Obama Gives Media A Critical Valentine During Victory Speech

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First Posted: 05- 7-08 12:31 PM   |   Updated: 05-15-08 05:12 AM

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As yesterday's primaries started heading toward its climax, Barack Obama hit back hard on Hillary Clinton's gas tax proposal, referring to it as a "gimmick" attempt at pandering. The criticism may have helped - among Indiana voters who said the economy was their number-one issue, Obama closed in the exit polls to a manageable 53-47 second place. But Obama didn't turn last night's result into an occasion for Clinton campaign eulogies on the strength of criticizing others for pandering. In fact, last night's game changer may have been a pander of his own, intended to score with the one critical constituency he had lost in the past month: the political media.

The Obama campaign is well-known and somewhat criticized for not engaging the media in what Howard Kurtz calls a courtship. While McCain treats the press as a base to flatter, and Clinton's team tenaciously works them like Mike Krzyzewski works the referees, the Obama camp stays aloof, playing hard to get. This has served a strategic purpose, magnifying the candidates overall allure and newish flavor. This is the source of Chris Matthews' famous "tingle-up-the-leg." But there's a flip-side to playing hard to get: if your pursuers manage to penetrate your mystery on their own, and they don't like what they see, the backlash sown can be significant.

That's precisely what happened in the long march to the Pennsylvania primary - Obama's mystique got penetrated in a number of negative ways, chief among them being his "bitter" commentary and the Reverend Wright fiasco. From there, the relationship between Obama and the media ended up in squarely in the third quarter of a matinée romance, in which the met-cute lovers divided over unforeseen differences. Obama started losing news cycles in droves, and the Pennsylvania loss only magnified the elitist meme.

In the final days before the North Carolina/Indiana primary, however, the media signaled that a reconciliation was possible. But their terms were clear: Obama had to "let people get to know him," and he had to play up his working class background. One of the constant refrains from yesterday afternoon's coverage was (and I'm paraphrasing/amalgamating): "How has Obama allowed the elitist tag to stick to him when it's Hillary who hasn't pumped her own gas for years?" A crude overture? Certainly. But it was a clear call for specific action: it was time for Obama to share.

It's been my impression that Obama - perhaps to a fault - seems to outright loathe having to do what the media expects of him. It's why he constantly insists that he's never going to change his style of campaigning (even as he does just that). There's been some obvious movement away from that position - Obama's newfound willingness to engage the Fox News Channel is a fitting example. But with the media stating explicit demands, and practically begging Obama to just let them give him a news-cycle win, Obama finally sucked it up and gave in last night, during his speech in North Carolina.

Here is the relevant text:

The people that I've met in small towns and big cities across this country understand that government can't solve all our problems, and we don't expect it to. We believe in hard work; we believe in personal responsibility and self-reliance.


But we also believe that we have a larger responsibility to one another as Americans, that America is a place, that America is the place where you can make it if you try, that no matter how much money you start with or where you come from or who your parents are, opportunity is yours if you're willing to reach for it and work for it.

It's the idea that, while there are few guarantees in life, you should be able to count on a job that pays the bills, health care for when you need it, a pension when you retire, an education for your children that will allow them to fulfill their God-given potential, that's the America we believe in. That's the America that we know.

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This is the country that gave my grandfather a chance to go to college on the G.I. Bill when he came home from World War II, a country that gave him and my grandmother the chance to buy their first home with a loan from the FHA.

This is the country that made it possible for my mother, a single parent who had to go on food stamps at one point, to send my sister and me to the best schools in the country on scholarships.

This is the country that allowed my father-in-law, a shift worker, a city worker at a water filtration plant in Chicago, to provide for his wife and two children on a single salary.

Now, this is a man who was diagnosed at the age of 30 with multiple sclerosis, who relied on a walker to get himself to work, and yet every day he went, and he labored, and he sent my wife and her brother to one of the best colleges in the nation.

And when he talked about his job, he expressed that it was important not just because it gave him a paycheck, but because it described his dignity, his self-worth, his self-respect. It was an America that didn't just reward wealth, but it rewarded work and the workers who created it.

That's the America I love. That's the America you love. That's the America that we are fighting for in this election.

In that section, Obama addressed every single one of the media's wishes: he told the part of his story that they specifically wanted to hear, elucidate an understanding of working-class people through the citing of specific examples, and framed the whole thing within a demonstration of patriotism.

It was, in essence, a pander, pure and simple, and a break from his traditional aloofness. But this was the part of the speech that got my attention: at that moment, I was convinced that the "split-decision" storyline - fully expected in advance and seemingly emerging, if a little delayed - was going to get flipped to a Clinton eulogy. Sure enough, that's precisely what happened - the speech got widely praised, Clinton's Indiana travails almost immediately shifted from "pulling out a gritty win in an uncertain state" to a bag of bad news (even when she was still up by four points!), and the whole matter culminated in Tim Russert's declaration that the race was over.

