Dems Not Backing Obama? Rahm Will Deal With It

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Dems Not Backing Obama? Rahm Will Deal With It stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS


First Posted: 06-13-08 10:35 AM   |   Updated: 06-21-08 05:12 AM

I Like ItI Don’t Like It
Obama And Rahm

As the man who guided (and pressured and arm-twisted) Democrats to historic congressional gains in 2006, what is Rep. Rahm Emanuel doing now about party members like Rep. Dan Boren who have balked at publicly endorsing Sen. Barack Obama?

Emanuel interjected before I could get my question out.

"Look, I talked to Dan, and I talked to all those guys," he said. "I'm not worried. I just think that's all -- it's reporters who, you know, just a little too much..." He trailed off, perhaps cognizant of present company. "If you had a real problem, I would deal with it. But it's not a problem."

As proof, Emanuel references Indiana Rep. Brad Ellsworth, another Democrat who hasn't yet endorsed Obama. "Brad's got flooding in his district, his people are flooding," he said. "If you ask Brad what he's doing in November, he'll tell you: he's voting for Barack Obama. If you ask Boren, 'I'm voting for Barack Obama.' I mean, it's what they're doing in November, for those guys, that matters. Not what they're doing today, when they're working on their districts. And they'll support their candidate."

The famously acid-tongued Chicagoan may be right, Democrats like Ellsworth and Boren may not pose a problem. But the Republican National Committee is sure trying to make them one. GOP officials have blasted out press releases highlighting Boren's claim that Obama has the "most liberal" voting record in the Senate. "You go ask Boren," Emanuel says, "he'll tell you his view is that that was taken out of context, that he is going to support the nominee."

(He was right: "My comments were taken out of context and as I have said from day one I will vote for the Democratic nominee in November," Boren told The Huffington Post.)

As for Rahm, his support was never in doubt. "I put my life into electing Democrats, okay?" he says.

And so it's understandable when he describes in some detail the agony of being forced to spend the entire 17-month Democratic presidential primary on the sidelines. "I didn't want to get between two friends. This is not what I want to do. I don't want to choose... I talked to Hillary today, she's a friend of mine. Why do I want to be in a position of picking between two friends?"

Story continues below

He continues: "It was a personal level." The Clintons are "dear friends" who he worked for "intimately," and "unlike others" in the Clinton administration, he notes, Bill Clinton came to campaign for him when he ran for office. "Everything I asked Bill Clinton or Hillary Clinton to do when I was chair of the [Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee], they did willingly. For the DCCC, Bill Clinton went to 36 districts, countless emails for fundraising, countless fundraisers around the country. There's not a thing I asked him or her to do that they didn't do. Now I'm not going to -- maybe other people can easily throw that away, but I wasn't going to do that."

On the other hand, Barack and Michelle are friends, he says. "I've known him a long time. We used to sit around helping our governor get elected, help those strategy meetings, stuff like that."

Indeed, they share the same political breeding ground. I asked him about the phrase "Chicago-style politics," ubiquitous in profiles of both him and Obama. "Chicago-style politics? Well, first of all, politics is our all-season sport... People always know somebody or someway or somehow to make it into politics, it's not some distant thing. Look at today, just pick up the paper. The Speaker of the House, who's a Democrat, is the one encouraging people to file articles of impeachment against the governor, who's a Democrat. That usually how we do it?" He laughs. "So that's Chicago-style politics. A lot of elbows, a lot of tackling."

And Obama is a candidate with sharp elbows who can win, Emanuel notes, before ticking off a series of states won by George Bush that he thinks may go blue in '08: Colorado, Virginia, New Mexico, Nevada -- he stops himself. "But that's not for me, that's for the [Obama] campaign." He veers back to the electoral map. "I would also put Ohio in that category."

But for all his optimism about the national trend towards Democrats, he remains skeptical that Howard Dean's 50-state strategy has much to do with it. "Surely it didn't have anything to do" with the three straight Democratic victories in special House elections this year, two of them in overwhelmingly Republican districts. "I know what we did. I know what the race was about in each of those cases, and what won it. We had superiorly recruited our candidates this cycle. They had inadequate candidates."

As for Emanuel's personal political future, I ask him about the Robert Novak column that suggested he was eying Obama's potentially soon-vacant Senate seat. "Please..." he mutters. "First of all, it did not say that, it said the Speaker wanted me [to run], it didn't say I wanted to. Just go read the piece." I said I thought there was a presumption in the story that Emanuel himself wanted the spot. "There was no presumption. So let me just disabuse you of presumption."

For the record, he was right about Novak's piece. I am disabused.

As the man who guided (and pressured and arm-twisted) Democrats to historic congressional gains in 2006, what is Rep. Rahm Emanuel doing now about party members like Rep. Dan Boren who have balked at ...
As the man who guided (and pressured and arm-twisted) Democrats to historic congressional gains in 2006, what is Rep. Rahm Emanuel doing now about party members like Rep. Dan Boren who have balked at ...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
596
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next › Last » (10 pages total)

Obama's Carville?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 06/13/2008
- Indubio I'm a Fan of Indubio 25 fans permalink

Party loyalty has a long history in American politics but sadly it'sa major impediment to effective democracy. Rhetorically...where should one's loyalty lay...with party or nation. Publicly,Emanuel says nation; privately my guess is he's more circumspect equality loyalty to party platform with loyalty to nation. America is facing unprecedented domestic/foreign problems that have building for years and that have been exacerbated by 28 years of counterproductive Conservative policies. We need serious political change before tackling economics. Democratic leadership is represented by people wedded to liberal social ideology but with respect to economic and foreign policies, they're a party of big business as much as the GOP. The plethora of 2007-08 small donors could change things but I suspect Democratic leadership prefers a modified economic status quo in spite of overwhelming support by voters for serious change (imagine Congress voting to regulate the oil indusry as a public utility?). On something as basic as war, Democratic leadership is tepid on withdrawal as if they're being asked to do something against their will.

