Democracy Has Prevailed.

August 4, 2008

One Issue, Two Views

By an odd coincidence, two of my favorite (and I mean that) columnists wrote on the same issue today; Bob Herbert at the New York Times and Ruth Ann Dailey at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

The issue? Race in Presidential politics.

To Dailey, it's the Democrats who are playing the "race card" (or as she calls it here the "racist card") on the Republicans. Her point is that since there has been nothing racial coming from the Republicans, any complaint or warning about it is itself racist. Her words:

But Sen. John McCain, his allies and the Republican Party as a whole -- despite its disarray and beleaguered mood -- have acted in unity thus far in refusing to utter the words that the Democrats keep trying to shove into their mouths.

So what's going on here? Something pretty despicable, actually. By constantly (and hopefully) claiming the Republicans will play "the race card," the Democrats are playing "the racist card."

It's absolutely necessary to distinguish between the two in this election cycle -- thanks entirely, up until now, to Democratic leaders' regular, and so-far false, accusations. Their strategy is essentially a prolonged smear tactic, propagating the Democrats' historically silly claim to be the party of racial equality.

That's right - notice the qualifiers. The Democrat's "historically" silly claim to be the party of racial equality. As if the Republican party, with Jesse Helms and Strom Thurmond is, of course, the REAL party of racial equality.

She has some history to back up her story. She starts with Warren G. Harding.
Both parties have plenty to be ashamed of in their racial histories, though you wouldn't know it from the popular narrative. Democratic operatives were the first to "play the race card," spreading (possibly true) rumors back in 1920 that Republican candidate Warren G. Harding had black ancestors. He won anyway.
Though I'd think that the charge that Thomas Jefferson fathered children with his slaves was an earlier (by more than a hundred years) use of the "race card" but perhaps I am misunderstanding the metaphor.

And I'm not sure bringing up Harding was wise in the first place. Given the corruption of the current administration why remind readers of another Republican administration mired in scandal? Teapot Dome anyone?

She calls on "the general consensus" that McCain is an honorable man who doesn't need to play the "race card." I'd disagree on the honorable part. We've already seen that he's willing to lie about his POW status to pander to Pittsburgh voters. Joe Klein disagrees on the "honorable" part, too:
A few months ago, I wrote that John McCain was an honorable man and he would run an honorable campaign. I was wrong.
So the "general consensus" can't be all that general when a mainstreamer like Joe Klein says he was wrong about John McCain.

Then there's Bob Herbert. First calling the Britney/Hilton ad "slimy" and then unloading on those who refuse to see what's right in front of them:

Gee, I wonder why, if you have a black man running for high public office — say, Barack Obama or Harold Ford — the opposition feels compelled to run low-life political ads featuring tacky, sexually provocative white women who have no connection whatsoever to the black male candidates.

Spare me any more drivel about the high-mindedness of John McCain. You knew something was up back in March when, in his first ad of the general campaign, Mr. McCain had himself touted as “the American president Americans have been waiting for.”

There was nothing subtle about that attempt to position Senator Obama as the Other, a candidate who might technically be American but who remained in some sense foreign, not sufficiently patriotic and certainly not one of us — the “us” being the genuine red-white-and-blue Americans who the ad was aimed at.

They even hit on the "presidents on the dollar bills" remark. Here's Dailey:

When Mr. McCain's campaign accused his opponent of injecting racism into the contest with his "presidents on the dollar bills" remark, Mr. Obama at first scoffed at the suggestion.

But by Friday, chief strategist David Axelrod said his boss was in fact guilty as charged, acknowledging on "Good Morning America" that Mr. Obama's dollar-bill remark referred in part to his race. At a Saturday news conference in Florida, the candidate said the same thing himself, repeating the defense offered by Mr. Axelrod: the remark's main point was that "I don't come out of central casting when it comes to presidential races." Oddly, he told reporters, "None of you thought I was making a racially incendiary remark, or playing the race card." (The Associated Press did not report how the press corps responded to his assumption of their collective absolution.)

And now Herbert:

So there he was this week speaking evenly, and with a touch of humor, to a nearly all-white audience in Missouri. His goal was to reassure his listeners, to let them know he’s not some kind of unpatriotic ogre.

