On Course For Another White Guy Election

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First Posted: 04-22-08 10:30 AM   |   Updated: 06-25-08 05:17 PM

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Hillary Clinton's release Monday of her first Osama bin Laden ad sets the stage for a general contest that Republicans could only dream about: an election fought over issues of patriotism, 1960s radicalism, liberal elites, gun control, terrorist threats, intimidation by a black preacher, and a 3AM phone call signaling enemy attack.

With the bin Laden spot, Clinton has set the stage for an election in which a crucial voting block will once again be white men, and the issues will be those that tend to push these voters to the right, towards the Republican Party, regardless of which Democrat is the nominee.

Clinton has intensified her challenge to Obama with the bin Laden commercial in Pennsylvania, directly questioning his fortitude and strength in the face of foreign aggression.

As still photos of World War II, Franklin Roosevelt, Nikita Khrushchev, Fidel Castro, gas lines of the 1970s, and, most importantly, bin Laden flash across the TV screen, the announcer declares:

"It's the toughest job in the world.

"You need to be ready for anything - especially now, with two wars, oil prices skyrocketing and an economy in crisis.

"Harry Truman said it best - if you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.

"Who do you think has what it takes?

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"I'm Hillary Clinton and I approve this message."

With some help from Obama, Clinton has been putting together a package redolent of historic 'wedge' issues -- Willie Horton, Dukakis and the M-I tank, Kerry windsurfing, and the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth.

The Democrats have huge advantages going into the 2008 election: a discredited Bush administration, continued distrust of Republicans in Congress, a teetering economy, and an unpopular war. The party may well be able to survive the current debate and take the White House on January 20, 2009, but the backward-looking wedge issue strategy poses risks.

Clinton has been the driving force in pushing the campaign rightward, but Obama has been complicit in his own way, as his faltering answers to questions on these subjects have served to keep them alive.

Six months ago, on October 4, 2007, Obama dealt with a question about his decision not to wear a flag pin on his lapel deftly and forthrightly.

"You know, the truth is that right after 9/11, I had a pin....Shortly after 9/11, particularly because as we're talking about the Iraq war, that became a substitute for I think true patriotism, which is speaking out on issues that are of importance to our national security, I decided I won't wear that pin on my chest... Instead, I'm going to try to tell the American people what I believe will make this country great, and hopefully that will be a testimony to my patriotism."

During the April 16 ABC debate in Philadelphia, however, his answer to a similar question was long, hesitant, and convoluted -- a 388 word "blood in the water" answer, the kind that attracts sharks:

"Well, look, I revere the American flag. And I would not be running for president if I did not revere this country. This is -- I would not be standing here if it wasn't for this country. And I've said this -- again, there's no other country in which my story is even possible. Somebody who was born to a teenage mom, raised by a single mother and grandparents from small towns in Kansas, you know, who was able to get an education and rise to the point where I can run for the highest office in the land, I could not help but love this country for all that it's given me.


And so, what I've tried to do is to show my patriotism by how I treat veterans when I'm working in the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee; by making sure that I'm speaking forcefully about how we need to bring this war in Iraq to a close, because I think it is not serving our national security well and it's not serving our military families and our troops well; talking about how we need to restore a sense of economic fairness to this country, because that's what this country has always been about, is providing upward mobility and ladders to opportunity for all Americans.

That's what I love about this country. And so I will continue to fight for those issues. And I am absolutely confident that during the general election, that when I'm in a debate with John McCain, people are not going to be questioning my patriotism; they are going to be questioning, how can you make people's lives a little bit better? And let me just make one last point on this issue of the flag pin. As you've noted, I wore one yesterday when a veteran handed it to me, who himself was disabled and works on behalf of disabled veterans.

I have never said that I don't wear flag pins or refuse to wear flag pins. This is the kind of manufactured issue that our politics has become obsessed with and, once again, distracts us from what should be my job when I'm commander-in-chief, which is going to be figuring out how we get our troops out of Iraq and how we actually make our economy better for the American people."

