With less than four weeks to go before the potentially pivotal Pennsylvania Primary, Barack Obama has announced that he will grace the state with his presence. On a bus tour.
Perhaps he simply intends to wave as the bus drives by. As the state has so far served as little more than a prop for Obama photo ops, a lot of us have been wondering if he's simply given up on Pennsylvania.
"Giving Up" seems to be a theme in the Obama strategy - or, at least, trying to convince the other guy to give up. The cry for Hillary Clinton to drop out of the race is rising up again from the Obama camp. Why? Because she has a double-digit lead over him in the Pennsylvania polls? Because Clinton stands to win this state? Because Obama doesn't have what it takes for the long slog to the White House? Somehow I don't think asking your opponent to drop out of the race will be a very effective strategy in the General Election.
Maybe Obama will be able to pull a last-minute come-from-behind victory, of the sort Rudolph Giuliani hoped to achieve in Florida. But I think if he loses in Pennsylvania, there will be a lot of post-hoc explanations given, most of them portraying Pennsylvanians as a bunch of blue-collar red-neck racist simpletons who embrace the past and reject the future. But the simple fact is this: Clinton and her team have campaigned relentlessly in Pennsylvania. Obama has barely bothered to show up.
If Obama wins the nomination, I will vote for him for President, and I will support him in the race. Because I believe either Democrat is infinitely preferable to a Republican candidate who will do little more than continue the failed policies of the current occupant of the Office of the President.
***
The illusion of Obama as a paragon of virtue far above the taint of negative campaigning is easily dispelled simply by getting on one of his mailing lists. I did, though I'm not quite sure how I did it. The e-mails started arriving on March 16, two days after I wrote this post and - more suspiciously - five days after I signed up for a Hillary Clinton mailing list at the grand opening of her headquarters in Scranton. Strangely, I haven't received any mailings from Hillary's camp yet. Gee whillikers, it's almost as if the list that I signed up for was actually used by Obama's people instead of Clinton's! But that would be wrong, wouldn't it?
On March 16 I received two e-mails from an Obama operative named Matthew Lehrich. The first e-mail informed me of a conference call I could "Dial-In" on (which I believe means "listen in on") at 1:00 - forty minutes after the e-mail arrived. I received a second e-mail later that day, then five more the next day, a single one on March 18 - and then the floodgates opened up. Six on 3/19, 5 on 3/20, 6 on 3/21, none on 3/23 or 3/24 (I guess they took the Easter weekend off), 9 on 3/24, 6 on 3/25, 9 on 3/26, 8 on 3/27, and 8 on 3/28. I've only received a single e-mail today. I've also been receiving e-mails from Sean Smith, another Obama person - two on 3/25 and one on 3/27.
I will admit that I haven't read all of these e-mails. Hell, I'm behind on responding to messages from my friends, so I can't really hope to keep up with floods of unsolicited e-mails from mailing lists I never signed up for. But just reviewing the subject lines indicates that twenty-two of these messages were primarily intended as anti-Clinton missives, not pro-Obama or anti-McCain.
Obama is also quite skilled at "playing the race card", as they say, but in a manner akin to that of Gambit, or Ricky Jay. (And if you actually needed to use either of those links to see who I was referring to, your education is sorely wanting - and I am happy to have broadened your horizons a bit.) He can play a race card by telling you he won't be playing a race card by telling you about how the other team's people have been playing race cards. That's pretty good, and darned convoluted.
Mark Cour of Wilkes-Barre Online had a chance to directly compare the Clinton and Obama camps during a recent quest for campaign buttons. The bottom line: he got some buttons from the Clinton people, but they tried to snag him into volunteering. The Obama people, however, would not give him buttons unless he made a cash "donation" - as a matter of policy. (He left without buttons.) But he tells the story much better than that. You can read about his adventure here.
Obama isn't head and shoulders above Clinton. As a friend once told me her sainted mother used to say, "One is as much in the muck as the other is in the mire." But, as was the case with that Saint of the Right, Ronald Reagan, it isn't sticking to one of them.
So far I've been leaning toward Clinton as the Democratic nominee. I didn't expect that when this game started out. Obama seemed like all charisma and somewhat refined (not exactly raw) talent, while Clinton seemed to have (as I once stated) the charisma of a jar of pickles. That opinion started to change when I actually saw (well, heard, through a P.A. system) Hillary speak in Scranton. It changed even more when I saw her bother to come and say hi to a few hundred people who didn't make it in to her speech, after having just spoken to a crowd of 3500 cheering supporters. When Chelsea came to town the very next day - bonus. And then Hillary again at the St. Patrick's Day Parade in Scranton, and then Bill in Wilkes-Barre. If you're willing to put that much effort into an area that all the pundits and pollsters say you've already got in your pocket, I'm impressed.
Obama, on the other hand, hasn't bothered much with campaigning in Pennsylvania. He's put more effort into other states with Primaries several weeks after Pennsylvania's.
