Earlier in the week I drew on Aristotle to preview the debate. Aristotle said that persuasion relies on three proofs: ethos, the speaker’s character; pathos, the passion instilled in the audience; and logos, a reliance of facts or data. Presidential campaigns are not decided on logos, most voters most of the time don’t vote on facts. Instead we look to the character of a candidate, those with whom we feel a connection and those who inspire us – ethos and pathos.
Senator Obama clearly stirs passion in his supporters (pathos). But ethos continues to be a problem. Voters say they’re not sure “who he is”, what drives him. They know he’s smart, but don’t know about his judgment. That he doesn’t seem to rattle is, on one hand, good because he reflects calm under pressure; on the other hand, we want to see a bit of life, a bit of the passion in him that he inspires in others. Obama had to show he was up to the task of Commander in Chief, voters had to be able to picture him in the Oval Office addressing the nation during a time of crisis. He also had to show some of his internal emotion, we wanted to see him engage at more than an intellectual level.
A week ago Senator McCain was all ethos. But that began to unravel a bit when he injected himself in the negotiations over the financial bailout package and his threat to skip the debate, which combined with increasingly questionable choice of Sarah Palin, have led some to question his judgement. McCain had to remind voters that he is a principled maverick, not a reckless gambler. He also had to demonstrate a bit of pathos, he had to stir voters without Palin in the room. McCain had to reinforce his position as the experience adult in a race against a precocious but naïve challenger and make us want to get behind him.
Obama by and large accomplished his goals. He was calm, demonstrated a mastery of facts, directly scolded McCain, and by and large took the questions on directly. But he also missed some opportunities to demonstrate his pathos. The split-screen shots occasionally showed Obama frowning or scowling when McCain was speaking (good). But more often than not he was smiling and shaking his head, a nonverbal “there you go again” (bad). Frowning, showing a bit of anger, demonstrating some passion, is good. My unsolicited advice for Barack Obama for the next debate is to frown more and smile less when John McCain is talking.
McCain largely accomplished his goal as well, at least as far as ethos is concerned. He talked a lot about his direct foreign policy experience and legislative accomplishments, and repeatedly called Obama naïve and unprepared (and no one mentioned his mid-week stunt). But he failed to stir anything in voters, there was no call to a higher purpose, no sense that he or this campaign were part of something greater. The next debate will be tougher for McCain – the announced topic of last night’s encounter was foreign policy, his strength. The next is on the economy, his weakness. My unsolicited advice for John McCain is to talk about his approach to politics as a calling to a higher or greater good.
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