Horserace
April 29, 2008 9:31 AM

Starting Gate: Might Makes Wright

There remains one dominant issue in the presidential campaign today, one week before the North Carolina and Indiana primaries – Rev. Jeremiah Wright. Barack Obama’s former pastor is making headlines for yet one more day. And they’re not pleasant ones for the Illinois Senator. There are the tabloid headlines like the one in the New York Post proclaiming a “Pastor Disaster.”

Then there is the serious advice, like that coming from the conservative Wall Street Journal editorial page: “Early in his campaign, Senator Obama earned support from many voters with the notion that he wanted to transcend racial politics. Rev. Wright is exacerbating them in a way not seen in recent years. Barack Obama cannot remain on both sides of this. He has to make a decision. He is not running for national Mediator. He is running for President. In time, that job brings tough decisions. He's there now.”

It’s the fodder for the morning papers and talk shows that opinion-makers (and superdelegates) are waking up to this morning: “Mr. Obama seems more and more like someone buffeted by events rather than in charge of them,” writes New York Times columnist Bob Herbert. “Very little has changed in the superdelegate count, but a number of those delegates have expressed concern in private over Mr. Obama’s inability to do better among white working-class voters and Catholics. Rev. Wright is absolutely the wrong medicine for those concerns.”

The Washington Post’s Eugene Robinson weighs in as well on Wright’s recent comments and appearances. “I’m sorry, but I’ve had it with Wright,” he writes. “Politically, by surfacing now, he was throwing Barack Obama under the bus. Sadly, it’s time for Obama to return the favor.”

What real impact all this might have on the Democratic nomination battle remains unknown. The initial round of Wright controversies took place in that gulf of time between the Texas/Ohio primaries and Pennsylvania and Obama performed about the same among demographic groups most likely to be affected by it, in some instances marginally better.

But it’s not pure Democratic primary voters those superdelegates are most concerned about, it’s those “Reagan Democrats” and independents who’ve shown a proclivity to vote Democratic in 2008 they want to keep in their column. It may take a while before the total impact of Wright is felt, so why should Democrats be in a hurry to get this race over with?


Easley Does It: Hillary Clinton heads to North Carolina this morning to collect the endorsement of Gov. Mike Easley, the first major elected official she’s secured the backing of in the state. Easley may not have the kind of pull Ed Rendell provided in Pennsylvania but it’s the first indication that Clinton may be making progress in a state where just keeping it close might be seen as a victory come next Tuesday.


It Is Tourist Season: Another week, another John McCain campaign tour, this one entitled the “call to action” tour. McCain is spending the early part of this week discussing his ideas about health care and in a speech in Florida today will lay out some of them, including a proposal to give families a $5,000 tax credit to help them purchase health insurance. “Insurance companies could no longer take your business for granted, offering narrow plans with escalating costs," McCain will say according to prepared remarks. "It would help change the whole dynamic of the current system, putting individuals and families back in charge, and forcing companies to respond with better service at lower cost."

McCain is also launching a new ad on the proposal today. Here’s part of the script: “The problem with health care in America is not the quality of health care, it's the availability and the affordability. And that has to do with the dramatic increase in the cost of health care. Let's give every American family a $5,000 refundable tax credit so that they can go out across state lines and get the insurance policy that suits them best. I can characterize my approach on health care by choice and competition, affordability and availability. We need community health centers. We need walk-in clinics. We understand that emergency room care is the most expensive in America. There's many, many solutions to this problem. I think we can address them. The fundamental problem is not the quality of health care; it's the cost of health care. So health care must be made affordable and available.”


Around The Track

  • The recent AP/Yahoo poll, which has tracked the same 2000 people since November, indicates negative feelings are growing within the Democratic Party. Among Obama supporters, 44 percent have negative views of Clinton, up from 35 percent a month ago. And, by a two-to-one margin, they say they would vote for McCain over Clinton. Forty two percent of Clinton backers say they have negative views of Obama, up from 26 percent a month ago.

  • Obama continues to hold a wide 51 percent to 39 percent lead in North Carolina, according to the latest Public Policy Polling survey. But the margin has shrunk from past surveys which showed him with a lead between 18 to 25 points.

  • Kentucky Congressman Ben Chandler will become the newest addition to Obama’s superdelegate tally, reports the AP, giving Obama the support of both of the state’s Democratic congressmen. Kentucky’s primary on May 20th.

