Thursday, May 22, 2008

The farm bill litmus, Obama hammered on foreign policy from every side, Clinton’s crew calls Obama sexist, April $ #s, and more primaries

First, before delving into this week’s election news on the 2008 race, it is worth highlighting McCain and Obama’s divergent votes on a major piece of legislation - the farm bill.  Obama voted for it, McCain against it.  The vote passed overwhelmingly.  McCain criticized it as being loaded with earmarks and bad for the country.  An insightful article into why they may have voted as they did is here - http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/20/opinion/20brooks.html?_r=1&ref=opinion&oref=slogin where David Brooks of the New York Times discusses this vote as a litmus test for what type of leaders the two candidates would be.

While most of the coverage this week in the news has focused on Obama winning Oregon and closing toward the magic number needed to clinch the nomination while Clinton also won a big victory in Kentucky, I find these newscasts and articles utterly uninsightful.  Oregon and Kentucky were not interesting because of a split decision, which sounds bland in and of itself, nor because they were very important to the outcome of the nomination, as they played out roughly as expected.  The poll internals were interesting.  Most notably in Kentucky, Clinton won 118 counties to Obama’s 2, and even in those two he only got 51 and 53% of the vote.  Take those two out, and Clinton’s 65-30 victory becomes more like 80-18.  In over 80 counties Obama did not even get 20% of the vote, and in 15-20 he got less than 10%.  Simultaneously, he edges Clinton in nearly every demographic in Oregon, some 2,500 miles away.  What would be interesting would be to see more articles to explain these disparities.  The usual tripe blaming white racists for stifling Obama in these states he is failing in is intellectually short of the mark to my mind.  While the race gap was 134 points, about 85 of those points came from the black vote breaking for Obama 92-8.  Some people did identify race as a factor in voting against Obama, but what they meant by that was not entirely clear, nor were they a remotely large percentage of the population.  Take them out and Obama gains only another 3-4 points off a 35 point loss.  The big question as to why did Obama do 50 points better in Oregon than in Kentucky, therefore, needs more than the perfunctory answer of “race.”

Turning towards the general election, I’d have to mark this down as a very bad week for Obama.  Despite having raised 3-4 times as much money as McCain during the campaign season, Obama and his party’s national committee now has less money (when the RNC and DNC numbers are added in) than McCain and his for the very first time.  Obama raised another 31.3 million in April, down from 40 million in March, which was down from the high water mark of 55 million in February.  McCain raised only 17.8 million, but that represents his third consecutive month of improvements in that category.  The RNC raised 15.7 million in the same time to the DNC’s 4.7 million, leaving Obama with 37.5 million in his war chest to McCain’s 21.7 million.  The RNC has saved 40.1 million, however, to the DNC’s 4.4 million.  More importnatly, however, is the downward trend for Obama’s fundraising.  It is now imperative for him to get Clinton on his side after defeating her, assuming he can close the deal, to raise at least an average of 42 million a month to outstrip the public funds amount of 84 million for the two month general election period that he rejected back when he was pulling in 55 million a month, (all during a very public flap about McCain’s charge that Obama was reneging on his earlier promise to take public funds when Obama did so, thereby apparently paving the path for more money for his campaign).  See http://www.nypost.com/seven/05212008/postopinion/opedcolumnists/barack__the_furies_111822.htm?page=1 for an interesting article into Obama’s challenge on the dynamic of Obama needing to convert the Clintonistas. 

Obama had two major gaffes this week.  One, while deflecting a question from Peggy Agar, a journalist following his campaign in Michigan and inquiring into Obama’s plan to help autoworkers, Obama called her “sweetie” while telling her to wait for the press avail.  He never answered her question, then or later, prompting her to remark “this ’sweetie’ never got an answer to her question.”  The second half of the first gaffe was Obama’s “apology” where he noted that he calls women “sweetie” all the time and that he was duly chastened, stating its just a “bad habit.”  Translation to feminists was that he’s not really sorry because its a habit and therefore not derogatory and since he’s “duly chastened” he wants everyone to drop the issue already.  They went in uproar mode.  He still never answered Agar’s question about how he would help the autoworkers.  To my mind, Obama has a real problem with slipping in condescending ways, making it worse with apologies, and handling criticism or pointed substance questions.  This will be a real problem once he gets to the general election and the GOP takes him on.

