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Democratic Party divisions deepen as Obama parades military
support
By Patrick Martin
14 March 2008
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The rival campaigns for the Democratic Party presidential nomination
intensified their mutual mudslinging over race, gender, and political
tactics, as the two candidates each vied for support among the
top party officials and corporate interests that will tip the
balance in the closely contested race.
Senator Barack Obama responded to criticism by the Clinton
campaign of his lack of national security experience by appearing
Wednesday with an array of retired generals and admirals who have
endorsed his campaign. The display was a calculated response to
Clintons appearance in the company of a similar assemblage
in Washington the week before.
Obama sought to square the circle, making simultaneous appeals
both to antiwar sentimenta major factor in his rise to frontrunner
statusand to the Washington political elite, which views
a bloodthirsty willingness to use military force as a key qualification
for the presidency.
Without mentioning Clinton by name, Obama rebutted her claim
that she and the presumptive Republican candidate, Senator John
McCain, have demonstrated qualifications on national security,
while Obama has not.
After years of being told that Democrats have to talk,
act and vote like John McCain to pass some commander-in-chief
test, Obama said, how many times do we have to learn
that tough talk is not a substitute for sound judgment?
The day before, at a campaign stop in Mississippi, he mocked
the Clintons campaigns now-notorious red telephone
ad, which suggested that Clinton but not Obama could be relied
on in a middle-of-the-night crisis. What do people think
Im going to do? he asked. Im going to
answer the phone, adding, and I wont be browbeaten
into launching a war that wasnt necessary.
Also Tuesday, the Obama campaign made a vitriolic attack on
Clintons argument that her residence in the White House
as First Lady from 1993 to 2000 gave her national security credentials.
Gregory Craig, who served as one of Bill Clintons principal
lawyers at his impeachment trial, denounced this claim, saying
of Mrs. Clinton, She never managed a foreign policy crisis,
and there is no evidence to suggest that she participated in the
decision-making that occurred in connection with any such crisis.
As far as the record shows, Senator Clinton never answered the
phone either to make a decision on any pressing national security
issuenot at 3 a.m. or at any other time of day.
Obama himself made a less sweeping critique at his Wednesday
appearance with the retired military officers, responding to press
questions about whether Hillary Clinton was qualified to be president
by declaring, Yes. As I believe Senator McCain is, and as
I believe I am. Keep in mind though, I think it is fair to say
Senator Clinton has deployed this as a political strategy.
He added that he did not expect Democrats to be making
these arguments against fellow Democrats, and concluded,
Certainly, if Senator Clinton were the nominee, John McCain
will make this exact same argument against her.
A spokesman for the Clinton campaign, Howard Wolfson, responded
by repeating the claim that Obama was unqualified. Senator
McCain might make the argument, he said, but it wouldnt
stick because Americans know that, unlike Senator Obama, Senator
Clinton has passed the commander-in-chief test.
Instead of rejecting the entire premise of the Clinton attackswhich
tacitly invoke the fear of terrorism to justify American militarismObama
seeks to frame his response as a demonstration of greater party
loyalty on his part. Ive been careful to say that
I think Senator Clinton is a capable person and that should she
win the nomination, obviously I would support her, he said
Wednesday. Im not sure that weve been getting
that same approach from the Clinton campaign.
This was a reference to the logical consequences of Clintons
attacks: by declaring that she and McCain are qualified to be
commander-in-chief, while Obama is not, Clinton is paving the
way for a section of her supporters to bolt from the Democratic
Party and go over to McCain if she fails to win the nomination.
This criticism of the Clinton campaign was echoed by the most
powerful Democratic Party official who is still publicly neutral
on the nomination, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. In comments to
a television station in Boston Tuesday, repeated on Capitol Hill
to a group of reporters Wednesday, Pelosi declared that there
was no possibility of a joint Clinton-Obama or Obama-Clinton ticket,
and she clearly placed the blame on Clinton.
I think that ticket either way is impossible, Pelosi
said. I think that the Clinton [campaign] has fairly ruled
that out by proclaiming that Senator McCain would be a better
commander-in-chief than Obama.
Most of Pelosis closest allies in Congress are supporting
Obama already. Pelosi will be the permanent chair of the Democratic
National Convention, which opens at the end of August in Denver,
Colorado. This position gives enormous influence if process issues,
such as the seating of contested state delegations, prove to be
important in determining the eventual nominee.
Foreseeing that the likely result of current trends is a narrow
Obama lead in delegates, the Clinton campaign has sought to revive
its claims for delegates from Michigan and Florida, two states
that violated party rules by moving their primaries forward into
January, and were penalized by the loss of all 366 delegates.
