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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Mmmmm... just shows the media is so full of themselves.
they believe they can (and they do no doubt) influence the course of many events - Iraq War for instance, and they have fueled hilary's flagging candidacy - but i think it is obvious to them now that that donkey can't be whipped any longer....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 05/07/2008

This is another example of a word (ie pander) being used once properly (ie to Clinton's gas tax proposal) and then subsequently being applied to everything without thought. Witness the recent overuse of the term elitist. Simply telling people what they want to hear is not necessarily pandering.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 05/07/2008

Excuse me, Jason, but with all due respect: What the hell are you talking about? What the media wants? What the media demands? The media wants to be pandered to? I'm sorry, but I thought it was the media's job to report who, what, when, where, why and how. You're saying that it's the job of the candidates to honor the media's request, and provide "their narrative with the next great plot point they were seeking." Do you know what you're implying with this? No wonder this country is in the mess its in. What on earth are they teaching in the journalism schools these days? Sheesh!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:36 PM on 05/07/2008
- cosmic I'm a Fan of cosmic 7 fans permalink

totally agree

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 PM on 05/07/2008

you hit the nail on the head SouthFloridaDem, it's the media's job to report the news, not create and demand the agenda. Some of Mr. Linkin's posts make sense, but this one is just plain stupid. Did you lay awake at night thinking this stuff up?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 05/07/2008

I loved his speech last nite. He has gone back to his original uplifting and inspiring message. The MSM know that what they tried to make people think about Obama isn't working. Chris Mathews and Andrea Mitchell, Lanny Davis all looked literally sick.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 05/07/2008
- cosmic I'm a Fan of cosmic 7 fans permalink

that's the general election Obama, the same we saw at the Dem convention last year. it's a whole new race!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 05/07/2008

This sounds like insight, but it isn't. Obama had his win before he opened his mouth last night. It came at the moment when the networks called North Carolina for him--in other words, at 7:30 p.m. It was already obvious by then that Hillary was not running away with Indiana. She might eke out a victory, but Obama was doing a lot more than eking.

I'm not saying there was no pandering in the part of the speech quoted above. There was. But it wasn't to the press. It was to the eoople who accused him of being elitist or unpatriotic. It was to the voters. It was a strange kind of pandering, at that. I think Obama meant every word of it. But I also think he wouldn't have said it if he hadn't been criticized on these grounds. It was a response to several attacks, and quite an effective one, I think.

I don't like the picture of the press that you're painting here, Jason. You make it sound like it needs patting on the head and occasional gifts. I think Obama is offering something much greater that that, something much more rare. It is authenticity. And I believe the press is just as taken with that as is the general public. Obama would disappoint us if he pandered. I think he knows that. And I don't think it is in his nature to pander.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 05/07/2008
- OrionGal I'm a Fan of OrionGal 10 fans permalink

Authenticity - wow.

In my generation, we are finally using the word 'Authenticity' when describing a presidential candidate.

Thank you for writing so eloquently. I do believe an occasional pat on the head does help us all. I guess it's how that pat is given, there is an artistry involved. 8-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 PM on 05/07/2008
- cosmic I'm a Fan of cosmic 7 fans permalink

yeah, but this was over after Wisconsin, and maybe after Missouri

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 05/07/2008

"I think Obama is offering something much greater that that, something much more rare.."

Outstanding HarveyArdman.... Yes, he is the REAL thing... I just hope that the rest of the nation can see that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:27 PM on 05/07/2008
- Maka I'm a Fan of Maka 11 fans permalink

Oh, good Lord.

Leave it to someone in the media to essentially say Obama won last night because the media is letting him win today. Now, I have no doubt the media plays a significant part in spinning how a candidate is perceived by some Americans, but I think Obama won last night because he frickin' got more delegates than Clinton did, and more people voted for him despite being hammered for weeks on end by a MSM salivating over one guilt by association charge after another.