If there's an ur-narrative to the ways in which the media has bounced back and forth with favor, shown alternatively to one candidate or the other, I tend to steer away from the idea that it is a result of bias - though in individual circumstances, a bias is clear. I'm also cool to the lazy/fickle angle. I'd prefer to point out that if nothing else, the media enjoys the sturm und drang of this drawn out campaign, and they love their version of the storyline. Mathematically speaking, the nomination was decided a long time ago, but the press has seen to it that every possible twist and turn got amplified so that they might garner attention and eyeballs.

I don't want to diminish the actual work that the Obama campaign did in Indiana and North Carolina, pressing his case and working to appeal to voters. Similarly, one cannot overlook the tyranny of the math: at this point, Clinton would need to win sixty-five percent of all extant delegates - pledged and super - to secure the nomination. But the most significant event of last night's primaries came in that section of that speech. Obama finally broke with his own tradition of aloofness, begrudgingly honored the media's request, and provided their narrative with the next great plot point they were seeking.

And that's how Obama turned a tie into a win.

As yesterday's primaries started heading toward its climax, Barack Obama hit back hard on Hillary Clinton's gas tax proposal, referring to it as a "gimmick" attempt at pandering. The criticism may ha...
As yesterday's primaries started heading toward its climax, Barack Obama hit back hard on Hillary Clinton's gas tax proposal, referring to it as a "gimmick" attempt at pandering. The criticism may ha...
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- kgb999 I'm a Fan of kgb999 21 fans permalink

So basically what the MSM is saying: pander to us and we'll write nice things about you ... hell we'll write anything you want. But if you make us do our job, we will do a tabloid spread so harsh it makes beg for the chance to provide 'deep background' .... but don't worry, if you survive our attacks we'll give you another chance to pander better - just DON'T LET IT HAPPEN AGAIN (don't you LIKE donuts?) ."

We live in some fucked up times!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:30 PM on 05/07/2008

That would be what they are saying and yes, we live in some fucked up times.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 AM on 05/08/2008
- bascombe I'm a Fan of bascombe 30 fans permalink
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amazing lack of depth in the analysis

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 PM on 05/07/2008
- aceholiday I'm a Fan of aceholiday 4 fans permalink

it wasn't a tie. he was winning. terrible blog.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 05/07/2008

I think your analysis is stretching too much. Yes, he gave a mom-and-apple pie speech, but that's what politicians do. It's not really pandering so much as it is just about getting people to relate to him better, and they had that complain from as far back as Pennslyvania.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 PM on 05/07/2008

I get the impression that Sen. Obama is not a skilled panderer -- nor is Michelle. I remember her saying in an interview -- don't remember the comment exactly but do remember the point -- she said that she and Sen. Obama decided if he couldn't become President being their true selves than it would mean they misjudged what the country was ready for.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:58 PM on 05/07/2008
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...And neither should we. As world citizens, we can remain ourselves and not pander.
In this way President Elect Obama will be surrounded by like minds.

We all need to bring out more of the Barack in ourselves; and organize on our little patch of the planet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:12 PM on 05/07/2008

He can't wait for the day he can tell yall to kiss it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:56 PM on 05/07/2008

A dear friend who is half black/white explained something to me. She said when she heard comments that African American's were asking is he "black enough" it reminded her what it was like for her growing up trying to fit in and be accepted by white society and black society -- which resulted in confusion about who she was as a person. But when she turned 25 she realized she never should have tried and realized she was a person and that's how people should judge her, as a person not rather she was white enough or black enough but as a person. She said she can relate why Obama may not like drawing attention and talking about his mixed race family and up-bringing in order to get people to accept him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:47 PM on 05/07/2008
- robXdion I'm a Fan of robXdion 186 fans permalink
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And that mentality clashes with a society that always attempts to put you in a box. ANY box. Blacks have started to define being "black" as being darker. In the 70's-80's it didn't matter. There is a civil war going on within black culture or skin tone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 PM on 05/07/2008

I know, I have heard this from so many biracial people. It is sad we make anyone feel this way.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 PM on 05/07/2008

An older woman when being questioned about the African- American Obama said," He's not African- american. He's American! And so he is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 05/07/2008

Thank you Point 84 for the lead off. You hit the nail on the head. The man hasn't said ANYTHING that he did not cover in his books but there's the media to put their spin on his story to fit the story line they want to write themselves.