Mr. Obama told them: “What they’re going to try to do is make you scared of me. You know, he’s not patriotic enough. He’s got a funny name. You know, he doesn’t look like all those other presidents on those dollar bills, you know. He’s risky.”

The audience seemed to appreciate his comments. Mr. Obama was well-received.
But John McCain didn’t appreciate them. RACE CARD! RACE CARD! The McCain camp started bellowing, and it hasn’t stopped since. With great glee bursting through their feigned outrage, the campaign’s operatives and the candidate himself accused Senator Obama of introducing race into the campaign — playing the race card, as they put it, from the very bottom of the deck.

Hmmm. I'll let Herbert sum things up:

Nevertheless, it’s frustrating to watch John McCain calling out Barack Obama on race. Senator Obama has spoken more honestly and thoughtfully about race than any other politician in many years. Senator McCain is the head of a party that has viciously exploited race for political gain for decades.

He’s obviously more than willing to continue that nauseating tradition.

I just don't see how Ruth Ann Dailey has much of an argument against that.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Just to add, McCain used the idea of Obama on a $100 bill about a month ago in a web ad:
Here

Anonymous said...

Oops...here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPARec32KMI

John K. said...

John K: You mean the party of Clarence Thomas, Dr. Rice and Gen. Powell. As opposed to the party of Robert 'sheetz' Byrd, Ted Kennedy and Fritz Hollings (he of hoist the confederate flag over the capital of SC and then blame it on Republicans fame).

EdHeath said...

Well, Dailey is correct that the Democrats were the party of the south during segregation, and the Republican congressional votes helped pass the civil rights legislation. Since then things have flipped.

But Herbert is also correct that the Republicans/conservatives are trying to define Obama as "other", I think to give people who vote on racial grounds cover. David Brooks ran a whole column today about how Americans like to define their candidates by what they are committed to, and how Obama likes to stand apart.

What amazed me about Dailey's column was that she totally ignored what set off the exchange about race/racism. She mentions, I guess, the ad in question by saying "His campaign's spoof of Mr. Obama's well-cultivated image as "The One" was spot-on. Its tone only falters in its final sentence, as it raises the issue of inexperience and asks, "But is he ready to lead?"". Maybe she turned a blind eye to the ad in question or maybe she decided to ignore the message in the particular ad. Either way, as David says, she fails to acknowledge any shred of racially charged innuendo coming from the Republican side. By that standard, her column would is correct, but a fair number of people saw the same thing in the Spears/Hilton ad, a subtle message that African Americans should be associated with white women of loose morals. It’s more than an exchange about who said what. The McCain campaign wins by feigning ignorance about the content of their ads, and making the Obama camp look silly by seeing race in every corner and under every rock. That’s got to be part of why they have pulled even in the polls.

Nick Kristoff, in the NYTimes, talked about Egyptians who were excited about Obama’s candidacy. They asked Kristoff “Do you think they will let him win?”. I think we have our answer.

cathcatz said...

why is it NOT okay for obama to bring race into this? seriously, its the elephant in the room. i think its refreshing that he makes some people more than a tad uncomfortable with some of his subtle, and not so subtle remarks. there ARE people out there, here on my very own street, who refuse to vote for him simply because he's black. that is NOT okay. these people should be made to feel the fool, i think. they are the ones who should be left to defend their opinion, not obama.

m dachshund said...

As David Gergen pointed out on This Week, anybody from the South knows that the McCain is playing the race card every day; for example, the "One" and "Messiah are code words for "uppity Nigger". Related, the word "Foreign" is conveniently right beside Obama's face in McCain's supposed "issues-ad" about taxes and oil-drilling; and Obama is Harold Forded in the supposedly humorous Britney and Paris ad.


People like John K. know this, at least on a sub-conscious level, but either delude themselves or willfully run with it, in their political slander of their opponents.

Bram Reichbaum said...

I don't think it's productive when evaluating the parties to use examples from before Realignment. Why no serious discussion of the Federalists and the Whigs?