Which is a nice segue into his second major gaffe this week.  Following up on last week’s back and forth with McCain, they continued the jabs this week, each chomping at the bit for a debate with the other one on the foreign policy matter of whether it is appropriate to meet with foreign leaders who despise America without preconditions.  Obama stated setting preconditions for meeting with an enemy is “cowboy diplomacy” like George Bush, that setting preconditions is “not a strategy, its naive, wishful thinking.”  Obama added, “I’m not afraid we’ll lose some propaganda fight with a dictator.”

McCain responded by stating that there is a “huge difference” between him and Obama along the lines of “experience, knowledge and judgment — none of which Senator Obama has.” 

Obama’s surrogates responding by quoting McCain on his willingness to meet with Hamas, which McCain’s surrogates noted was only on the preconditions that they cease terrorism and stop calling for the destruction of Israel.  Obama’s surrogates then pointed to James Baker, a supporter - not team member, of McCain’s, who stated that “talking with an enemy” is not “appeasement.”  Of course, Baker also never said meeting an enemy without precondtions was good foreign policy.  Obama’s team then pointed to Kennedy’s quote “never negotiate out of fear, but never fear to negotiate”, suggesting McCain was unwilling to ever negotiate.  Obama pointed out also that Reagan met with Gorbachev and Nixon with China, although again, McCain’s supporters note that there were precondtions to those meetings, Kennedy never met with Castro as Obama has said he would do, nor would any of those Presidents likely have done so with jihadist terrorists. 

The aftermath of this give and take is enough to score this round for McCain.  Senator Biden, a senior Democratic Senator on the Foreign Relations committee stated simply that Obama gave the “wrong answer” on this topic.  He explained that Obama is intelligent though and would come around to the right answer and he must not have really meant that.  Similarly, former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, also a Democrat, and Obama foreign policy advisor Susan Rice all stated at different times that Obama must not have really meant no preconditions such that he would just sit down and meet with foreign dictators.  Later in the week, Obama introduced entirely new terms into the discussion, explaining that while not demanding preconditions, he would demand “preparations” as lower level diplomats would discuss the items to be negotiated, if any, and the terms for doing so, which, of course, is the same thing as preconditions.  Obama also said this week that when he agreed to meet with the leaders of countries like Iran, he did not mean necessarily Ahmadinejad, implying he might meet with Khomeini or an opposition political figure, but this too is inconsistent with his earlier explicit statements while campaigning that he would meet with Ahmadinejad.  Several articles, all from neutral or liberal media outlets, have noted the duplicity and the folly in these statements for Obama in a rather damning fashion:

See http://marcambinder.theatlantic.com/archives/2008/05/parsing_obama_without_precondi.php ”parsing Obama”

See http://www.abcnews.go.com/Politics/Vote2008/Story?id=4896002&page=1 ”Obama’s answer on rogue nations evolves”

See http://www.nypost.com/seven/05212008/postopinion/opedcolumnists/obama_to_ajad__atomic_assist_111819.htm?page=0 ”Obama gives Ahmadinejad a nuclear assist” contending that Obama severely undermined this week Ahmadinejad’s strongest domestic political rival as he contended Ahmadinejad’s nuclear violations were undermining Iran’s stature in the global community.

See http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/political_commentary/commentary_by_dick_morris/obama_wrong_on_iran Perhaps the most insightful argument, put forth by Dick Morris, former advisor to President Clinton and sworn enemy to Hilary Clinton, as to why Obama’s stance on Iran is a very bad foreign policy.

And, perhaps most importantly should there be an electoral tie, Senator Lieberman’s article, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121132806884008847.html?mod=opinion_main_commentaries, also blasting Obama.

These attacks all came from the left, stating Obama was too far left, on an issue he politically threw the hatchet down against McCain on, then had to retreat on.  While the KY and OR drama dominated news coverage, these issues are not going away, and Obama has set himself up for a foreign policy debate nightmare down the road.  They have an apparent “truce” as they have stopped attacking each other lately, perhaps some sort of deal has been worked out.  Speculation has ranged from Hilary getting a VP slot to a cabinet position to being promised as Obama’s nominee to the Supreme Court if he gets elected, but this is all at this stage idle speculation, unsubstantiated by any comments from the candidates.  Something must have changed based on the change in candidates’ tones however.

Looking ahead to next week, Obama and Clinton will campaign in Florida while the Credentials Committee of the DNC is now set to meet on 5/31 to decide the fate of Florida voters, around the same time as trailers for “Recount” the movie in which Kevin Spacey stars and reminds the nation of the recount episode in the 2000 election (from a very pro-count them all perspective) are playing.

