Bowers on Nunn
It was just a matter of time before some progressive blogger got alarmed about the possibility of Sam Nunn being Barack Obama's running-mate. Chris Bowers of OpenLeft filled the vacuum yesterday with a post that calls Nunn a "worse Vice Presidential choice than Joe Lieberman" and half-seriously proposes a "stop Nunn" movement.
I'm a big fan of Chris Bowers, but he goes way over the top with this piece. Yes, Nunn would be an offensive choice to many gay and lesbians, and no, he's not exactly Mr. Change. But Chris' suggestion that Nunn has done nothing since leaving the Senate other than serving on corporate boards is a pretty egregious refusal to note the Georgian's yeoman work towards avoiding the fiery annihilation of the planet. Sam Nunn is to the nuclear proliferation issue what Al Gore is to the global climate change issue, and you could make the argument that these are the two most urgent challenges facing the country and the world. It's encouraging that both these men have endorsed Obama for president (Nunn back in April, Gore yesterday).
The invidious comparison of Nunn with John McCain's close friend and supporter Joe Lieberman is more than a bit odd, too, since the Georgian shares none of Joe's adoration of the Bush-Cheney foreign policy (au contraire), of the Iraq War, or of John McCain's neo-Cold War posturing towards Russia, China and Iran. Indeed, as a surrogate if nothing else, Nunn could do Barack Obama a lot of good by getting under John McCain's thin skin on his dangerous approach to national security.
One final thing about Chris' post: in an effort, I guess, to bring out the Big Berthas on the Nunn Veep idea, he says that "the DLC was originally founded in order to elect Sam Nunn President. I'm not kidding." Chris' authority for this assertion is a disputed, agit-proppy Wikipedia entry on the DLC which says the group's "original focus was to secure the 1988 presidential nomination of a southern conservative Democrat such as Nunn or [Chuck] Robb."
You know, I somehow don't think that founding DLC chairman Dick Gephardt (who ran for president in 1988), or founding members Al Gore (ditto) and Bill Clinton (who nearly ran that year) were "focused" on elevating Sam Nunn to the presidency in 1988. But this and other bad and good arguments for and against Nunn will be heard a lot if his apparent short-listing for the vice presidency continues.
UPDATE: Chris Bowers has done a new post that seriously tones down his objections to Nunn, based on this and other responses he got (he still opposes Nunn for Veep, but recognizes he may have a valuable role in the campaign or the Obama Administration). This is typical of Chris: he's the rare blogger who quickly corrects himself when he becomes convinced he's gotten something wrong. It's an honorable example the rest of the blogosphere--myself included--should emulate more often.






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Perhaps Bowers is easier to differ with than Jonathan Capehart, whose article "Don't Ask Nunn" was in the Washington Post last Wednesday:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/10/AR2008061002527.html
It may have been just a matter of time, but not quite as much time as it took Bowers. The comparison of Nunn to Lieberman may fail in one way, but unless Nunn enthusiastically embraces Obama's program, I'd be very much worried about his independence turning into obstruction. He turned on a President of his own party already, when he was in the Senate, and what is the Vice President but President of the Senate? Another surprise like Lieberman's jumping to the Republican position on putative military ballots in Florida without signatures or dates is not something I would care to see.
Nunn of course deserves credit for his work on non-proliferation.