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Obama's slogan: looking to replace Hope and Change

 

Jeff Mason
Reuters
February 18, 2012 ET

WASH­INGTON (Reuters) - Winning The Fu­ture. Greater Togeth­er. We Don't Quit.

They may not be of­ficial but those are all phrases that could in one form or an­oth­er be can­didates to become Pres­ident Barack Obama's re-election slogan.

Advis­ers say a fresh slogan to replace the winning "Change we can be­lieve in" mantra of 2008, is unlikely to appear before Obama knows who his Re­publican oppo­nent will be and starts big campaign trav­el swings, likely in the spring or summer.

His campaign posters now say simply, "Obama 2012."

But Obama's surrogates have roadtested some slogans in re­cent months, including "Winning The Fu­ture," which the White House used to promote its bud­get, and "Greater Togeth­er," which the campaign has used to brand its youth out­reach effort.

A new tag­line will have to reflect a new re­ality.

Obama is no longer a Wash­ington out­sider, un­employ­ment is falling but still high, and eco­nom­ic in­secu­rity for many vot­ers is a huge concern that a simple slogan cannot overcome.

Obama is aware of that diffi­culty. He still refers to his old slogan at campaign fundrais­ers, emphasizing the "change" he has achieved, while dropping lines that could be test runs for a pitch to convince vot­ers to give him an­oth­er term.

"When you think about change that we can be­lieve in, as hard as these last three years have been, don't under­es­ti­mate the changes we've made," Obama said at a fundrais­er in California this week.

"In­spiration is wonderful, nice speeches are wonderful, pretty posters, that's great. But what's required at the end of the day to cre­ate the kind of country we want is stick-to-it-ness. It's determination. It's saying, 'We don't quit.'"

In his State of the Union address last month, the pres­ident also played up the issue of eco­nom­ic fairness, which branding experts said could encapsulate his 2012 pitch.

"Own­ing 'fairness' is a powerful idea, but getting that idea communicated in a clear, sticky way is very hard," said Allen Adam­son, man­aging di­rector of mar­keting firm Landor As­sociates.

"Telling that story is more diffi­cult than telling a 'change' story because you have to de­fine fairness for who, and what's unfair, and why is fairness important. Change was a brutally simple idea."

Af­ter three years of governing - fulfill­ing some promises and breaking oth­ers - the word "change" is a tricky brand for the pres­ident to espouse.

But Obama's advis­ers say his philoso­phies are still the same, even if the words as­sociated with them from 2008 are not part of this year's campaign tag­line.

"This election is also about hope and about change. That doesn't nec­essarily mean they're go­ing to be in the slogan," said David Axelrod, Obama's message guru and se­nior campaign strate­gist.

"But the pres­ident has a very hopeful, opti­mis­tic view about this country, even with all the chal­lenges we have, and is working to­ward that."

LOOKING FOR SUCCESS

The importance of a crisp message is not lost on Obama's team. Po­lit­ical branding has been crit­ical to defining and winning U.S. pres­idential elections since as far back as 1840 when the William Henry Harri­son-John Tyler ticket rode to victory with the slogan "Tippecanoe and Tyler too."

Not all slogans clicked with vot­ers.

For­mer Vice Pres­ident Al Gore, the Demo­crat­ic can­didate who lost to George W. Bush in 2000, did not make waves with "People Not The Powerful" or "I Will Fight For You."

Sen­ator John McCain, Obama's Re­publican chal­lenger in 2008, cap­tured his person­al story with "Country First" but did not touch the public in the way his better-branded oppo­nent did.

Advertis­ing exec­utives cited Re­publican Pres­ident Ronald Reagan's "Morning again in America" message in 1984 as a brand that res­onated - and for an incumbent pres­ident, no less.

"(That) communicated this notion that Reagan had de­clared success and now it was time to cel­ebrate a new day in America and give Reagan four more years to complete the task," said De­nis Riney, a se­nior partner with Bran­d­logic, a firm that advises large corporations.

"Obama could ben­efit from some­thing in a similar vein."

Re­publican can­didates are trying to go with simple branding ideas too, and most of them have adopted themes that suggest the United States under Obama is on the wrong track.

For­mer Massachusetts Gover­nor Mitt Romney uses "Be­lieve in America," for­mer House of Rep­resentatives Speaker Newt Gingrich has "Rebuilding the American Dream" plas­tered on his bus, and U.S. Rep­resentative Ron Paul proposes to "Re­store America Now."

Branding experts said it was smart for Obama to keep his slogan under wraps until his oppo­nent was clear. Tar­geting a catchphrase to con­trast with Romney could be differ­ent from aiming one at for­mer Pennsylvania Sen­ator Rick Santo­rum, for example. Santo­rum is leading among Re­publicans in some national polls.

Axelrod, who would not tip his hand on what Obama's slogan would be, said the message from all the Re­publicans was differ­ent from that of the Demo­crat­ic White House occupant.

"I lis­ten to these Re­publicans speak and they have such a dark, grinding kind of view of this country," he said.

"We have a lot of strengths in this country. We've got a lot of chal­lenges, but we've also got a lot of strengths, and we're go­ing to work our way through this mo­ment. But that will require change, and those changes are changes that we have to con­tinue."

It may not be catchy, but "changes that we have to con­tinue" may at least be a start.

Source: Reuters
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Obama's slogan: looking to replace Hope and Change
Jeff Mason
credit: REUTERS/Jason Reed
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U.S. President Barack Obama is pictured during a Democratic Party fundraiser in Bellevue, February 17, 2012.
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