Michael Barone
Echoes of Berlin
Tony Blankley
Lessons From A Dance Slav
Andy Borowitz
Athlete Without Compelling Personal Drama Expelled from Olympics
Donna Brazile
Election Based On Merit, Not On Identity
Phil Brennan
What Free Press?
David Broder
In N.H., A Deal To Close
Floyd and Mary Beth Brown
Obama Patriotism and Worldview Declared Off-Limits
Pat Buchanan
Who Started Cold War II?
Martha Randolph Carr
Martha's Big Adventure - A Blueprint to Build Your Dream
Mona Charen
The 3 a.m. Phone Call Is Real
Linda Chavez
A Majority Minority Nation
Will Durst
Too - Americas
Larry Elder
McCain Vs Obama: Showdown At Saddleback
Bonnie Erbe
No Celebration For Horses At This Celebration
Susan Estrich
Leroy Sievers
Suzanne Fields
Lessons From Literature
Joe Galloway
A Sad Week For Georgia, America And The World
Jonah Goldberg
Good And Evil And Obama
Victor Davis Hanson
Blame Everyone But Russia!
Harpers Magazine
Weekly Review
Froma Harrop
Even Health Care Can Be Outsourced
Jim Hightower
The Bushites Crude Connection To Georgia
Arianna Huffington
It's A Three-Man Race: Obama Vs The Two McCains
Jesse Jackson
Faith And Our Future
Terrence Jeffrey
Obama And Pro-Life 'Liars'
Garrison Keillor
On A Fair Footing
Robert Koehler
Predator And Prey
Morton Kondracke
Bush Bets Pakistan Will Become South Korea, Not Iran
Charles Krauthammer
How To Stop Putin
Donald Lambro
The Party Of McGovern, Mondale, Dukakis And Kerry
Kathryn Lopez
Dems Will Never Abort Pro-Choice Mission
Gene Lyons
Holier Than Thou
Ross Mackenzie
On Meal Diversity, Being Green, Dudists, Al's Opera, Etc.
Michelle Malkin
Democratic Platform's Hidden Soros Slush Fund
Marsha Mercer
Lobbyist Says Blocking Her Political Donation Is Unfair
Dick Morris and Eileen McGann
Back-To-Back Conventions: The Great Unknown
Deroy Murdock
Democrats Should Apologize For Blowing It On Surge
The New Republic
Pain At The Port
Oliver North
Report From A Forgotten War (2nd In A Series)
Robert Novak
Can McCain Back In Again?
Clarence Page
Helping Boys Without Hurting Girls
Leonard Pitts Jr
Clarity Is Good, Wisdom Is Better
Dennis Prager
If There Is No God
Bill Press
Hillary's The One!
Tom Purcell
School Lunch Dough
Michael Reagan
Governing is Above Obama's Pay Grade
Steve and Cokie Roberts
New Orleans Counts Its Blessings
Mary Sanchez
Return Of A Literary Hatchet Man
Deb Saunders
Woe Is Me, Said The Democrat
Robert Scheer
This Old Soldier Never Learns
Connie Schultz
'It Was The Human Thing To Do'
Mark Shields
Memo to Obama: This Election Is About the Voters
Roger Simon
Edwards: An Affair We Won't Remember
Bill Steigerwald
The Great Garet Garrett -- Interview with Bruce Ramsey
Cal Thomas
What Happened To Common Ground?
Diana West
Blind Defense of Koran Abrogates Reality
Agnes Cross-White
The Rhinoceros in the Room ... RACE
George Will
Where Paternalism Makes The Grade
Jules Witcover
The Disappearing Lame Duck
'Swing Vote': What It Tells Us About The '08
Race, And Why Obama Needs To Put Kevin Costner
On His Ipod
Arianna Huffington
8/6/2008
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The makers of "Swing Vote," the new film starring Kevin Costner, have pulled off a rare double play, producing a smart political satire that is also heartfelt and moving. It's also a film that turns out to be remarkably relevant to the 2008 race.
Costner plays Ernie "Bud" Johnson, a beer-drinking, unemployed resident of Texico, N.M., who as fate -- and a voting machine error -- would have it, will single-handedly decide a presidential election (sure, it's high concept, but don't forget that in 2000 New Mexico was decided by just 366 votes). The media descends on him, as do both presidential candidates and their win-at-all-costs campaign managers.
The film has lots to say about -- and gets plenty of laughs from -- the evils of modern campaigns: pollsters, lobbyists, focus groups, and the inevitable mudslinging and negative ads. The film features a bunch of satiric smear ads launched by the competing candidates -- incumbent GOP President Andrew Boone (Kelsey Grammar) and his Democratic challenger, Donald Greenleaf (Dennis Hopper).
But as ludicrous and over-the-top as the film's negative ads are, none of them can hold a candle to the absurd ads unleashed last week by the McCain camp and the RNC.
Paris
Hilton and Britney Spears? Really? David Hasselhoff? John McCain has been waiting his whole life to run for president and the best he's got is Britney, Paris, and the Hoff? And Moses? Everything about the McCain media reeks of desperation -- and a stunning disconnect from popular culture. Do the McCain campaign's computers have Google software that can only go back to 2003? And the RNC's ad ended with a riff on Leo DiCaprio in Titanic. That was 1997. When John McCain still had principles.
The film shows how, in their hunger to win, the candidates are willing to say or do just about anything -- and chalk it up to the price of doing business. At one point near the end of the film, both candidates have crises of conscience. President Boone, disgusted at his own willingness to abandon his core principles to court voters -- "dancing the dance," as his campaign manager calls it -- wonders aloud, "What are we about?" To which his campaign manager replies: "Winning. If we don't win, you can't do what you set out to do. And everything you've done won't matter."
But even the two campaign managers -- who are the personification of cynicism -- eventually admit the emptiness of that realpolitik rationalization.