From Our Inbox

Obama, Romney had the cleanest fight in U.S. history

 

Now that the candidates have left the hustings (whatever those are) behind, it can be said: This was the cleanest presidential campaign in recent memory, perhaps in American history.

Before you get exercised about Mitt Romney’s sketchy tax math or President Obama’s attacks on Bain Capital Partners, take a deep breath and look at the evidence. If you can step outside your preference for your own candidate, you will see a good, clean, hard fight — one focused overwhelmingly on the issues and informed by the fundamentally decent competitive impulses of the candidates. Both wanted very much to win, but neither was willing to ride dirty to get there.

Start with character. For the first time in decades, no candidate insinuated or allowed his supporters to insinuate that the other candidate was fundamentally fraudulent. There was no swift-boating, and other than Donald Trump and a handful of other attention-seekers and fringe conspiracy-mongers, there were no “birthers” darkly hinting that one candidate was Manchurian.

Yes, Obama pointed to Romney’s flip-flopping and suggested he had no core principles, but that was very different from alleging that Romney had concocted his past out of whole cloth. Some pro-Romney ads depicted Obama as a self-loving celebrity, but this was a legitimate line of attack against a president who received the Nobel Peace Prize just for showing up.

Then there’s religion. Remember that issue? It’s not only that neither candidate insisted God was on his side and his side only, in the way George W. Bush managed to suggest in two different elections. No, this was a race between the two most religiously outre candidates in U.S. history, offering nearly infinite opportunity for a faith war. Yet it never came.

Four years ago, commentators (myself included) wondered seriously whether the public would ever accept a Mormon president. Yet the Obama campaign did not emit even the most subtle hints about Mormonism’s polygamist past or its outlying present beliefs and practices. When was the last time you heard somebody talking about Mormon garments, an irrelevant topic that nonetheless came up repeatedly in the 2008 primaries?

Nor was there any attempt to invoke the (non-canonical) White Horse Prophecy associated with Joseph Smith, which predicted that the U.S. Constitution would someday be saved by a heroic “white horse” associated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

Mitt Romney deserves equal credit for saying exactly nothing about Obama’s former pastor Jeremiah Wright, an intellectual inheritor of black liberation theology. Romney also distanced himself from even subtle implications about Barack Hussein Obama’s Muslim family background or his childhood in Indonesia. He refused to tap into growing anti-Muslim sentiment in the heartland that can be seen in proposals for preposterous anti-Sharia laws in several states.

A cynic could plausibly claim that religion was a potentially radioactive topic for both candidates, dismissing their discretion as nothing more than self-preservation. I don’t buy it: Each side could reasonably have calculated that it had more to gain from subtle religious aspersions than it had to lose.

A much more probable explanation is that Romney and Obama, both buffeted in the past by illegitimate religious sentiments, were genuinely unwilling to use bigotry as a weapon. Besides, the combination of self-interest and principle is the base on which religious tolerance was built in the West. It is to be admired, not disparaged.

© 2012, Bloomberg News

Read more From Our Inbox stories from the Miami Herald

  • On spying and Moscow rules

    The arrest of the American diplomat, Ryan Fogle, in Moscow last week, was a journey to an earlier era, a throwback to a quarter century ago when these Cold War cloak and dagger spy games were painfully regular, as the United States and the Soviet Union played out the final act of a long and deadly contest. About the only difference in the handling of the ambush of Fogle by the Russian security service was that the photographic record of his arrest was in sharp, digital color, rather than grainy black and white. It was a textbook takedown. We see Fogle on the ground, arms behind him; then later in FSB headquarters being photographed with all the spy gear he was carrying. The “competent organs” are clearly protecting the motherland.

  • Jerry Brown’s best chance to save California

    It has been 35 years since California voters overwhelmingly approved Proposition 13, a measure that, as Gov. Jerry Brown put it in 2011, “started the centralization of power” in the state. He should know because he was also governor in 1978 and helped oversee that shift.

  • The issue behind Syria’s civil war

    I just spent a day in this northeast Syrian town. It was terrifying — much more so than I anticipated — but not because we were threatened in any way by the Free Syrian Army soldiers who took us around or by the Islamist Jabhet al-Nusra fighters who stayed hidden in the shadows. It was the local school that shook me up.

Miami Herald

Join the
Discussion

The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere on the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.

The Miami Herald uses Facebook's commenting system. You need to log in with a Facebook account in order to comment. If you have questions about commenting with your Facebook account, click here.

Have a news tip? You can send it anonymously. Click here to send us your tip - or - consider joining the Public Insight Network and become a source for The Miami Herald and el Nuevo Herald.

Hide Comments

This affects comments on all stories.

Cancel OK

  • Videos

  • Quick Job Search

Enter Keyword(s) Enter City Select a State Select a Category