Yet there is still an irrational hatred of all things Clinton in some quarters, matched by an equally irrational love for all things Obama. Not to say that there aren't things to dislike and/or love about both of the candidates, and plenty of people who dislike and love them with just cause. But I'm talking about the irrational manias that grip some people on both of these counts. And the inverse is less true - those who have an irrational love for Hillary Clinton and those who have an irrational hatred for Barack Obama are far fewer in number, or at least far less vocal.
So, having said all that, maybe Obama would be the better choice for the Democratic nominee.
This Primary is turning out to be a test of character, and strategy, and skill, and endurance. All of those things will be required of one of these candidates as President. How they acquit themselves now will give us clues as to how they will perform once elected.
If they get elected. If the supporters of whichever candidate does not win the party nomination do not decide to simply storm off and sulk on election day - or worse, choose to play spoiler by voting for McCain.
So: don't do that. And Obama supporters: please quit your whining about how Hillary should just drop out of the race. It ain't over until it's over. And we Pennsylvanians haven't had our say yet.
Not only haven't we Pennsylvanians had our say yet, the election is still more than three weeks away.
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised you're supporting Hillary, but that's a good thing.
Unlike some of my friends on the right, I want Hillary to win because I think she'd be a better president than Obama. I think it should be as simple as that. Maybe McCain has a better chance of beating Obama, but I'd hate to be wrong about that. 'Cuz then we get President Obama.
Bill @ BN
I have spent the last hours reading your post and the links. I have to stop and try and get my tax inforamtion together. A project meant for today.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your words, wit and intelligence. I enjoy reading your posts, especially now.
I am a Obama Fan. I am in his "cult". I thought about John Edwards for a few minutes last fall, but have been with Obama the last six months.
I am also a woman who lives in florida.
I hope Obama visits soon and I hope you get to hear him. Maybe even a photo, if not with Barack then Michelle.
Until.........next time.
Bill, I take it your statement indicates a change of heart from the opinion you expressed on January 14 of this year?
ReplyDeleteDizzy Blond, welcome! I noticed a visitor from Florida plowing through lots of my posts recently -was that you? Thank you for visiting, and I hope you keep coming back! The Obama headquarters in Wilkes-Barre have a life-sized cutout of Barack, so I was thinking of getting a photo with that. Though, really, to maintain balance, I'd need to get a photo with life-sized cutout of his kids!
I'm hoping that when he comes to this area, it will be at a time I can see him. I'm restricted by my work hours, which is why I was able to see Hillary and Chelsea in Scranton (both afternoon events) but not Bill in Wilkes-Barre last week or Hillary in WB next week (both midday events.) But there haven't been any real details of his visit released yet.
I'm not sure what I said on Jan. 14. I have admitted it's a little difficult to decide exactly what I want to happen, except for McCain to win the presidency.
ReplyDeleteI was against Hillary until I got a look at Obama. Then, studying both a bit more, I think Hillary would be a better president than Obama.
But even then, I'm really not positive about that. For example, Obama has one really really useful skill -- he's an outstanding communicator. If he delegated a lot to moderate Democrats and worked with Republicans for a centrist agenda, and spent the rest of the time giving pep talks, he could actually be an extremely effective president.
Or Obama could use his skills to promote welfare statism, identity politics and abortion.
It's hard to predict the future, and in this election, it's really tough for me to decide what I want to happen ...
"Yet there is still an irrational hatred of all things Clinton in some quarters"
ReplyDeleteI have a 40+ year old co-worker that has never voted in her life. She said if Hillary wins the primary she will register just so she can vote against her. She can't give any reasonable explanation as to why she hates the woman. It doesn't have much to do with politics as this woman cannot stand anything political. I suspect her husband, a hard-core Republican, has had something to do with the formation of her opinion.
Pay attention, people! Your future is in the hands of people like this!
Bill, it was this:
ReplyDelete"I just want the Dems to choose the more defeatable candidate. "
http://industrialblog.powerblogs.com/posts/1200071554.shtml#4694
A lot of similarly-minded folks have allegedly joined in on Limbaugh's "Operation Chaos" to try to twist the results of the Democratic primaries by switching their regictrations to Democrat and then voting for...well, I get a little fuzzy there. They're either voting for Clinton to prolong the Democratic Primary fight and shorten the time available for campaigning for the General Election, OR they're voting for Hillary because they think she's more defeatable, OR they're voting for Obama because they think HE's more defeatable, OR they're voting for the stronger candidate as a way of denying McCain the Presidency, since they hate him more than any Democrat. Talk about chaos!
But I'm hoping for a Texas-style midseason redistricting based on the Primary registration figures. Since there will be SO many Republicans-turned-Democrats, they certainly won't mind having what had once been Republican strongholds carved up and divided among neighboring Democratic power bases, where any remaining Republicans won't be able to cause any mischief.
Yes, I have reversed my position on the "more defeatable" candidate. In retrospect, my position was irresponsible.
ReplyDeleteBill @ BN
Apparently my strident anti-Clinton opine didn't make it into the comments. Ugh. Wasted writing effort.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure how you assess who is more beatable: Obama or Clinton.
This HuffPo post sort of covers my position. Of course, Hillary can go on as long as she wants and I'm sure her supporters want her to go on too. I don't think we need the same family in the White House again. I'm not too happy with some of the Clinton attacks.