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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Obama In Nc

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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- kdubbg I'm a Fan of kdubbg 13 fans permalink
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Umm. if the MSM actually read a book they might have known all that before. I can't remember if he talked about his father-in-law's MS, but all the other stuff has been repeated again and again.

The reason he was "playing aloof" is that he sees through the media's horse race mentality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 05/07/2008

Smerconish read his books and has been saying it all along... Yay!!! for one person in MSM that actually did some research!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:37 PM on 05/07/2008
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That speech really worked its magic on the MSM naysayers. Joe Scarborough was practically gushing last night and this morning. Thank god for guys like Keith Olbermann, Jack Cafferty and Tim Russert who knew the score all along and continued to support Obama. Chris Matthews is the swinger of all times when it to dissing or not dissing the candidates. Obama put everyone on their notice last night. GO OBAMA...YE­S HE DID!!!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 PM on 05/07/2008
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Chris Matthews is the most fickle of political commentatoers. I think he was sad that HIllary didn't do as well as expected. He didn't seem to happy last night. He is like a weather vane. I truly do not respect his political judgnment despit the years in politics.H­e is vain and superficial.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 05/07/2008

Sorry, Jason, I don't buy it. Obama's story has been out there all this time for the media and everyone else to see. Dreams from My Father became a bestseller after his keynote at the 2004 convention. Michelle Obama has been telling her (and his) personal story all around the country for nearly a year now. Just because Obama added a few lines to his post-primary speech doesn't mean he was pandering to the media. He may have been responding to the onslaught of criticism from the media that he is an elitist, but I think that is a little different that pandering.

You say "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 agree with that. The media has manufactured controvers­ies/issues to keep this thing going because it makes them money and keeps them the center of attention.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 05/07/2008
- BlueAsh I'm a Fan of BlueAsh 5 fans permalink

I agree--the sheer size of Obama's NC victory forced the press to acknowledge what had been established for sometime--that Clinton had lost. You say here that Obama "pandered," as if wishing he'd be clobbered again by the press. Hadn't he gotten clobbered enough? How many political candidates can withstand that kind of assaults, from all different directions, and survive? Isn't that one of the reasons that his victory is all the more significant?

He was a winner--it was a win, not a tie, even though each candidate won one of the two states. He gave a speech that a winner would give.

This whole business of Hillary coming up from behind is sheer b%%#$ (pardon my language). She had always led in name recognition, political machines on the ground, and the polls, but she was also losing, bit by bit, simply because of how she, or her campaign, conducted itself. If Obama had more time to cover Pa, he might have won that state as well.

The sheer truth is: the more people get to know Obama, the more they like him. There is little game playing or acting. Though matured, he has remained pretty much true to who he was when the campaign started.

Sure, there are always people who end up not liking him as much--nobody gets loved by everybody, but there is enough substance to this man that most people respond in kind.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 PM on 05/07/2008

Jason:

You need to get over yourself - Obama and his wife have been telling their life stories in speeches for nearly two years. Obama wrote two books about his life and perspective.

No matter how often he tells his story there are Americans who would prefer to believe in the myths and lies because it fits in with their bigotry and racism. Obama will never win these people over.

Just as there is a segment of the population who will never vote for Hillary no matter how far to the right she goes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:40 PM on 05/07/2008

I think I am going to Vomit!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 PM on 05/07/2008
- N8Ma I'm a Fan of N8Ma permalink

What a minute---

THE MEDIA ARE NOT A CONSTITUENCY.

They are a CONDUIT for information, right? Do they honestly now think of themselves as just another pig at the trough?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 PM on 05/07/2008
- flabingo I'm a Fan of flabingo 7 fans permalink

Reagan was able to govern with likeabilty. To a lesser extent Bush Jr. did the same thing. Hillary could not be an effective governor since she is not likeable by many people, and her character flaws are many. The Clintons did not help Gore and they will sit on their hands for Obama

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 05/07/2008
- Furby I'm a Fan of Furby 66 fans permalink
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Trying hard not to call you an idiot because personal attacks are no way to discuss ideas. Bush Jr. governed through likeability?? Good grief man, get out from under that rock will ya.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 05/07/2008
- elr50 I'm a Fan of elr50 20 fans permalink

I did not like Reagan, and I HATE George Bushit Jr. Both of them appeal only to idiots and party zealots who don't THINK and follow like trolls.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 PM on 05/07/2008
- musselmanm I'm a Fan of musselmanm 20 fans permalink
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Man, I do not like the Clintons but I believe that they were not invited much to help with the Gore campaign.
There was a problem with a lie while Bill was president about some oral sex. Gore did not think that would be too awful helpful for his candidacy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 PM on 05/07/2008
- S1m0n I'm a Fan of S1m0n 98 fans permalink
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It was one of the more bizarre and disjointed acts in Hillary Clinton's bizarre and disjointed campaign. 24 hours after declaring that the whole race had changed, and that the contest was now about the economy, not the war, Hillary Clinton began preaching a flat-earth economic proposal and hillariously denouncing all economists--indeed, all non-idiots--as "elitists" who didn't know nuthin' 'bout sellin' no gas. She could not have done a better job of destroying all hope of representing herself as a competent steward of the economy if she'd tried.

It's time to ask: did Hillary Clinton have a death wish, or was she really that stupid all along?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 05/07/2008

David Axelrod et al seem to know what they're doing. This time last year, who'd have thought Obama had even a 2% chance?

It was Hillary's to lose, and she lost it in February. The Obama campaign did a good job weathering the inevitable Wright storm, managing expectations and grinding it out.

I don't think she would have made a good general election candidate based on her performance.

