BY PEGGY NOONAN

 
 The choice of Joe Lieberman of Connecticut as Al Gore's running mate
 is so smart, so clever, so good, so satisfying, so striking that it
 just may turn this election a bit on its head for a while.

 Certainly its most immediate effect is going to be a successful Democratic convention
 next week in Los Angeles, because now the Democrats, badly hit by their own form
 of Clinton fatigue and acutely aware of the particular charmlessness of their presidential
 candidate,  have something to cheer about. They respect Joe Lieberman.

 They think he has a center, a moral and ethical view of the world.
 He is experienced and articulate. He is decent and intelligent. He is independent.
 The media love him. He is a regular co-star on Imus, and all of the columnists and
 reporters for the elite newspapers, and all of the electronic pundits and anchors,
 know him and admire him.

 But that is not what is most wonderful.
 What is most wonderful is that he is an Orthodox Jew.
 What does this mean? It means a lot of people who love America more than they
 love parties or politics are happy that a big and great breakthrough has occurred.
 A friend, a journalist who is politically conservative and Jewish, e-mailed me to tell me
 he had been weeping all morning, that he'd cried when he heard the news.

 Another friend, a producer at a TV news show, called and told me she woke her father
 in California to give him the news and they both got choked up. "This is like 1960,"
 she said, and I said I know, and I got choked up. It is wonderful when America is 
 at her most American, and breaks down another barrier and says
 "What's in your heart is most important."

 If Joe Lieberman had been Joe Lee, and an Episcopalian, Al Gore would have been
 smart to pick him. He would have been an obvious choice. The only reason he would
 have hesitated over Mr. Lieberman is that he's Jewish. Mr. Gore decided that was just
 fine. I think that I have never seen Al Gore do such an elegant,
 intelligent and original thing. Well done, Mr. Gore.

 I have to tell you, this really does feel like a 1960 moment to me.
 I was a little girl when a Catholic got chosen to run for president,
 and I had gathered from the conversation of grownups that You
 Don't Elect Catholics to the Presidency. When it happened, it's hard to
 describe how exciting and moving and idealism-inspiring it was.
 It gave a lot of people a lot of joy. It opened things up more.
 That was a good thing. So is this.

 And because this is such a good thing, I hope everyone of whatever politics or
 persuasion sits back for a few days and feels good about it. Everyone should be
 nice and not do any political bashing until . . . Friday.

 However, I think it's okay and maybe even helpful to note the following.

 Network producers are going to decide, in their bright and touchingly uninformed minds,
 that the big opponents of the Lieberman choice will be Christian conservatives. That's where
 they'll go for the negative sound bites. But Christian conservatives love Joe Lieberman.
 They've been arm in arm with him in the great cultural battles of the past decade. He was
 just about the only Democrat who'd give them the time of day. He was on their side.

 The last time I saw Mr. Lieberman was last spring, in New York, at a symposium on
 Hollywood and the culture. I moderated and introduced our guests--Joe Lieberman and
 Bill Bennett, who are close friends and co-warriors in the values battle. Lieberman and Bennett
 very frankly talked to the audience of producers and writers and network people and movie stars
 about how to make television and film and music more decent, more helpful.
 This is how people on the right think of and have experienced Mr.
 Lieberman--as a good guy with his head screwed on right.

 Many conservative Christians--I think most conservative Christians--see all of those who love
 God as part of the same "cultural minority." Conservative Christians don't feel they have much in
 common, in terms of their political desires, with atheists and agnostics and leftist Episcopalian bishops
 and such. But they think they have a great deal in common with Orthodox Jews. They crowd
 around Rabbi Daniel Lapin when he speaks at a conservative gathering; they crowd around
 Dennis Prager, Michael Medved, David Horowitz  and scores of others. One of the biggest heroes
 of conservative Christians is an Orthodox Jew called Dr. Laura; the last time I saw her
 she was wowing them at a born-again Christian assembly at the National Prayer Breakfast last February.

 A powerful and respected political officeholder told me Monday that there's "no upside" to
 the Lieberman choice. I told him there's no downside. He was surprised and said, "He can't even
 campaign on Saturdays!" I said so what, America would love to see a
 politician  who actually put God first one day a week.

 I wish I'd added this: Remember Sandy Koufax?
 Joe Lieberman not campaigning on Saturday is Sandy Koufax not pitching on Yom Kippur.
 There were a lot of great sports moments in the 1950s and 1960s, but none greater than the day
 in 1965 when Mr. Koufax put God before the World Series. What a great guy, what
 a lesson for a generation of Christian and Jewish kids. And Muslims and everyone else too.

 Yes, it's good news for Hillary. It's great news for Hillary.  It enlivens part of her New York base,
 it says to New York Jews that the Democrats are the party that did this great thing, it excites people
 --and may help them forget, or at least not remember so vividly, that the Democratic senatorial
 candidate has, shall we say, a not fully satisfying relationship with New York's Jews.
 A historic choice like the Mr. Lieberman can overwhelm a lot of previous bad static.

 But let's not care about that for now. The headline is not "Is It Good for Hillary?"
 The headline is: "It Is Good for America."
 It is a wonderful country that does something like this, that takes a good man who is a member
 of a small ethnic/religious minority to be one of its two major vice presidential candidates,
 and that greets that choice with resounding hurrahs.

 This is really a great day.
 We should all be happy.
 We really are a maturing democracy.
 
 
 
 

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