The Clinton campaign has raised the demand for seating the
delegates from the two states, both of which Clinton won, although
neither primary was contested. In Michigan, Clinton was the only
major Democrat on the ballot, and in Florida none of the candidates
campaigned, to avoid penalties threatened by the Democratic National
Committee.
The back-and-forth conflict over national security credentials
came as the nomination campaign enters a lengthy pause, following
the primary Tuesday in the state of Mississippi, which Obama won
easily, taking 60 percent of the vote to 37 percent for Clinton.
One third of the electorate and more than half the Democratic
primary voters in the state were African American, and exit polls
suggested a clear racial polarization, with 90 percent of black
voters backing Obama, and nearly 75 percent of white voters backing
Clinton.
The Mississippi vote completes a concentrated period of 43
primaries and caucuses in nine weeks, which have failed to determine
the outcome of the nomination fight. Only nine primaries remain,
and there is now a six-week break until the April 22 Pennsylvania
primary, with 181 delegates at stake. Another 189 delegates will
be chosen May 4 in Indiana and North Carolina.
With his comfortable wins in Wyoming and Mississippitwo
lightly populated statesObama largely offset Clintons
narrow victories March 4 in the big states of Ohio and Texas and
reestablished the lead of just over 100 delegates with which he
began the month.
The lead was bolstered by the results of protracted vote-counting
in earlier primaries. Last week Obama gained eight delegates in
California and several in Texas, on top of the net gain of seven
in Wyoming and Mississippi. He also added the vote of the newly
elected Democratic congressman in Illinois, Bill Foster, who won
a March 8 special election, while Clinton lost the vote of New
York governor Eliot Spitzer, who resigned Tuesday.
According to an Associated Press tally, Obama now has 1,598
delegates and Clinton 1,487, counting both pledged delegatesthose
elected in primaries and caucusesand superdelegateselected
officials and party officers who are free to switch their votes.
Since only 595 delegates are still to be chosen in the remaining
primaries and caucuses, and these will be divided relatively evenly
because of proportional representation, it is effectively impossible
for either candidate to reach the total of 2,025 required for
nomination simply by winning pledged delegates.
The decision will be in the hands of the 796 superdelegates,
about half of them not yet committed publicly. The two campaigns
are waging an increasingly ferocious and unscrupulous struggle
to gain their support.
While the Clinton campaign has focused on a right-wing attack
on the issue of national security, the Obama campaign has resorted
to inciting racial polarization. The focus was an attack on former
congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro, the 1984 Democratic vice-presidential
candidate and a prominent Clinton fundraiser.
The Obama campaign dredged up comments by Ferraro to a suburban
Los Angeles newspaper last week, noting the obvious fact that
Obamas campaign owes much to his identity as the first African-American
candidate with a real chance to win the presidency. She compared
his success to her own selection as Walter Mondales running
mate in 1984, due mainly to her gender, not her position as a
relatively obscure congresswoman.
These comments provoked an avalanche of media commentary, much
of it overwrought, such as a diatribe by Keith Olbermann of the
cable network MSNBC, who compared Ferraro to David Duke. Ferraro
resigned her position with the Clinton campaign, but refused to
retract her remarks, repeating them in several television appearances
over the next few days.
While Clintons campaign is effectively blackmailing superdelegates
with the prospect of a split over national security issues if
Obama is nominated, the Obama campaign is making its own none-too-subtle
threat that black voters will stay home if Clinton is nominated.
This threat was underscored by the remarks of two prominent
black clergymen, Rev. Eugene Rivers of Azusa Christian Community
church in Boston, and Bishop Charles Blake of Los Angeles, a leader
of the Church of God in Christ.
Rivers denounced the criticism of Obama as a virtual
race war, politically, and attacked Clintons much-publicized
suggestion that Obama could become her vice-presidential running
mate. Blacks arent going to sit back while the winning
candidate is told to sit at the back of the bus. Blake added
that if Obama was denied the nomination, there could be a sharply
negative reaction among black voters, and their whole motivation
for participating in the political process in this election would
be greatly reduced.
See Also:
Clinton's national security campaign
and Obama's political dilemma
[10 March 2008]
Clinton victories in Ohio, Texas intensify
divisions in Democratic Party
[6 March 2008]
Obama, Clinton debate in Ohio:
What accounts for the bitter struggle within the Democratic Party?
[28 February 2008]
The two faces of Barack Obama
[14 February 2008]
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