  • Clinton has accepted an invitation for a Lincoln-Douglass style debate in Missoula, Montana in advance of the state’s June 3rd primary. Obama’s campaign has not accepted.
  • Tags:
    Barack Obama ,
    Jeremiah Wright ,
    Hillary Clinton ,
    John McCain
    Topics:
    Starting Gate
    Add a Comment
    by eroosevelt08 April 30, 2008 1:24 PM EDT
    With respect to Senator Obama''s comments about Reverend Wright on April 29, 2008: What? Has Senator Obama been in a coma for 20 years? Did he sleep through the sermons? Was he even there? His hangdog story today that he just NOW figured out what Reverend Wright is about insults everybody''s intelligence. If he is that dense, why on Earth would anybody want to vote for him?
    Reply to this comment
    by jlpden April 30, 2008 4:45 AM EDT
    I think it was a poltical move by Obama and Wright. Hillary showed some positive move up, Obama went to Chicargo for a couple of days, then Wright came blasting out and gave Obama a chance to get rid of him. Obama wants to be so much like Hillary, when he left Chicargo, he went to a Methodist church on Sunday, Hillary is Methodist and Obama has followered her lead from the begining, so what is new with the deceiver.
    Reply to this comment
    by memekiller April 29, 2008 7:34 PM EDT
    MattCat,
    Unlikely, seeing as McCain has spent the last 8 years trying to make up for the distancing he did from televangelists in 2000.
    Reply to this comment
    by mattcat25 April 29, 2008 7:07 PM EDT
    Ok, Senator Obama has completely denounced his former pastor Reverend Jamamiah Wright. Now, is John McCain (and, other Repubs) willing to denounce controversial, outrageous, and radical voices from the right wing?

    Reverend Hagee
    Pat Robertson
    Rush Limbaugh
    Ann Coulter
    The Entire Fox News Network

    And, so on%u2026.
    Reply to this comment
    by memekiller April 29, 2008 5:09 PM EDT
    And... the pastor McCain sought the support of praised God for drowning New Orleans.

    Now what is the controversy over Wright, again? Wasn''t this whole Swiftboating a rather lame attempt to join Obama at the hip to a black man whom the white people Matthews refers to as "regular people" get the willies about? So, if this guy is out there doing everything he can to undermine Obama''s campaign... what''s the controversy? They obviously aren''t the kindred spirits the MSM has made him out to be for months -- while McCain continues his embrace of his wacko pastor.

    McCain''s wacko is out there dialing it back, subverting what he actually believes to help his friend b/c they are kindred spirits. Wright could care less what happens to Obama. So who''s in bed with an extremist here? The ones who work in tandem, or the ones in the oppo research handed to you guys in glossy PR packets?
    Reply to this comment
    by mattcat25 April 29, 2008 2:40 PM EDT
    President Bush and Vice President Richard Cheney are both deep into BIG OIL. The Republican Party and their new Presidential Nominee John McCain are all backing the profits being made by big oil and imposing the costs to each and every American Citizen. We have all been levied with a big oil profit tax by the Republicans who have driving the price of oil up by invading foreign oil producing countries, and all they can talk about is the Reverend Jaramiah Wright?

    What%u2019s wrong with this picture???
    Reply to this comment
    by dd_sf April 29, 2008 2:13 PM EDT
    So, I publicize my deep spiritual relationship with Reverend Wright when people suspect me of being Muslim....but then fervently distance myself from him when Rev Wright turns out to be a rabid fundamentalist.

    So, I pray with the Reverend in my basement with my family but publicly denounce his views and ideaology.
    So, I run a campaign of Hope and Change and then get peevish if people ask me exactly how I hope to bring about change.
    So, I claim that I will rise above partisan politcis, but can''t defend the fact that I have the most liberal and partisan record in the Senate and I couldn''t possibly never convince anyone across the aisle...(you can''t claim to be ABOVE Washington Politics AND claim that you''re the ONLY one who can bring these Washington Politicians together - what a joke).
    So, I get my name off the ballot in Michigan to garner approval with voters in Iowa and New Hampshire but then cry foul if Michigan voters want to be part of a very close Primary.
    So, I talk loftily to SF liberals about blue collar America and their addictions...but then get annoyed when I''m asked why I''m not getting through to blue collar Americans.
    So, I talk about giving it all I''ve got til the very end and then claim fatigue and boredom with the long drawn Democratic Primary (Why doesn''t she just give it to me already??)
    There''s a stench of "**** just who the heck is this Frontrunner of ours??" in the Democratic party. And now we''re stuck with the stench!



    Reply to this comment
    by shalopash April 29, 2008 1:53 PM EDT
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/04/29/clinton-booster-organized_n_99129.html

    Check it out!!!!!
    Reply to this comment
    by jnyren-2009 April 29, 2008 1:52 PM EDT
    Who can stand up to Hillbilly once the Fems and Lobby go to work on a''Black'' candidate. Ah, democracy. You were our treasure before racism felled the really worthy candidate.
    Reply to this comment

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