Reading IS fundamental.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:22 PM on 05/07/2008
- zbig I'm a Fan of zbig 3 fans permalink

The media can't understand that Obama's main concern is the voters, not the media. The media, with its reality distortion field, thinks it's all-important. Actually, for Obama, you're not, WE are. WE, the people. That's why he prefers to talk to PEOPLE rather than the media, because people are real, while the media is MANUFACTURED. Obama's actions are geared toward the people--and no amount of spin will change that. He may sometimes have to play defense thanks to the media's distortions, but that's about it.

Media, since you stopped doing your jobs, why not get a refresher course from Walter Cronkite--he's still alive. Maybe he can remind you what you're supposed to be doing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:16 PM on 05/07/2008
- hannitizer I'm a Fan of hannitizer 13 fans permalink
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Very well said.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 PM on 05/07/2008
- POINT84 I'm a Fan of POINT84 3 fans permalink
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You should read his books buddy, (both you- and the rest of the 'media') theres nothing really new to ANYTHING he's said in the last 13 months.

What a funny article- media accusing the media of creating narrative, while simultaneously trying to write his own narrative.­.everyones a pundit

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 PM on 05/07/2008
- zbig I'm a Fan of zbig 3 fans permalink

If you don't have time to read his books like a professional journalist who actually does research on his subject before writing about it, you can buy his audio books and listen to them on your iPod

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:28 PM on 05/07/2008
- drzoon I'm a Fan of drzoon 15 fans permalink

or get an intern to read them to you!

or read it for you... and take out all the big and boring words so its more "fun" for you

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:48 PM on 05/07/2008
- cmbaldwin I'm a Fan of cmbaldwin 12 fans permalink

Jason, all I can say about this article is....WHAT THE F**K! Now I've heard everything­...the headline should read 'OBAMA PANDERS TO MEDIA" - what a crock of bullcocka. I guess Obama penned that speech JUST to keep you media asswipes happy. This article is a WASTE OF SPACE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 05/07/2008
- eurydice I'm a Fan of eurydice 10 fans permalink

This is pale compared to the cutesy drivel Linkins puts out every Sunday AM on HuffPost regarding the Sunday morning shows.
Plus, he censors any criticism, so I'm typing this into the void.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:29 PM on 05/07/2008
- gjoh I'm a Fan of gjoh 6 fans permalink

"In that section, Obama addressed every single one of the media's wishes: he told the part of his story that they specifically wanted to hear, elucidate an understanding of working-class people through the citing of specific examples, and framed the whole thing within a demonstration of patriotism­."

Where have you been? His, and Michelle's, entire biography screams "working class". When did the American press change the black sterotype from urban poor to elite rich? Black's are, by knee jerk definition of most of the media, working class and underclass. Now all of a sudden Barack Obama is elite. How stupid do you think we are?
The reason the media missed this part of his story is because they are the elite. They are unfamiliar with the everyday problems of average Americans. He has been citing specific examples of his experience with working class people at every campaign rally, in his grass roots organizing during his early political career and in his personal life. The reason he gains ground with working class people once they meet him is because he does connect with them. He really does understand their problems.
Obama is a working class presidential candidate. The first one in a very long time. You didn't see it because you are not working class.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 05/07/2008
- hannitizer I'm a Fan of hannitizer 13 fans permalink
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Yes!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 PM on 05/07/2008

Jason, a gas tax holiday is pandering.
A victory speech from your next president is something else.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 05/07/2008

Oof. That's good.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 PM on 05/08/2008
- nellie I'm a Fan of nellie 497 fans permalink
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I disagree with the way you have framed the events. Disagree strongly. First:

"Obama's mystique got penetrated in a number of negative ways"

His "mystique" wasn't penetrated. Instead, the press came across video and sound that they could "slice and dice" and distort in order to paint a negative picture of Obama. The media then proceeded to pound that negative image night after night in a shameless barrage of attacks, employing with expert dexterity that old media standby: the double standard.

Second, I have to say you missed the whole point of the section of the speech you highlighted. And I'm surprised, because this has been the media talking point for weeks. This narrative was for the voters, not the press. It was for the press to disseminate, certainly. But the target audience is those elusive, white, blue collar voters that he wants to connect with. What he wants to say to the press, he says very directly:
http://youtube.com/v/zEJ2ZLkjqQI

What he says in his speeches is for the public.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 PM on 05/07/2008
- akkadian I'm a Fan of akkadian 6 fans permalink
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Obama runs a viral election campaign, that connects to people directly while bypassing the mainstream media.
Clinton and McCain run old-school campaigns which rely on manipulation of the media.
Obama raises his money from ordinary Americans who know that things can be done differently.
Clinton and McCain raise money from large vested interests seeking political favours.
Obama needs to win to fulfil the hopes of the American people that have invested in his candidacy.
Clinton and McCain need to win in order to repay the big money donors that have invested in their candidacy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 PM on 05/07/2008
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