I just hope he learns from McCain and this signals a better relationship with the press.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 05/07/2008

Obama put together a fantastic team and built a 50-state organization from scratch. And he won. That alone demonstrates leadership. After Obama's eight years in office, each member of the campaign team will be able to write their own tickets. They are truly impressive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:36 PM on 05/07/2008
- LeeinJax I'm a Fan of LeeinJax 2 fans permalink

J.L. "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"

I was fascinated by the candor of Russert at times last night. Not only in acknowledging that the Democratic candidate is now known, but also in confessing his disappointment that there would be no brokered convention.

You are right, Jason, they just love, love, love this stuff. For them, the process IS the point.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 PM on 05/07/2008

My favorite moment was when Kieth Olberman asked Chris Matthews if it was over, and after a short pause, Chris just said

"yes"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 05/07/2008
- LeeinJax I'm a Fan of LeeinJax 2 fans permalink

I cheered, applauding equally the singular brevity and the sentiment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 05/07/2008
- omaro I'm a Fan of omaro 3 fans permalink

Yes it was a good speech, summarizing important narrative points, all of which he has made many times before. It was a good time to repeat these points, since national attention was focused on him, but it was hardly a pander--just Obama, turning smoothly toward the general election.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 05/07/2008
- OrionGal I'm a Fan of OrionGal 10 fans permalink

I thought his speech last night was excellent, and very emotional to me.

Obama seems to not want to share his vulnerabilities, yet when he does, we see more of who he is. This is what the people want, yet I think he's 1. trying to be the tough man because Hillary was pushing him into the corner 2. he's waiting for a bit until he can use this vulnerability against McCain.

Well, that's my perception of his strategy. I could just be delirious because last night went so well!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 05/07/2008

Jason,

I can't believe you didn't cover Lanny Davis' tantrums/breakdown on CNN. It was jaw-dropping.

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

Lanny was a wounded dog last night....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 05/07/2008

Not so much....I'­d want to bring a wounded dog home and nurse it back to health (like my spaniel Snix). Lanny.....­my first thought was euthanization. Lanny does not work and play well with others.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 PM on 05/07/2008
- lotuslike I'm a Fan of lotuslike 8 fans permalink

And the shocking "we can't win with African Americans and eggheads" rant of Paul Begala earlier in the CNN election broadcast. Not surprisingly, msm has really made no mention of these meltdowns.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:12 PM on 05/07/2008

AA and Eggheads? I used to think more of Begala. Actually I used to consider him to be a really smart politcal analyst...­you know, an EGGHEAD. Fuck him.

Guess what folks, there are enough (white Blue Collar) people who voted for Obama and enough people who do not want another 4 years of Bush that Barack will have ZERO problem winning THE PRESIDENCY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 PM on 05/07/2008

OMG. i THOUGHT I was the only one who saw that . Did you see Donna Brazile challenge him to the equvalent of a duel? Hilarious!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 PM on 05/07/2008

I know! He is always obnoxious, but last night I really thought he was going to lose it! He was attacking Paul Begala and David Gergen for Godsakes..­.. One of the things I'm really looking forward to is not having to hear his awful voice after Hillary drops out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 05/07/2008
- Endy I'm a Fan of Endy permalink

LOL... you nailed, it as an adult I felt so ashamed for him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 05/07/2008
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One, more thing. In what realm does more delegates, popular votes, and states won constitute a tie?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 05/07/2008
- nomobull I'm a Fan of nomobull 45 fans permalink
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only cnn

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

"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."




I think the "Clinton Eulogy" could have been written months ago. The Math was there for them if they actually wanted to write that "storyline"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 PM on 05/07/2008

I have seen all of the speeches as well and I tell you this speech is ranked #2 in my book over taking his SC speech and of course no speech I have heard is as good as the PA speech "A More Perfect Union". I can't wait for the State of the Union speech come January/February.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:52 PM on 05/07/2008

Obama is going to be an amazing President. Honest, compassionate, intelligent, worldly. The polar opposite of Bush. Thank you NC and Indiana for allowing us to move this campaign forward. It's time to take on McSame.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 05/07/2008

I echo your sentiments­... THANK YOU NORTH CAROLINA!!!!! THANK YOU INDIANA!!! and THANK YOU THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA!!!!
We are coming together.. we have the motivation and the will to make this great nation one for its people again. I'm a 52 year old half japanese and half caucasian woman who is active duty military.. and while I have been proud of my nation many times in my life... I can honestly say that I have greater pride now in my nation than at any time in my life.... I love you UNITED STATES!!!!!

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

What about the DNC 2004 speech. That was the first time I saw Obama and sais I want hin to run for president.

I can't wait for the State of the Union either.


Very much looking forward to debating McSame

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 PM on 05/07/2008

Same here! That keynote speech took me back to the days of Jack and Bobby Kennedy.

Soon our dreams of a better future will be realized.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:48 PM on 05/07/2008

Aug 28, 2008. While it may not stand out to many as a unique day... just imagine what it will be like. The last day of the convention and the first African American candidate takes the stage for his speech. Then think back 45 years to the day...

Aug 28, 1963 - During a 200,000-person civil rights rally in at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., Martin Luther King, Jr. gives his famous I have a dream speech.

Talk about historic moment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:40 PM on 05/07/2008
- bbrecht I'm a Fan of bbrecht 19 fans permalink
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wow!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 PM on 05/07/2008
- Chris Weigant - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Chris Weigant 177 fans permalink

BLinCincinnati -

Wow, that's a good point. I stole this idea for my blog posting here on HP today. If you'd like, I can rewrite it slightly to give you credit for where I saw the notion first.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/chris-weigant/august-28th----a-good-dat_b_100703.html

Write me at chrisweigant.comeigant.com in the next day or so and I'll give credit where credit is due. To avoid spam, that email address will get shut off in a few days, though.

-CW

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:26 PM on 05/07/2008
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