Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW
He also offers his thoughtful perspective of Stephen Harper’s last 10 years in his recent eBook, The Harper Decade.

Jobs and Obama: story time

by Paul Wells on Thursday, January 28, 2010 12:51am - 71 Comments

Jobs and Obama: story timeI’m not asserting some enduring national character difference when I point out that Canada doesn’t have a political leader or a business leader right now who could begin to attract as much attention by giving a speech as Steve Jobs and Barack Obama did today. Nor indeed do we have a leader in either field, for the moment, who would even bother to try.

As I’ve pointed out before, Stephen Harper is the third prime minister in a row who will not make a big speech on television to put his case before the nation unless it’s his own political hide that’s in the balance, as Paul Martin did in 2005 and Jean Chrétien, perhaps a hair more nobly, did a week before the 1995 referendum. On the business side, try to imagine even the relatively flamboyant Mike Lazaridis or Jim Balsillie giving a big public speech to launch a new BlackBerry product. They never do. They let the thing dribble onto the market and trust people to figure out that it’s arrived, and then decide for themselves how it fits into their lifestyles and their… their… their personal consumer mythspace, which is what I suppose Steve Jobs is conjuring with his occasional trade-show unveiling rituals.

In both politics and business, however, Canadians have not always been so furtive, bashful or tongue-tied. Brian Mulroney and Pierre Trudeau both used to plunge into grand projects with very shaky chances of winning public appeal, and both favoured big set speeches, before select audiences or on national TV, to state their case and try to make some gains. As recently as the early 1990s, fine public speakers who used oratory as a key element of their political strategy were practically falling from the trees across Canada: Preston Manning, Jacques Parizeau, Lucien Bouchard, arguably Paul Martin. Manning used to pull whatever parliamentary strings he needed to buy himself some time in the legislative day, stack a text he’d typed himself on top of three thick law books, and hold a surprising number of MPs, including more than a few on the government side, spellbound for an hour or more as he put flesh on the bones of his Reform vision. There are fewer examples of Canadian businessmen who used blarney to make a buck, but I do believe there was a little of Steve Jobs in Dave Nicholls, the President’s Choice huckster whose TV commercials and flyers depended on his ability to tell a story about worldly affluence brought within reach of the ordinary shopper.

These days, however, I got nothing for ya. In the absence of a constitutional requirement to explain himself annually, Stephen Harper, who can be an effective speaker, almost never tells a coherent story about his plan for Canada’s future. Michael Ignatieff would like to be a fine speaker, but even his partisans have trouble quoting one of his lines, unless it’s a coalition if necessary but not necessarily coalition.” Saskatchewan’s Brad Wall is a charming keynote speaker, but with that partial exception none of our premiers makes oratory and story-telling a centrepiece of his political action. In business, meanwhile, perhaps the best that can be said is that while our entrepreneurs don’t cut much of a public profile, in most cases one wouldn’t want them to.

Meanwhile, south of the border, there are Steve Jobs and Barack Obama. Measured against what each set out to accomplish, Jobs had a better outing on Wednesday, but as Babe Ruth once said when comparing his own salary to Herbert Hoover’s, Jobs has had a better year. All Obama got was an inauguration and a Nobel Peace Prize; Jobs won a place in the pockets of millions of consumers, and for the first time in its history, Apple has a real shot at dominating consumer electronics, not just carving out a tony niche. His California speech could hardly have contained much less surprise — he had a new steroidal iPod to peddle — but the newspapers and Twitter had much more buzz about him than about the President, who is neither soaring nor tanking these days but merely listing a little. Both men were trying to repackage familiar products. Obama wants health care to pass, Afghanistan to get easier at last rather than harder, partisanship to leave Congress and the fiscal books to balance. Jobs wants to address complex info-tech needs with a simple user interface. It’s basically the same thing he’s been trying to do since 1983 at least.