Perhaps, the MSM finally realized what fools they'd look like if they went on and on this morning about how it's still a tie, when:
1) the math doesn't add up that way
2) some of Clinton's own supporters have started in with the "it's time to step aside" chorus
3) despite "Operation Chaos", Obama still managed to pull within a few percentage points in Indiana
4) it doesn't look like any of the recent and ongoing scandals had much of an impact on voter's decisions. No matter how hard the MSM tried to do just that.

So it seems to me, Obama won last night because a majority of Americans MADE him win, and the MSM is just now catching up to the reality of that.

But don't worry, it's a long time till November. I'm sure the MSM will be right back to flogging whatever dead horse the GOP can dig up on Obama before too long.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 05/07/2008
- westreal I'm a Fan of westreal 16 fans permalink

Jason Linkins is off his rocker. I really wanted to say he's an idiot but I'm giving him the benefit of the doubt. All these months of Obama talking and you come to the "realization" that he's sucking up to the media. What?

The media was begging to give Obama a "win cycle"? WTF? The media could have done that by simply not reporting on Rev. Wright. It would have been very easy for them to do since the polls showed voters were completely tired of it and wanted to hear nothing more of Wright. But noooo. That same media who wanted to give him a win cycle ramped up their Wright coverage and bittergate.

I'd hate to be on the media's bad side if this is how they show their love for you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 PM on 05/07/2008
- DRaymond I'm a Fan of DRaymond 65 fans permalink
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The number one bias in the press isn't liberal or conservative. The press is biased toward a good story. Saying that yesterday was a tie that would allow the march to continue was Pennsylvania's story. The story that Obama finally had put Clinton away in North Carolina was a new story. The story that Clinton's win in Indiana was so narrow it could have been the result of Republicans trying to keep things going is a new story. The new six million plus dollars in loans is a new story. That the clock had finally run out was a new story. for once Clinton could not lower the expectations. The story about her continued viability was built on a steady increase in momentum with increasing the margins through the end of the primaries. The expectations simply were not met. That was the new story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 05/07/2008

I'd say the evidence lately points to the media being biased toward bad stories. And the badder, the better. What does that say about how far the profession has fallen?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 05/07/2008

Remember all the Excitement years ago upon the arrival of the Hindenberg?
Coming this Fall to a Polling Place near you, HINDENBERG! the sequel staring the "O"man as himself Barry Hussein Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 05/07/2008
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You are a moron.

Signed;
John Hussein Levy

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 PM on 05/07/2008

shut your piehole, ChiMan. Or learn to lose with grace.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 PM on 05/07/2008

That magnificent speech was a "pander?"
My goodness, cyncism is too prevalent.

Let the man lead, and let the American public rally around causes (as Reagan "used" the public to push policy).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 05/07/2008
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Wonderful,­insightful commentary. This is why I read the Huffington Post., it is the place for politics!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 PM on 05/07/2008
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I guess what this post is saying he needs to do Taco Bell with the press. "feed the Beast".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 05/07/2008
- sherbug I'm a Fan of sherbug 50 fans permalink

What did he say last night that he has not said before. We all know his story. Why is it now so endearing to the press? The next gaffe by Obama will have the MSM roasting him over an open fire like always.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:08 PM on 05/07/2008
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"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."

Careful! If you pat yourself on the back any harder than that you'll dislocate your shoulder.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:07 PM on 05/07/2008

Sorry Jason, but Obama has no need to play up to the MSM's short-sighted love affairs. He has stood on principal day in and day out, and well, you and the rest of overly self-important journalists may as well get used to it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 05/07/2008
- Savanarola I'm a Fan of Savanarola 5 fans permalink

What aself-righteous, self-serving, self-congr­atulating, auto-erotic puffery and fauousness.
The Media have been coopted by their corporate bosses and the word jouranlism is only next to whoredom in its moral elasticity. When you guys try to make yourselves the story, you bring shame to what used to be a profession.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 05/07/2008

Wow, thanks. You said what I was thinking, but much more candidly than I did.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 05/07/2008
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