LAFAYETTE, Ind., May 6, 2008
Who's More Red, White And Blue-Collar?
Washington Post: With A Boilermaker Here And A Bowling Ball There, Obama And Clinton Try To Win Over Middle America
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Play CBS Video Video Clinton And The Working Class Hillary Clinton is tailoring her stump speeches in Indiana and North Carolina to her base, working class voters. Jim Axelrod reports.
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Video Obama Courts Whites In Indiana Hungry for a win in Indiana, Barack Obama persevered with a weeklong courtship of white working class voters who have consistently resisted his charms. Dean Reynolds reports.
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Presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., greets a worker during a shift change at the Automotive Components Holdings, LLC. in Indianapolis, Monday, May 5, 2008. (AP)
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Timeline Democratic Campaign Trail Notable events in the race for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination.
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Interactive Eye On The Economy In-depth features on U.S. markets, taxes, employment and the Federal Reserve.
If he weren't so busy waiting tables at O'Charley's or scanning Wal-Mart for discount meat to feed his four kids, Scott Winschief thinks he might make a pretty good candidate for president of the United States. For the past six months, he has watched on television in his double-wide mobile home as Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama have traveled around the country and imitated his lifestyle. Badly.
They posed for photos in the same kind of factory where Winschief, 44, pinched a nerve in his back hauling 1,800-pound coils of wire in 140-degree heat. They visited bars and drained pints of the domestic beer that fills Winschief's fridge. They toured barns occupied by animals like the ones he fed at 4 a.m. every day so he could pay for a few years of college. They reminisced about shooting guns like the ones displayed inside almost every house in his rural neighborhood.
The presidential race has turned into a riveting competition for ordinariness, as both campaigns have concluded that whoever does a better job of winning over voters like Winschief -- an average blue-collar man in an average American town of 60,000 -- is more likely to triumph in Tuesday's primaries in Indiana and North Carolina.
Identifying with the common man has been a requisite in presidential elections for almost two centuries. But the stakes are especially high in a race largely defined by an economic crisis, and campaign experts say the candidates have gone especially far in their appeals.
In the past six weeks, Clinton hammered down a shot of Crown Royal whiskey -- not necessarily the first choice of the workingman -- and chased it with a beer. Obama visited a Pennsylvania sports bar and sampled a Yuengling after making sure it wasn't "some designer beer." Clinton told stories about learning to shoot behind the cottage her grandfather built. Obama went bowling.
Whether these voyeurs of blue-collar existence yield results depends on how people like Winschief perceive them. Are these genuine attempts at connection or overly calculated tactics to win voters? Are they telling moments that reveal a candidate's humanity or patronizing charades that reveal a candidate's guile?
Last Tuesday night, Winschief cradled his custom-made bowling ball at Arrowhead Bowl in downtown Lafayette. It was league night, a staple of his schedule for the past decade, and he shuffled a deck of Hooters playing cards on the table in front of him and gulped Miller Lite from a plastic cup. One of Winschief's teammates mentioned Obama's recent misadventures at a bowling alley, where he rolled a succession of gutter balls (with the help of a couple of young children who rolled a couple of frames) en route to a score of 37. The friend wondered whether there was an adult in Lafayette who couldn't beat Obama's abysmal total.
Winschief, an undecided Democrat, pondered this for a second as he glanced up at his own score -- 164 with three of 10 frames left to bowl.
"I love him for trying, but that's awful," he said. "A 37? It kind of makes you wonder why he's even bowling in the first place."
Presidential candidates have strived relentlessly downward in social class ever since the 1840s, when William Henry Harrison created what historians now call the "common-man myth." While most of his peers campaigned from their estates, Harrison traveled the country and spoke under a banner depicting a log cabin and a bottle of hard cider. He won the presidency by a landslide, and his campaign model became the new standard.
With few exemptions since, American voters have picked presidents who mimic the public's most ordinary habits -- men who regularly mention drinking, or NASCAR, or old-fashioned farm work. Ronald Reagan liked to be photographed chopping wood. George H.W. Bush spoke longingly about pork rinds. Bill Clinton stopped at McDonald's while on the campaign trial, even when it required a side trip. And George W. Bush is a champion brush-clearer.
Disruption to this role-playing occurs only when a politician makes a blunder so glaring that it reveals him to be a jester in costume. Gerald Ford bit into a tamale without husking it while campaigning on the Mexican border in 1976, and he extolled its deliciousness before realizing he had consumed the wrapper. John F. Kerry ordered a cheesesteak at Pat's in Philadelphia and asked for Swiss cheese, even though Pat's had specialized in subs with Cheez Whiz for 70 years.
