreigners were awed.

    
Mitt Visits Foreign Lands

    
(And not to hide money)

    The Mittster, while taking a three-nation swing

    Showed talent for saying the very wrong thing.

    He teed off our English friends lickety-split;

    The tabloids in London Town called him a twit.

    Though Mitt said his motives were never ulterior,

    He seemed to be calling the Arabs inferior.

    In English and Arabic venom Mitt bathed.

    ’Twas only in Poland he came out unscathed.

    His trip, meant to show foreign policy cred,

    Because of Mitt’s gaffes was a model instead

    Of what not to say when abroad one doth roam.

    So here’s the consensus: He should have stayed home.

Though pollsters said we always should remember

How much could change before we reach November,

The polls rained down, just like a summer shower,

With some poll every hour on the hour.

In almost any survey that you’d check,

Barack and Mitt were running neck and neck.

On cable, every well-connected speaker

Assured us that this race would be a squeaker.

In August, though, by pundits we were told

Mitt’s team might have to make some move that’s bold

If this prize was at last to go to Mitt.

The race required shaking up a bit.

24.
 
 
Shaken Up

Before “presumptive” stuck to Romney’s name,

The press already played a little game

Of speculating just what Mitt might do

In choosing who would be his number two.

One measure of the candidates he’d bested:

Just one of them was seriously suggested.

Yes, Tim Pawlenty, who had been the guy

McCain had also thought that he might try

As veep before, with yardage to amass,

He switched and called that long Hail Mary pass.

The candidates who’d been in real contention

With Romney for the win received no mention.

Considering Mitt Romney’s gringohood,

Some thought the veep position surely would

Be offered this time to a person who

Was plainly of a somewhat darker hue.

(They feared one day the Grand Old Party might

Just disappear if it stayed lily-white.)

There were some candidates like that available—

Non-WASP, attractive, and to voters salable.

Marc Rubio, a rising star, was floated,

And so was Nikki Haley, who’d promoted

Mitt Romney very early in her state.

And Condi Rice was mentioned for the slate.

Poor Bobby Jindal hoped that the pervading

Impression of that dorky speech was fading.

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