The constellation of issues that Clinton has been raising -- and that Obama, in varying degrees, has been vulnerable on -- establish dominant campaign themes that have proven ideal for Republicans over the past 40 years (think of Hubert Humphrey in 1968, George McGovern in 1972, Jimmy Carter in 1980, Michael Dukakis in 1988 and John Kerry in 2004). In each of those elections, a crucial demographic group leading the charge to GOP victory was white men.

With only minor differences between Obama and Clinton this year on such pro-Democratic subjects as health care, public sector investment and tax policy, Clinton has felt compelled to make the case that Obama would be a fatally flawed nominee in the general election.

To do so, she and her aides have pounded relentlessly on Obama's liabilities among conservative and centrist voters.

The Clinton forces have stressed the statements of Obama's preacher, Jeremiah Wright; Obama's cocaine use in his youth; the support he received from former members of the 1970s Weather Underground; his failure to wear an American flag; and his 'disparaging' comments on the religious and moral views of small town Pennsylvanians.

In Monday's Christian Science Monitor reporter Linda Feldmann wrote:

"The holy grail of the final push for votes in Pennsylvania: white male Democrats. As a group, they are nearly evenly divided between Senator Clinton and Sen. Barack Obama. And individually, white male Democrats express the most ambivalence about the two candidates.


"A recent poll from Temple University in Philadelphia asked likely Democratic voters to rate the favorability of Clinton and Obama on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being most favorable. The contest was closest among white men who gave Clinton an average of 6.4 and Obama 6.9. When only voters over 30 are considered, the numbers get even tighter: 6.5 for Clinton and 6.7 for Obama.

"Pennsylvania's white women, in contrast, clearly are more enthusiastic about Clinton. They give her an average favorability of 7.8, versus 5.9 for Obama."

Insofar as the Democratic contest remains focused on these issues, white men, a driving force in the seven Republican victories out of the last 10 presidential elections, will once again become a -- if not the -- crucial constituency in determining the outcome.

The prominent role of more centrist and conservative white men in the Democratic primary process is confounding to some. Just last year, Democratic political scientist Thomas F. Schaller was breathing a sigh of relief over the prospect that white men were a steadily diminishing factor in the political landscape.

In an essay titled "So long, white boy" published September 17, 2007 on Salon, Schaller wrote:

"The Democratic obsession with the down-home, blue-collar, white male voter, that heartbreaker who crossed the aisle to the Republicans many decades ago, may finally be coming to a merciful end....it's a waste of time and resources for the Democrats to pursue them -- a classic sucker's bet....Democrats finally seem to realize that cultural contortionism in the pursuit of Bubba produces little more than smiles on the faces of Republican consultants."

Two other Democratic analysts, Ruy Teixeira of the Brookings Institution and Emory University's Alan Abramowitz, both agreed that the white working-class vote, both male and female, is declining as a share of the electorate. But that does not mean, they note, that these voters can be cast aside:

"Al Gore...lost white working class voters in the 2000 election by 17 points. And the next Democratic presidential candidate, John Kerry, did even worse, losing these voters by a whopping 23 points in 2004," wrote Abramowitz and Teixeira in a paper titled "The Decline of the White Working Class and the Rise of a Mass Upper Middle Class."

"[T]hose voters who seem to correspond most closely to one's intuitive sense of the heart of the white working class -- that is, white voters who have a modest income and are non-college-educated -- are precisely the voters among whom Democrats did most poorly. For example, among non-college-educated whites with $30,000-$50,000 in household income, Bush beat Kerry by 24 points (62-38); among college-educated whites at the same income level, Kerry actually managed at 49-49 tie. And among non-college-educated whites with $50,000-$75,000 in household income, Bush beat Kerry by a shocking 41 points (70-29), while leading by only 5 points (52-47) among college-educated whites at the same income level."

Now, in the midst of the 2008 Democratic primary, white men have once again emerged as a crucial, if not key, constituency in the presidential election - a foreboding development for the prospects for Democrats in November.