This county needs political change but I don't believe we'll get it unless there is near or full economic/environmental collapse. What is Emanuel fighting for: My sense is political power not a nation. While it's nice to see Democrats fighting back I'm not sure it's going to make a difference because few Democratic leaders want real political reform as it could terminate the two party system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 06/13/2008
- alguien I'm a Fan of alguien 16 fans permalink
photo

growing up in san diego i know what you're talking about. party loyalty is one thing but if a candidate for public office is a democrat AND a member of the ku klux klan, you kind of half to vote repub.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 PM on 06/13/2008
photo

What the f.. is going on Huffpo?

My replies are all under the wrong comments!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 06/13/2008

Sometimes there are "glitches" in the filters on the website. Be glad you get posted and not inadvertently banned. Win some, loose some.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 06/13/2008

I was wondering where Mr. Emanuel's been. I guess it really must be difficult when two friends are running for the same spot. I hope to see more of him about. And Russ Feingold too! Where's he been?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 06/13/2008
- wmbear I'm a Fan of wmbear 24 fans permalink

O-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-OH...

The Enforcer!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 PM on 06/13/2008
photo

Exactly.

(You beat me to it)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 PM on 06/13/2008
photo

*****
5 star comment!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 PM on 06/13/2008
- Wanjiru I'm a Fan of Wanjiru 13 fans permalink
photo

...I love Rahm Emmanuel...

...actually, I'm loving the pitbull Democrats (Ted Kennedy, Joe Biden etc)...

...pitbull Democrats stand up!... and let's put these Rethuglicans to rest once and for all this November!...


Obama 2008!

.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 PM on 06/13/2008

Rahm is great. He eats nails for breakfast!! Can we clone him???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:41 PM on 06/13/2008
- jsarets I'm a Fan of jsarets 185 fans permalink

So if Daschle is O's Chief of Staff, then Rahm is his Congressional Whip?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 06/13/2008
- jsarets I'm a Fan of jsarets 185 fans permalink

Boren is getting skewered for his anti-endorsement. What a miscalculation on his part.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 06/13/2008
- jupitor I'm a Fan of jupitor 2 fans permalink

this is a misleading post! No one needs to be pressured to endorse. It's their bussiness who they endorse and private who they vote for. Boren had the right to come out when he please's, and it was not any big deal to obama, so why is it a big deal to any one alse! this is a none news post, and we need real meat. We need issue comparison between Obama and Mccain. news that shows us why Mccain is not ready or good to be president. We don't need this past history that was a none issue in the beginning.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 PM on 06/13/2008

Your headline is very, very misleading!!

"As for Emanuel's personal political future, I ask him about the Robert Novak column that suggested he was eying Obama's potentially soon-vacant Senate seat. "Please..." he mutters. "First of all, it did not say that, it said the Speaker wanted me [to run], it didn't say I wanted to. Just go read the piece." I said I thought there was a presumption in the story that Emanuel himself wanted the spot. "There was no presumption. So let me just disabuse you of presumption."

For the record, he was right about Novak's piece. I am disabused."

Did you yourself not read the column before you asked the question or were you just trying to trick him?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 PM on 06/13/2008
- gintheb I'm a Fan of gintheb 8 fans permalink

That's right Rahm's, get them in the knee caps baby!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 06/13/2008
- Brettster I'm a Fan of Brettster 10 fans permalink
photo

Rahm is a very smart guy, but I don't like his wing of the Democratic party. I hate his feud with Howard Dean too, I definitely take Dean's side. The 50 state strategy is EXACTLY what the party needed to do forever. Sure, it's long term. It's paying off though, and it will continue to pay off in spades if they stick to it. It's a losing strategy to just forfeit over half the country, and continually forfeit more and more. That's the losing Democratic party right there. Dean has changed it. The party is winning these days, and it's almost like the older establishment can't handle it. Emanuel is one of those Democrats who thinks that the party needs to shift right simply to win elections, act like diet republicans. I just hate that. The party simply needs to stand stronger for its progressive ideas and have a backbone. the chief concern I get from people about the party is simply that they're weak and spineless and don't ever do anything like impeach George W. Bush. It feeds this stereotype that they're all the same.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 PM on 06/13/2008
photo

Love ya Rahm, Barack , Axelrod....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 PM on 06/13/2008

Who am I to know anything, but my reading is that if Rahm is now fully backing BO (and even has the pretense of being the enforcer), it means that BO has said something to appease the Zionist wing of the Dem party. And if that is the case, and if BO is now beholden to that wing, I really don't see much change in our Middle East policy, and I see BO just being in charge of a kindler and gentler 100 year war, of which we are the mercenary proxy fighters.

I hope I am wrong, but reading up on Rahm's background (his father was a terrorizer for the Zionists during their breaking away from the British), and all the other scuttlebutt about Rahm's role in the Clinton Whitehouse, especially during Clinton's failed Israel/Palestinian peace negotiations, my audacity of hope just went down a couple of notches.

As I said, I hope I am wrong...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 06/13/2008
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next › Last » (10 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect