The official Democratic response to President Donald Trump’s big speech before Congress last week offered the country not only a contrast of political visions, but of rhetorical strategies.
Trump’s address was defined by — and indeed, succeeded on — the strength of its concrete details: specific programs cut, specific heroes lauded, specific private-sector investments announced (See Nib #61).
Democratic Senator Elissa Slotkin’s nationally televised speech immediately following Trump was, too. But not obviously.
Most of the specific details of the speech were biographical, in the first 100 words. After that, Slotkin glazed over issues with airbrushed generalities:
“We need to bring down the price of things we spend the most money on…”
“… change doesn’t need to be chaotic or make us less safe…”
“Today’s world is deeply interconnected…”
“We are a nation of strivers.”
The climax of Slotkin’s speech was almost a parody of homogenized political banalities. The two things we need to overcome today’s challenges, according to Slotkin and her speechwriters: “Engaged citizens and principled leaders.”
Woof.
On the other hand, Democrats know this poll-tested pap won’t move the needle. So what’s really going on here? The most likely answer is what boxers call the “rope-a-dope.”
That is, Slotkin’s — and by extension her party’s — plan here is to put up perfunctory, superficial resistance to bait Trump into overreaching or punching himself out. This is what Muhammed Ali famously did to George Foreman in 1974.
(Sen. Chuck Schumer’s announcement this week that he will help Republicans pass their stopgap spending bill reflects the exact same strategy.)
The success of the rope-a-dope strategy depends picking the right moment to pounce off the ropes and decisively attack the exhausted opponent. That’s what Ali did to Foreman in Round 8 of the Rumble in the Jungle, leading to his stunning knockout.
So when might Democrats spring from their shell and go on offense? The one concrete, specifically paragraph in Slotkin’s speech tells us:
“And one more thing: In order to pay for his plan, [President Trump] could very well come after your retirement – the Social Security, Medicare, and VA benefits you worked your whole life to earn. The President claims he won't, but Elon Musk just called Social Security ‘the biggest Ponzi scheme of all time.'”
This is old school, lunch-pail Democrat “looking-out-for-the-little-guy” partisanship, not bespoke identity politics or green-energy fan fiction. It signals where Democrats — even now in their weakened position — think they have the high ground, and where they plan to set their trap.
Slotkin’s response to Trump was a case study in rope-a-dope, speechwriting. Anyone wondering where she and her party think they are on defense, and where they can go on offense, need only follow the details. Speechwriters take note: when on the attack, specify; when on defense, generalize.
Until next week… keep writing!
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