Hillary Clinton's release Monday of her first Osama bin Laden ad sets the stage for a general contest that Republicans could only dream about: an election fought over issues of patriotism, 1960s radic...
Hillary Clinton's release Monday of her first Osama bin Laden ad sets the stage for a general contest that Republicans could only dream about: an election fought over issues of patriotism, 1960s radic...
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- adc I'm a Fan of adc 5 fans permalink

Love the HuffPost - so liberal, so tolerant. I posted a simple question earlier that was deleted - and I now post it again:

What is wrong with electing another white man?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:41 PM on 04/22/2008
- qdog112 I'm a Fan of qdog112 68 fans permalink
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Nothing. Anything wrong with electing the best of those left?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 04/22/2008
- joelaf I'm a Fan of joelaf 4 fans permalink
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Nothing, just as long as it's not "just another white man". The difference is subtle, but staggering. BTW, I'm a "white man" (emphasis on neither)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:09 PM on 04/22/2008

you can say that again, I'll take an accomplished woman or minority of some cardboard cutout white guy any day, but on that same note I'd take a nobel peace prize winning white guy over the candidates now.
-Still lovin Al Gore in CA

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 PM on 04/22/2008

The answer is in your question.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:31 PM on 04/22/2008
- joelaf I'm a Fan of joelaf 4 fans permalink
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I am a 48 y/o white male, raised by my grandparents in Alabama . Yeah , I know, thanks for the tomatos and eggs. I was raised in a low income home, in a "mixed" neighborhood ( my family providing the mix). I earned a college degree, and my Tennessee born wife earned two. I cringe when I see these "typical" representations of THE SOUTH, but I acknowledge there is a basis for them, however limited. Would you be surprised to find out this photo was taken in Michigan, or Ohio, or Wyoming, etc.? I worked for 8 years for C*t*bank , in ATL. We had 300+ employees of all races and regional origin. My work groups primarily were me, and a host of African American women. These women and I had a very strong bond. When people were being interviewed for minor management positions, (none of them AA), one of my coworkers commented "well, I guess they don't promote black women". 'Mona and I were close enough, I felt comfortable pointing out that they weren't interviewing me either. Her response? " You're an honorary Black Woman". (CaddyShack) "So, I've got that going for me" I miss you 'Mona : )

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:41 PM on 04/22/2008
- Gilda I'm a Fan of Gilda 7 fans permalink
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Your post isn't that interesting but I'm a chick.

I thought that was a picture of Michael Moore and some dude from the Grateful Dead.
Like the tattoos though.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:33 PM on 04/22/2008

These guys don't care, they're proud of their beer bloated bellies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:48 PM on 04/22/2008
- bikerdude I'm a Fan of bikerdude 68 fans permalink
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I thought they were republicans bloated from foie gras...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 PM on 04/22/2008
- Fightnmad I'm a Fan of Fightnmad 43 fans permalink
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Did some of you people read the article at all? Edsall is writing about the Democratic chances for a win in the Nov 08 elections, and based on the spurious platform issues by the Dem candidates, this is leaning towards a McCain wet dream:

"Insofar as the Democratic contest remains focused on these issues, white men, a driving force in the seven Republican victories out of the last 10 presidential elections, will once again become a -- if not the -- crucial constituency in determining the outcome."

Edsall is talking demographics and how they pertain to election trends. Historically, and someone correct me if I'm wrong (and I'm certain you will :) ), the MAJORITY of positions of power and influence in our nation have belonged to the caucasian male. Is this observation incorrect, sexist, or racist?

The Dems, for a brief period of time, gave this power and influence to the "little" people, women and people of color, who live in previously "politically insignificant" States. People came out to vote in droves, just so they could make their voices heard! The numbers were unprecedented. Is this observation incorrect, sexist, or racist?

