Thursday, November 26, 2009

Opinion

Michael Barone

Obama Is Throwing Wright Under the Bus

April 30, 2008 02:09 PM ET | Michael Barone | Permanent Link | Print

On Monday, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright spoke at the National Press Club in Washington, with nationwide reverberations. On Tuesday, Barack Obama denounced Wright and his statements. Judging from the talk I've been hearing from Democratic insiders since Wright's Monday speech, Obama did what he had to do. But the problem remains. Obama has now taken two positions on Wright. March 13: No, I cannot disown him. April 29: Yes, I can. Left still unanswered is the question: How can the man we heard deliver that speech in July 2004 about what unites us—in which his strongest line was "in the blue states we worship an awesome God"—how could that Barack Obama have attended the church of that Rev. Jeremiah Wright for 20 years? And not just attended: He and his wife contributed more than $20,000 to the church. It just doesn't add up. It undercuts Obama's very appealing theme of bridging divisions in our society.

I think this is going to be a continuing problem for Obama. As I suggested several weeks ago, it threatens especially to dampen the support Obama has won from young voters—the millennial generation. He has brought them out in great and unexpected numbers to vote for him in primaries and caucuses. It's not clear he will be able to do that in the general election—and the argument that he can has been one that has had weight with many Democratic superdelegates.

My Creators Syndicate column this week looks at other problems Obama has as a general-election candidate. Polling shows him making a stronger race against John McCain in some important states, notably Colorado (nine electoral votes). But it has also shown him weaker than Clinton in some others, especially Florida (27 electoral votes). As I note in the column:

In 2000, Al Gore won 67 percent of the vote in Broward County and 62 percent in Palm Beach County—both have large Jewish populations. In this year's Florida primary, Obama lost those counties to Clinton by 57 percent to 33 percent and 61 percent to 27 percent. No Democrat can carry Florida without big margins in Broward and Palm Beach.

Let me set out those numbers a little more fully. In 2000, the Gore-Lieberman ticket carried Broward County by 209,821 votes and Palm Beach County by 116,790. Its next-highest popular-vote margin in a county was 39,293 in Miami-Dade, followed by 22,371 in Leon (Tallahassee). The final count showed Gore trailing by 537 votes. In 2004, John Kerry's margin in Broward was 209,199 and in Palm Beach 115,999. He lost the state. His next-biggest popular-vote margins in counties were 48,637 in Miami-Dade and 32,258 in Leon. Kerry lost the state by 380,978 votes.

Obvious lesson: No Democrat can carry Florida without large popular-vote margins in Broward and Palm Beach counties. Or even come close. There's just no other county in Florida where a Democrat can win by anything like such a large margin. And without overwhelming support from Jewish voters, no Democrat can win big popular-vote margins in Broward and Palm Beach. Obama's weakness among Democratic primary voters is apparent from the results in Massachusetts (check out Newton), New York (look at Manhattan or Westchester County), California (look at the totals in the West Side and San Fernando Valley districts in Los Angeles County), and Pennsylvania (look at Montgomery County). My Democratic sources with close knowledge of Jewish voters in these areas believe that Obama has real problems there.

Footnote. A regular reader sends along the link to a June 2007 Chicago Sun-Times article about Obama's electrifying speech to the national meeting of the United Church of Christ in Hartford. The last two paragraphs are interesting:

Obama made several references to the 9,000-member South Side Chicago church to which he belongs. Trinity UCC is a church that still believes in altar calls. Obama, the son of Muslim and Christian parents, answered that call as a young man, mentored by Trinity's pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

Wright was in Chicago Saturday but offered a videotaped introduction of the senator. During his talk, Obama received three standing ovations and, at the end, was cheered for nearly three minutes.

Tags: presidential election 2008 | Barack Obama | Jeremiah Wright

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Reader Comments

WHITE VOTE BEFORE & AFTER REV WRIGHT

I personally believe that the first emergence of the video tapes of Reverend Jeremiah Wright (near the end of February) was the pivotal turning point in the Democratic Primary. , , , And so for Michael Barone, who certainly would know, I ask Question # 1: What percentage of the white vote did Obama (& Clinton) get in January & February; and what percentage of the white vote have they gotten in March & April? . . . Question # 2: Same question re percentages of the Black vote. . . . I suspect the statistical answers will clearly show a turning point.

two weak candidates

Obama and Clinton are both very weak candidates in what should be a banner year for the Democrats. But the Democrats are once again nominating a candidate who can only win against a weak Republican. Obama's supporters will tell you all about Clinton's weaknesses and Clinton's supporters will do the same for Obama. Both groups are right about the candidate they oppose.

There is only one Democrat with the credibility and stature to win: Al Gore. The super- delegates should lead the Party to an understanding of this reality, deadlock the convention on the first ballot and unite the party around Gore before it is too late.

Consider the people the Democrats have nominated over the last few decades:

McGovern: weak and far-left

Carter: weak but able to defeat a weak, unelected Republican incumbent

Mondale: credible but running against a very strong Republican opponent

Dukakis: weak

Clinton: marginal but able to win against two conservatives in a three man race and against a weak Bob Dole

Gore: tarred by association with the corrupt Clintons but able to win the popular vote

Kerry: weak and tainted with an unpatriotic past

Democrat activists have just not learned that to win the presidency they have to capture the independent vote - people with centrist ideology or who are focused more on a candidate's character than his policy views.

IT IS THE HATE, STUPID.

Obama is quoted elswhere when he denounced Reverand Wright's comments as,"GIVING COMFORT TO THOSE WHO PREY ON HATE."

Consider, Obama, by his own admission, has for twenty years been taking comfort from Rev. Wright's mentoring. Does this make Obama one of those who preys on hate? I think it does.

Rev. Wright panders to that element of the Black Community who feed on hate.

Obama said that he could not disavow Rev. Wright or that Black Community.

The medea has forced his hand.

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Michael Barone is a senior writer for U.S.News & World Report and principal coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics. He has written for many publications—including the Economist and the New York Times.

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