Wednesday, August 13, 2008

This race is about Obama

Peter Beinart on the race issue of the campaign....
Barack Obama has a problem. He really, really doesn't want this campaign to be about race. He wants it to be about change, President Bush, the economy, gas prices, Iraq, Afghanistan -- almost anything else. But it is going to be about race, at least in part. That's the lesson of recent weeks, when the McCain campaign brought up race (on the pretext that Obama had brought it up first). The Obama campaign tried desperately to change the subject but couldn't. Once the chum was in the water, the media sharks went wild.

Obama should take that as a warning. Race will be central to this campaign because McCain needs it to be. He simply doesn't have many other cards to play. And it will be central because every time Republicans light the match, the press will create a forest fire. Race is just too titillating to ignore. The history of post-Vietnam presidential elections is littered with Democratic nominees who thought they could run on policy and ignore symbolism. This year, the symbolism will be largely racial. Obama can't avoid that. He needs to control the race debate instead.

Already, there is reason to believe that race is weighing Obama down. A survey this year by CBS and the New York Times found that 94 percent of respondents would vote for a black presidential candidate. But when asked if "most people" would, the number dropped to 71 percent. Notre Dame political scientist David Leege estimates that 17 to 19 percent of white Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents will resist voting for Obama because he is black. That's far more than the percentage of Republicans who may vote for Obama because he is black. And it's a major reason that this election -- despite Obama's myriad advantages -- remains close.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, this campaign will be about one thing and one thing only; OBAMA. The Obamamaniacs can do everything they want to portray McCain as Bush Jr. but that dog won't hunt. Ultimately, the electorate is going answer the question... " Can Obama lead this country?"

If the voters decide yes, Obama will be our next president. If the answer is no, he won't.

My suspicion is that many voters will have the question (unanswered) right up until the day they go into the polls. They'll be watching for any little Obama dingle berry to see if Obama can be the man.

So all these pundits can go on and on about how a vote against Obama is a vote for racism. If that's what they want to pontificate, they'll get to actually watch him work in the senate next year.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

You have got to be kidding me. If you can't see that he (Obama) is covered in dingleberrys by now, you are living in a cave.

gordon gekko said...

Look maybe you can look at Obama and see a fraud but the electorate is not just you and I.

There will be millions of people who will look at him and say "he can't do anything to hurt the country".

The same question was asked of Ronald Reagan. In 1976 the answer was "we can't afford to risk our country on an unknown". By 1980 the country was in such a quagmire, there was really nothing to lose on Reagan.

In many respects, the more secure the nation is from an economic and national security stand point, the more the public will have no problem with Obama.

In many respects, the Bush years will ultimately pave the way for Obama much like Carter did Reagan.