This article is how the Dems are running ( or "ruining") the primary campaign using Rove's Play-by-Play book, a win-win for the 28%er "backwash" Republicans come Nov. I hope Edsall is wrong.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 04/22/2008
- Busterdawg I'm a Fan of Busterdawg 6 fans permalink

He's right.

Obama can't win. He could never win.

Hillary would have wiped the floor with McCain. O

Oh well, better luck next time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 PM on 04/22/2008
- bilmardre I'm a Fan of bilmardre 32 fans permalink

Well, its kind of an illusion. The republicans have been salivating for years expecting to run against Clinton. They have a boat load of negative ads prepared to run against her.
You just don't hear anything about them now.

Perhaps because they still want her to win the nomination. If she were to win the nomination, republicans will be gleeful, and the real ugliness will begin.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:31 PM on 04/22/2008
- joekerr I'm a Fan of joekerr 11 fans permalink

I don’t have much too say about the subject of this post in particular, except “Isn’t that obvious?”. Caucasians still constitute a rather large majority in this country and rarely have I heard tales of them being excluded or disenfranchised from voting. And of course they matter…they live and pay taxes here too. What I’d like to remind all the people raving about how Obama wants to destroy the country and Hillary is just a cougar in disguise, is that this is a historic moment in our history and lambasting your enemy and distorting facts just to get people on your side is reminiscent of older times. Democrats on both sides alike seem to have forgotten that both these candidates are truly representative of a shift our collective thinking. Just a year ago, it was nearly unthinkable that either candidate stood a chance at all of becoming the next President of United States of America and I stress, the UNITED STATES. Don’t forget that your loyalty lies not with your fellow woman or black man but with all Americans. Don’t forget that Democrats are the party of the people, not the party of hate. I fear as I read these comments, that we are not so unlike the Republicans we so often vilify. So celebrate the very fact that this contest evens exist and use your vitriolic for the very real enemies named hate and fear and misunderstanding. Thank you from a very confused Democrat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:42 PM on 04/22/2008

i really llike your post....you may be older, or just a really mature young person....but your right, we get caught up in winning so much we forget about what all of this means.....our country is shifting towards equality..­..finally.­...and as you said a few years ago noone would have voted for either of these two....but thanks 2 george bush F***ing up so bad.....people will give anyone a chance, especially if they can get peoples money right.....thats something john mccain isn't gonna be able to do come election time.....he just isn't that strong on the economy....and if you look back in the past......there hasn't been a republican in the last 20 years who has had a good economic plan for everyone...Reagans plan was the best out of the republicans...and he still only helped out 51 percent of the country leaving the poor behind.....you think john mccain is gonna top that?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 AM on 04/23/2008

Nice photo.
Why not show a photo of a couple of black dudes all done up in the gang outfits?
And you wonder why most people think Liberals are self-satisfied, smug, know-it-alls.

McCain in 2008.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:38 PM on 04/22/2008

Yeah, I wonder how it would have went with a picture of Buckwheat along side some gang banger. It is OK to degrade middle class white America. As a "typical white person,"I find it pretty offensive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:52 PM on 04/22/2008
- joekerr I'm a Fan of joekerr 11 fans permalink

YOu've proven a point, though you don't know it. How many pictures of "ethnic minorities" can you dredge up in just a few minute? None? Well let me help you.
Buckwheat (MGM)
Stepin Fetchit
Uncle Rufus(Disney)
Any Martial Arts movie made in America
The goons in the Indiana Jones Movie

The list can go on and on

Now quick, tell me a parody of any white people that is famous and popular. No one said it's ok to degrade white middle America, but that doesn't mean you get to degrade everyone else.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:54 PM on 04/22/2008
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What's the matter, did'nt the ask before they took your picture?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 04/22/2008

Don't you get enough of that from Fox News? Why do you want to see it here?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 PM on 04/22/2008
- cramos I'm a Fan of cramos 2 fans permalink

