Thursday, July 24, 2008

Opinion

Obama: End of the Phenom Phase

February 06, 2008 10:55 AM ET | Bonnie Erbe | Permanent Link

A couple of observations coming out of Super Tuesday: The "Phenom" phase of Barack Obama's campaign may be ending. The shine may be off the star. Yes, it's still a tight race between the junior senator from Illinois and the junior senator from New York. But up to this point Obama has had the distinct advantage (and disadvantage) of being less well-known; that era is starting to end.

Most damaging to Obama so far is a New York Times article published several days ago showing he claimed to have "passed" a bill regulating nuclear power plants that never did pass the Senate. Worse yet, he participated in negotiations that watered down the bill to the point of meaninglessness. Lastly, he took campaign contributions worth hundreds of thousands of dollars from executives and employees of Exelon (the company the bill was in part meant to regulate).

We can all expect to see more of the same as reporters dig deeper into Obama's record.

Here's another media hit against him that is bound to be used against Obama if he claims the Democratic nomination:

The National Journal last week named him the "most liberal" member of the Senate. That's a great title to claim in the middle of the primaries, when the most liberal Democratic voters are heading to the polls. But it's nothing but an albatross heading into a general election, when Republicans will be looking under every tablecloth to find a way to tag the Democratic nominee as "too liberal" for the country.

Tags: presidential election 2008 | Barack Obama

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About Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie ErbeBonnie Erbe has covered Washington politics since God was a baby. Because of that, and the fact that she's a native New Yorker, nothing much surprises her anymore. She has covered Congress, the Supreme Court, the Justice Department, and occasionally the White House for radio and television networks. She also hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe, and writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service. To the Contrary will allow you to lift the curtain of partisanship for a refreshingly non-partisan perspective on politics, the environment, religion, and issues that affect the lives of women, families, and communities of color.

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