Jobs had better success making his repackaged wares seem new. I know, I know, Jobs has the easier job. He faces no effective opposition within Apple, his sales force isn’t fighting two wars, and he didn’t inherit quite the financial mess that Obama did, although Michael Spindler and Gil Amelio certainly did their best. Still, it was possible to watch him spout his trademark superlatives about the iPad and believe this really was a new day. Almost immediately critics dismissed the new computer panel as just an oversized iPod Touch, but I believe that’s actually the secret of its success: thousands of developers have already spent two years cooking up apps for the iPhone and iTouch; they’re guaranteed to get right to work dreaming up things the iPad can do. Apple’s weakness forever has been an inadequate flow of innovative software. Jobs has guaranteed the new gadget won’t face the same problem. By porting the iPhone experience onto a larger machine, Jobs has conscripted thousands of entrepreneurial allies to his adventure. At last he’s not a loner.

Obama had a moment of real courage, when he promised to re-open the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy that discriminates against gays in the military. He spoke a lot of sense, as when he reminded Democrats they still command a historic majority in Congress and that maybe it’s early for them to turn tail. His reluctance to indulge in flash and fancy footwork — the surprise is that this most unusual president is almost always so prosaic — can sometimes be refreshing. At least he’s not trying to snow anyone. But the flash polls suggested this speech was markedly less persuasive than the one he gave a year ago.

Evaluations of the two speakers’ performance aside, it was hard not to envy these occasions Americans have to take the measure of their leaders in various fields. In Canada, to a much greater extent and at least for now, we’re left guessing what key players have planned.

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  • Claude

    Keep in mind that any President visits and speaks in the Leg Chamber at most a few times (and usually only once) a year, as opposed to the PM who is in the Commons several dozens of times a year. The SOTU is comparable to an annual Budget Speech, Throne Speech and all other PM speeches rolled into one. Maybe Canadians would pay more attention if Harper only visited and addressed Parliament once a year…

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Inkless Inkless

    We're getting close to that ideal.

  • Bill Simpson

    Paul, I continue to be disappointed by your support for Obama, who has delivered so far from what he promised that anything he says now is meaningless.

    As for Jobs, he is unique. Not even Bill Gates, who has made similar contributions to the advancement of technology, bothers to compete with him in this respect.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Stewart_Smith Stewart_Smith

    The "At Issues" panel is dominated by people from the prairie provinces with 66.6% of the regular panel members (Note how evil that number is, coincidence?).
    What about the more than 80% of Canadians that live elsewhere?

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

    The author can certainly lay no claim to being a keen observer (or even casual) of Obama.

    Obama wants "partisanship to leave Congress"??? His first answer after Inauguration to Republicans who expressed an alternate view to his own was "I won". Since then he has encouraged Congress to hide behind closed doors, locking Republicans out to birth the 2000 page Health Care Reform monstrosity in flagrant contradiction to his empty promises of transparency and having debate broadcast on CSpan. His first and recent bipartisan initiative is an attempt to direct public anger at his policies toward Republicans as well, i.e. share the fallout, not actual decision making.

    "At least he's not trying to snow anyone"??? There's a veritable blizzard of verbiage coming from this inexperienced, unqualified and underachieving reader of a teleprompter who has made more speeches trying to sell his flawed goods than previous presidents made in four. As a Senator, he voted "present" on most issues. As President, his response to any problem is another empty speech. He's way over his pay grade.

  • hosertohoosier

    I would argue that Canada and the US have two distinct oratorical traditions. The US has a tradition of speech-making. Watch C-span, or the presidential debates – there is zero back and forth (the closest they get is press conferences). Rather, people talk past each other. There is a tendency to avoid specifics in favour of platitudes and rhetorical flourishes. Indeed, Obama's gift for vagueness enabled him to win over a number of fiscal conservatives that liked how he sounded on issues like charter schools. I'm guessing they were disappointed.

    Canada, by contrast, has a political tradition of debate. Our head of government has to duke it out in the trenches. It is raucous and uncivil, but it poses some distinct advantages. The positions of our parties are directly contrasted, usually in terms of specifics and facts. Politicians can employ categorical denial strategies ("The opposition is unpatriotic! We don't need to answer this"), but at the very least it looks bad. I think we have the superior tradition, even if it is in need of tweaking.