The picture are OBAMA'S

Typical WHITE PEOPLE

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 PM on 04/22/2008
- qdog112 I'm a Fan of qdog112 68 fans permalink
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I see those guys everyday. Don't pretend they don't exist. They are proud of who they are. Certain white comedians have made a cottage industry targeting those guys. They are as important a part of Americana as any other demographic. in my opinion the photo is not flattering, but it represents a real segment. Have beer and get on with business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 04/22/2008

Well I sure as hell don't see those guys everyday.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:00 PM on 04/22/2008
- kellygrrrl I'm a Fan of kellygrrrl 640 fans permalink
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are those guys still waitin' on the porch for the faux cowboy to have a brewski?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:13 PM on 04/22/2008
- SmellyOne I'm a Fan of SmellyOne 29 fans permalink
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Let's be honest, these type of white people are funny to look at, and fair game to be made fun of. They are part of the Master Race, and that's still the best they can do with themselves.

If it were a story about black folk being the key to Obama's victory, and the picture was of a couple of African Americans from the hood with all THEIR stereotypical wonderment, that would be wrong, because they are all goofed up because of what the Master Race has done to them.

One stereotype is funny, one is sad.

I'm just glad there isn't an Asian running, because then NO ONE would know how to react. Except for Rosie O'Donnel.

Race is Fun!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:13 PM on 04/22/2008

The "master race?" Really?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 PM on 04/22/2008
- wmbear I'm a Fan of wmbear 24 fans permalink

HEY, FLABBY, SUNBURNED GUYS WITH TATTOOS...

Rule!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:38 PM on 04/22/2008
- teembee I'm a Fan of teembee 4 fans permalink

"Master Race" LOL........yeah right.
Anything to make excuses for non-performers, right?
I guess those Irish immigrants felt mighty entitled to all the riches that America had to offer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:26 PM on 04/22/2008
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Great analogy. The wave of Irish Catholic immigrants in the 1800's did, indeed, take a lot of abuse on their way to the American dream. Maybe someday we'll have an Irish Catholic running for president! Oh, wait....1960? 48 years ago?

To quote Emily Latella...."Never mind."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 PM on 04/22/2008

But look!! look!! Obama is bowling. He just like us white men that spend 4 nights a week at the local alley.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:03 PM on 04/22/2008

"Fuck it dude, let's go bowling!"-­----------­------Walt­er Sochack

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 04/22/2008
- doug108 I'm a Fan of doug108 19 fans permalink

One of my all-time favorite movies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:46 PM on 04/22/2008

Interesting post, thank you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 04/22/2008
- teembee I'm a Fan of teembee 4 fans permalink

Gee, I wonder why the photo was taken down?
They were scared that it was going to show up on O'Reilly tonite and expose them for the
hypocrites that they are.
Liberals are so entertaining.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:47 PM on 04/22/2008
- SmellyOne I'm a Fan of SmellyOne 29 fans permalink
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The original pic is still on the Home Page.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:08 PM on 04/22/2008

The stupid picture was removed. Yeah!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:33 PM on 04/22/2008
photo

Or not!
Try the homepage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:43 PM on 04/22/2008

I am bitter!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:58 PM on 04/22/2008
- wmbear I'm a Fan of wmbear 24 fans permalink

MY COUSINS HALF-REMOVED...

Flabby sunburned white guys hanging out. All that's lacking is a couple cans of Coors....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 04/22/2008
- Busterdawg I'm a Fan of Busterdawg 6 fans permalink

And so were several threads of comments. Damage control?

Yup, yup... HuffPo really practices The New politics of Change and Unity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:36 PM on 04/22/2008
- MoeSart I'm a Fan of MoeSart 10 fans permalink

The short version of this column is, if you're a white male and you don't support Obama, you're a dumbass racist hick.

That's the sort of thing I expect from urbanite latte liberals. That they will ultimately make the election a litmus test for racism. This guy Edsall is just starting it up a little early.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:31 PM on 04/22/2008

Hooray for White Guys. What would America be today without them......­.....Nothi­ng.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 PM on 04/22/2008
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