Which party has a better record over the past, say, forty years? And why I wonder are all those black folks identifying ad Democrats? Are they all being brainwashed by the all-powerful Democratic message machine (snicker) and their slavish toadies in the media? How unfortunate for them, but how gullible they ALL must be!

John K. said...

John K: What are you left wingers, stuck in high school? Code words and secret phrases? According to the left, whenever McCain talks I have to get out my secret decoder ring to make sure I have all the code words deciphered. After all, to keep up with the left and their kookiness that is what they are doing.
Shows two things, how warped your brains are and
How you really want McCain to be a racist and make racist comments so you can attack. You hate the fact that he doesn't.
You lefties do know that the only two people to use the N---- word on FOX were Democrats, Byrd and Jackson.

m dachshund said...

Clarence Thomas is the beneficiary of a certain peculiar, pernicious kind of affirmative action: he has been promoted because he is a black “conservative.” This is not normal affirmative action: this is humiliating affirmative action; there are very few blacks who agree with him, there are many Republicans who want to have black allies for political cover, and so Thomas gets promoted, not just because he is black, but because he is one of a very small number of blacks.

Thomas is paranoid that people question his ability because of this arrangement. So he hates affirmative action. He wants to pretend that he hates affirmative action on its own merits, but he really hates it because he himself is the exemplar of the most extreme, grotesque, and humiliating affirmative action ever enacted. He confuses his own predicament with those of blacks in general. He is an extreme narcissist. He is consumed with rage and self-loathing.

That he has reasons for feeling the way he does, that his views fit into a position of “black conservatism” (which is just as repellent as any other “conservatism” of this mode, advocating violent self-discipline as the only means of “self-improvement”), is not relevant.

What is relevant is that he has let himself be used by cynical whites, hates himself for it, and tries to blame everyone else for his problems.

John K. said...

John K: M Dash-- You are confused. You are describing yourself. Clarence Thomas is black. And he is a conservative. And that just pisses you off. LMAO LMAO Blows your entire agenda about how people of color are better served by Democrats. Bush has more people of color in his admin than any other President. And that pisses you off also. LMAO

m dachshund said...

Johnny K,

You know even less about others than you do about yourself--which is precious little.

I suggest you concentrate on acquiring knowledge of at least one thing,yourself, before you try branching outward to others.

BTW, did you ever go to a party and have to listen to the socially awkward man whose jokes are terrible, and only makes matters worse for himself by guffawing loudly as no one else is laughing?

Please keep that in mind before you type another your characteristic "LMAO", "ROFL" or "LOL"s.

All the best...

Anonymous said...

Again, the conservative can only resort to fears, smears and lies.

Obama's right - these folks like John K. are proud of their ignorance; they wear it like a badge.

What Dailey also neglects to mention is Nixon's Southern Strategy which was deliberately designed to play off White southern voters' prejudice of African-Americans.

Idiots like John K. can try this lame spin that somehow the Republicans are the party of equality; good luck with that because nobody buys it coming from a political ideaology that's built itself up by marginalizing and stepping on the backs of other people, from minorities to middle class Americans.

But let's look at the Paris/Brittany add.

What's the first thing you think of when you see Paris? "Snob," "Slut," "Porn video."

What's the first thing most people will think of when they see Britany? "dysfunctional," "slut," "bad mother."

The people who made the add know that; it had nothing to do with "celebrity." They chose those people because they knew it would elicit a specific response.

So, we've attached the idea of "slutty white women who are bad mothers" to...the first African-American to ever be nominated to run for President??? And there's no race involved there, huh?

Puh-lease...it speaks directly to what conservatives have long said, often under their breaths, about single Black mothers - you know, Welfare Queens - and playing up fears of miscegenation.

But when they get called on it, well, of course the little cowardly bastards aren't going to own up to it.

Why else does John K. constantly refer to him as "Hussein Obama?" The name doesn't bother me or other liberals, but it does bother people like John K. or at least he thinks if he uses it enough he can frighten people because Obama's middle name doesn't sound "Amer'kin" enough, it sounds "forn."

And that is precisely the subtext of McCain's recent campaign against Obama - he's not one of "us." Why, he even wants to lose the war just to become President!!!

But keep playing ignorant, John K. It's what you do best.