    Canada has had two oratorically gifted Prime Ministers in recent years – Pierre Trudeau and Brian Mulroney (dull grey men like King or Paul Martin are more the norm). For all their charisma and vision, between the two of them they nearly destroyed this country. They unleashed the forces of Quebec separatism and western alienation, greatly harming national unity. Their grand projects created massive deficits that were costly to eliminate. Given their track record, I will take boring transactional leaders over charismatic transformational ones any day.

    • JimD

      I hate Mulroney's guts, but the guy had an excellent speaking voice.

  • Andy Flogan

    I am old enough to have heard John Deifenbaker give 2 speeches.
    He was a fine speaker. He held everyone's attention, for the entire
    time. Have not heard his equal in a Canadian politician since.

  • Gentle_benn

    The best speaker in the land is undoubtedly Rex Murphy!

  • http://revolutioncanada.ning.com Daniel J.E.O. Babin

    As for Myself,my course is clear,a Canadian subject I was born, A Canadian subject I will die.With my utmost effort,with my last breath I will appeal to men of means to lift the burden of poverty and to raise the least of men from the lowest places..on high..so there may at least appear to be a swelling of the chest with a measure of pride in a life made worthy of living not least by the sacrifices of the sons and daughters of the Dominion of Canada.
    Ideas need men of conviction and courage, unfettered by public opinion . As for the needs of the many ? well they outrank the opinions of the few.
    Never should we forget the sons and daughters that gave their lives in the service of this great country there are those who would bow down and pay our enemies and give them monies earned by the sweat of OUR brows in hopes they will lay down their arms for a time. Mr Lawrence Cannon be warned now that the blood of our soldiers is on your hands and we will not cower if you bring shame to those who died,If you bring to nothing the reason for their deaths and participate by rewarding the killers,because on that day, Canada will remember her honored dead and on that day… she will hunt you down .

    I agree we need better orators…..i can`t remember the last time a good speech got the better of me.

  • Myrna

    What a silly topic! Who cares if we don't have good speakers. Mr. Harper gets the job done, can't say the same for Obama. All talk!

  • Myrna

    What a silly topic! Who cares if we don't have good speakers. Mr. Harper gets the job done, can't say the same for Obama. All talk!

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/SamDavies SamDavies

    Hold your horses! I just watched a video clip of Harper opening up to the Canadian people, and changing his stance on environmental policy. One could honestly say that he is now a Yes man!

  • Jan

    That was before he switched to saving women and children, I take it.

  • JimD

    "He spoke a lot of sense" (Obama)

    He's always spoke a lot of sense, that's the only reason he got elected in the first place. Problem is, he consistently does exactly the opposite of what he's says he's going to do.

    He reminds me of myself when I ran for student council rep in Grade 6. I found a cartoon poster of Canada's Wonderland, and campaigned on the promise that I was going to make our playground look like that. I did it as a joke, never thinking the fools would believe me, but they did, and I won. Sucked having to come clean with the little kids.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/tedbetts tedbetts

    I am reading a biography of Laurier right now, having recently read a biography of MacDonald. Specifically, the speeches he was giving around the time of the Manitoba Schools Crisis about the importance of respecting provincial jurisdiction and minority rights, but also how these two issues were foundational issues upon which the young country was being built.

    Another point about old style oratory is how well and intelligently they could insult the other side. Instead, today, we just have petty name calling like "Taliban supporter" or "hate the troops". I mean, if you are going to try so hard to avoid any substance in your responses, you might as well try just as hard at an interesting and intelligent insult.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/frenchie101 frenchie101

    The speech was long and boring,,albeit in Obama style, it was wordy I hope he has listened to the American people.Not just the GOP. Democrats are fed up with his non stop sending.

  • MJH

    What have you got against saving women and children? Have you no heart?

  • Jan

    I see you have received the talking point – anyone who questions Harper's sincerety should be accused of not caring about the – gasp – women and children.

  • kcm

    Agreed. Trudeau's comment on Joe's vision of the country – " A confederation of shopping malls" – was a cheap shot, bu nonetheless a good example.

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