McCain meanwhile has pledged to appear at the NAACP convention, and noted that even if he does not win the black vote or any segment in particular, he will represent all Americans, including those who opposed him and the “forgotten America” groups he coined during his tour a month or so ago.

Posted by at 03:04:25
Comments

4 Responses to “The farm bill litmus, Obama hammered on foreign policy from every side, Clinton’s crew calls Obama sexist, April $ #s, and more primaries”

  1. Anonymous says:

    [DR]
    A few other stories that got significant attention this week, no? Any likely significance to attach to the resignation of Doug Goodyear, and the allegations that surfaced this week about Charles Black, McCain advisors both? How about the developments on the John Hagee front?

    Surely “Sweetiegate” is only a minor gaffe; it’s mostly gotten attention from Clintonistas and the Right. Somewhat plays into the “Obama as aloof fancypants who thinks he’s better than everybody” narrative, but only somewhat, and mostly, again, with those who have already decided they don’t like him, IMHO.

    The preconditions business is potentially much more damaging for Obama, and he’s clearly going to have to be more careful in the future in the way he talks about some of this. But on the other hand, what many people hear is the candidate who opposed the Iraq war supporting diplomatic solutions in a spat with War Cowboy George Bush. There’s a real danger of McCain being associated with the Bush Administration on foreign policy, no? Fairly or unfairly, the perception is there.

    Your fundraising points are very thought-provoking. It might lead to Obama in the end striking a deal for public financing; will be interesting to see how that plays out.

  2. Anonymous says:

    Excellent points all DR. It appears at this point that the signifigance of the Goodyear resignation was more of a move to avoid the appearance of impropriety than anything else. If Black were to resign amid allegations similar to those under which Mark Penn from the Clinton campaign did, that would be a bigger story as Black is in McCain’s inner circle. At this stage though, it is just that, an allegation. This is on the radar to my mind, but not quite newsworthy at this stage. We’ll see how it develops.

    As for John Hagee, McCain has condemned Hagee’s remarks, and he has rejected an endorsement. I do not think there is anything else McCain can do to distance himself from Hagee. Of course, Hagee’s situation is sharply different than the Wright scandal, unlike the equivocations of some columnists. Hagee was never McCain’s pastor, they are not even the same denomination. Hagee never served as a spiritual mentor to McCain or his family, gave sermons that McCain sat through despite controversy, served as an advisor to the campaign, gave a sermon whose title became the title to a McCain book, etc… Moving forward, I suspect Obama will not want to draw attention to Hagee due to the lack of substance against McCain on this particular front, and the unfavorable contrast it brings in drawing Wright back to the conversation, a situation Obama will seek to avoid as much as possible.

    Whether sweetiegate is a minor gaffe is as yet depends on how well Obama does in winning over the Clintonites. To the extent the feminists are mad at him and to the extent it plays into the general perception against him that he is a condescending elitist, it may hurt him. More problematic than the initial comment though was to my mind the apology that made it sound even worse, which is becoming somewhat of a pattern. I would agree though with you that it was not as serious a matter as the preconditions business.

    Your point about McCain being painted as associated with Bush on foreign policy is right on. The DNC, and both Democratic candidates, have settled on that particular talking point. In the end though, I do not think it will be particularly effective, especially once debate season begins and folks pay closer attention. McCain is simply not Bush III. They are from opposite ends of the GOP, and I could probably name a good 25-30 issues on which they differ. I could probably name a good 10 or so differences on foreign policy alone. (I’ll make that the subject of a later post). Take Iraq for instance. Perhaps there is no subject in which the Democratic argument would be stronger or has been more consistently made that McCain is another Bush cowboy than on Iraq. But McCain has sharply criticized Bush more than any other Republican, and more often than many Democrats, on Bush’s handling of the Iraq war, and has done so for five years. He took on Bush over Bush’s unwillingness to heed the advice of General Chinseki, advocated for the surge before Bush did to the extent he was ostracized by the GOP for it (though he turned out to be correct, as it is has been a far more effective military policy), and particularly dealt sharp criticism on Rumsfeld’s dealings and Bush’s inexplicable decision to stand by Rumsfeld.

    McCain is also sharply different from Bush over relationships with Russia, China, Europe, philosophy for military intervention, trade policy, environmental policy, etc…

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