In 1994, George W. Bush arranged for several media outlets to follow him on the first day of dove-hunting season. He fired his gun, killed a bird and looked like a real woodsman until officials identified his kill as a Texas songbird, a protected species easily distinguished from doves by experienced hunters. Bush paid a $130 fine.
"If you can look like the common man and make your opponent appear out of touch, you've pretty much won the election," said Richard Shenkman, a George Mason professor who has written several books about presidential campaigning. "The American people, given the choice between reality and the myth, almost always pick the myth. . . . We tell ourselves their average day is just like ours."
By Eli Saslow
© 2008 The Washington Post Company


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See all 21 CommentsBill, Chelsae, Rendell & the Campaign Committee really won. They get paid up front.
After all she is still there for us. That is, for all the Fund Raisers. 35 years experience has PAID off for the Clintons. ITS ALL ABOUT ME. Wheeeeeee this is FUND time. I''m just warming up.
"Don''t forget the Superdelegates are on my side and their not happy that Obama doesn''t know his place." Soooooo Sad what the Clintons & the Old Guard Demos have done to the Democratic Party & its not over yet.
Who will get the knucklehead vote?
Looks like Hilly may have that sewn up!
Posted by metroduck75: ... Obama,s Supporters..have been out there insulting hardworking middle class....you know, Obama is NO healer of the nation, he is the ultimate Divider.===========
Obama''s supporters couldn''t have been insulting what they couldn''t find left in this country! All those jobs left the country on Gorge''s watch. And Obama isn''t about HEALING this nation at all. The divide between the rube right and lunatic left is too wide. Maybe we can do Jeremiah''s "wutu" dance to exorcise them. If that doesn''t work, we can try amputation. Given intelligent support, Obama can bring together the rational moderates from both parties. That''s the REAL class that makes this country work. Sorry you don''t consider yourself a part of the solution.
So why would any millionaire with a college degree, a law degree even, ever want to be "ordinary joe" anymore? That defeats the whole purpose in getting the degree. And the millions! At least one thing seemed true enough: even a spastic gutterball bowler can do "hoops" with the Wright mentor.
I''ve seen 8 years of criminal "look at the shiny object in my right hand" while the left lands a roundhouse sucker punch to my pocket and my future.
Posted by ninasevyn at 11:14 AM : May 06, 2008"
In fact this is easily done - exactly the same process that has $600 per adult and $300 per child coming to you shortly. When dealing with government money the congress can move rapidly - attempting to go after big oil profits to support and tax break will be the proverbial slow boat to China.
Posted by ninasevyn at 11:14 AM : May 06, 2008
The real problem is that it has been proven that the tax savings is rarely passed on to the consumer, What you have to understand is suspending the tax means that it will not be COLLECTED from the seller of gasoline - it in no way means they need to reduce their pricing. The second issue is the fact that George Bush will NOT sign off on going after oil companies to foot the bill - therefore it is lost revenue to cover infrastructure maintenance and will therefore cost us more money in the long run. Thirdly, a short term redcution in gas prices will have NO EFFECT on food prices. Lastly, while I certainly understand that this break if it could be enacted with the resultant price reduction would provide great relief to some high end users, it would eresuly in an extremely small savings to the average american. It is not sound policy because Hillary can''t control it, can''t enact it, and can''t force payment by others to cover the bill. It is sheer grandstanding to buy votes - I sincerely hope that Indiana and NC residents can see that and vote accordingly.
Posted by RowdyTexan2 at 09:31 AM : May 06, 2008"
LOL a paranoid racist supporting another paranoid racist...how nice.
Posted by ninasevyn at 11:14 AM : May 06, 2008"
Who''s gonna pay for your tax break? You really think Hillary is gonna be able to "stick it to the oil companies"? They''re already raising prices in anticipation of this tax break, then if it does happen they''ve already raised their prices. Meanwhile you''ve just taken 10 billion dollars out of the Federal highway fund which repairs the roads that your truck tears up. You haven''t spent any less because the Oil companies have already stuck you with the "tax break" and you''ve increased prices for food and everything else...nice trade, Big Oil thanks you for your thoughtful gesture.
you know, Obama is NO healer of the nation, he is the ultimate Divider.
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Posted by metroduck75 at 09:00 AM : May 06, 2008''''
Well said!
Hillary''''''''08 ALL the way!!!!
Maybe if Hillary " went all the way" Bill wouldn''t have to get BJs from other women.
you know, Obama is NO healer of the nation, he is the ultimate Divider.
Hillary''''08 ALL the way!!!!
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Posted by metroduck75 at 08:32 AM : May 06, 2008
I guess that''s why Bill Clinton has seen more azz than a toilet seat in a Mexican hotel. Strong women don''t put up with cheating husbands. Hillary is all talk, Bill runs the show.
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