By Michael Barone
President Barack Obamas 17-minute video The Road Weve Traveled gives us an idea of how he wants to frame the issues in the fall election.
The first thing you notice about the video is that the atmosphere is dark wintry minor key. You see but dont hear the election night crowd in Grant Park and then the video switches to graphics about the economic meltdown that followed the financial crisis of 2008.
There are gloomy scenes throughout. Obamas economic advisers arrive in a bleak Chicago after a snowstorm. The president is shown in the Oval Office through a window at night.
The visuals are oddly antique for a president who promised hope and change. When narrator Tom Hanks talks of the middle class we see downscale neighborhoods with houses built in the 1910s or 1920s. When he talks about economic recovery we see an early 1950s Ford coming off the assembly line.
Hanks strikes another historical note. Not since the days of Franklin Roosevelt has so much fallen on the shoulders of one president. Well Harry Truman and Ronald Reagan might disagree but one gets the idea. If America is not standing tall its because Obama started off nearly 6 feet under.
We hear a lot about the burdens of office and the loneliness of presidential decision-making. The same point was made in 30- and 60-second ads run by Jimmy Carters re-election campaign in 1980.
Those spots featured only Carter and the narrator speaking. The 17-minute video has time for testimony from Joe Biden Bill Clinton and briefly Michelle Obama.
The resemblance to the Carter ads is ominous seeing as Carter lost 51- 41 percent in November. Americans want to think well of their presidents but sometimes they decide theyve had enough.
Republicans and political reporters will find much to quibble with in The Road Weve Traveled. There are misstatements of facts and issues are framed in ways that are arguably misleading. The Washington Posts fact checker has given the video three of a possible four Pinocchios for the Obamas description of his mothers insurance situation in her final illness.
On issues we dont hear the words stimulus package; there is just a brief reference to the otherwise unidentified Recovery Act. Much more is made of the GM and Chrysler bailouts which Biden says -- some Pinocchios due here -- exacted sacrifices from the United Auto Workers.
There is also much more -- more than there was in Januarys State of the Union -- on health care. We hear a list of promised benefits -- keeping adult children on parents insurance banning refusals to insure for pre-existing conditions -- which so far have failed to make most Americans love the law.
We hear little about foreign policy except for the withdrawal from Iraq with some attractive footage of soldiers returning home and praise from Clinton and Biden for ordering the SEALs to kill Osama bin Laden.
There are the predictable shoutouts (liberals call them dog whistles) to Democratic constituency groups -- feminists gay rights supporters seculars fans of green energy.
Altogether this seems more like an attempt to shore up the Democratic base than it does an attempt to win over independents who polls indicate are skeptical about many claims made in the video. Its main message is what I heard from Democratic voters I encountered on the primary trail: Things were really bad when he got in and he needs another term to straighten them out.
For a contrast look at the 1984 Reagan campaigns Morning in America ad. The narrator ad man Hal Riney has a soothing voice like Hanks but his message is vastly more upbeat. America is prouder and stronger and better he proclaims because of the policies of President Reagan.
You see more flags than you do in the Obama video more smiles couples at the altar. It looks like springtime and is filled with light.
Why would we ever want to return to where we were less than four short years ago? Riney asks. Which surely reminded viewers of the question Ronald Reagan posed in his only debate with Jimmy Carter: Are you better off than you were four years ago?
Reagan stole the line from the master Franklin Roosevelt who in a fireside chat before the 1934 off-year elections asked Are you better off than you were last year? But that was 46 years earlier and no one remembered.
Its a question that the Obama campaign dares not ask.
Michael Barone senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner (www.washingtonexaminer.com) is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.