Wednesday Aug 06, 2008

Koch's Comments: Obama's mistake

Posted by Ed Koch
Comments: 13
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Last week, I wrote of the recent successes of Senator Barack Obama -- his trip abroad to Iraq and Europe and his reception in Germany where 200,000 people came to hear him speak and cheer him. I compared Obama with Julius Caesar, evoking Caesar's boast of "Veni, Vidi, Vici."

But Caesar also made his share of mistakes. This week, I'm writing about a gaffe by Senator Obama, in which he appeared to be playing what has come to be known as "the race card."

On August 1st The New York Times summed up the situation: "Senator John McCain's campaign accused Senator Barack Obama on Thursday of playing 'the race card,' citing his remarks that Republicans would try to scare voters by pointing out that he 'doesn't look like all those other presidents on the dollar bills.'" The Times went on to state, "The exchange injected racial politics front and center into the general election campaign for the first time, after it became a subtext in the primary between Mr. Obama and Senator Hillary Clinton."

The Times' reference to the primary relates primarily to the fallout from former president Bill Clinton's remarks concerning Senator Obama when he said, "Give me a break. This is the biggest fairy tale...," referring to Obama;s anti-Iraq war efforts, and Clinton;s comparing Obama;s victory in South Carolina where he received 92 percent of the black vote with Rev. Jesse Jackson;s similar victory. Bill Clinton;s remarks were attacked by Obama supporters as racist. Clinton who had a well-deserved reputation among African-Americans as being "our first black president," was, and it appears continues to be, outraged by this accusation.

Is the McCain campaign's charge that Obama is playing the race card valid, in view of Obama's recent remarks on his own appearance compared to "other presidents?" I think so. Others do not agree.

New York Times op-ed columnist Bob Herbert wrote on August 2nd, "So there he was this week speaking evenly, and with a touch of humor, to a nearly all-white audience in Missouri. His goal was to reassure his listeners, to let them know he's not some kind of unpatriotic ogre. Mr. Obama told them: 'What they're going to try to do is make you scared of me.  You know, he's not patriotic enough. He's got a funny name. You know, he doesn't look like all those other presidents on those dollar bills, you know.  He's risky."

"What they're going to try to do is make you scared of me." The meaning of those words could not be any clearer. McCain, he is saying, will try to scare you by constantly raising the fact of Obama's race. But McCain has not said any such thing. The thoughts that Obama attributes to the McCain campaign came out of Obama's mouth, not McCain's.

The Obama campaign quickly realized that Obama made a serious mistake, and is now backtracking. According to Newsday of August 1st, "...Obama campaign manager David Plouffe said, 'We weren't suggesting in any way he's [McCain] using race as an issue.'" 

Really? Then what were they suggesting?

Obama has used this tactic before. The Times reported on August 1st that Obama stated in June, "We know what kind of campaign they're going to run. They’re gong to try to make you afraid of me. 'He's young and inexperienced and he's got a funny name. And did I mention he's black?'"

Steve Schmidt of the McCain campaign said, "The McCain campaign was compelled to respond to this outrageous attack because we will not allow John McCain to be smeared by Senator Obama as a racist for offering legitimate criticism. We have waited for months with a sick feeling knowing this moment would come because we watched it occur with President Clinton. Say whatever you want about President Clinton, his record on this issue is above reproach."

CNN political analysts Roland Martin, radio talk show host, himself an African-American, and David Gergen had the following insights on the use of the race card in the presidential race. In discussing the issue, moderator Wolf Blitzer, asked, "Roland, when - when Senator Obama says Republicans will try scaring voters because he looks different than other presidents on dollar bills, what do you think he means by that?"

Roland Martin responded, "The problem here is that he tried to link Bush and McCain specifically with those comments. Now, you might have bloggers, you might have conservative talk show hosts, you might have columnists who are making all kind of comments like that, who are raising these whole - these various issues. Frankly, Obama made a mistake. And that's why they did change their tune. They haven't even wanted to talk about it even further. And, so, when the candidate brings that up, you need to have facts to back it up, if you're going to link to it. That's why the McCain comment was very specific. He said, we did none of this. Obama's mistake was not saying the larger sort of arena people who might be supporting McCain, those folks may be making these kinds of comments. That's a mistake he made. They must own up to the mistakes they made."

Gergen responded, "I agree with Roland. He went too far. But it is also true that, in all of the - that, in the overall Republican attacks, race has not been directly mentioned by McCain and his campaign, but it's been heavily hanging over the attacks."

In politics, like no other field of endeavor, the wheel constantly turns, and will turn again. Stay tuned.

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1  |  Daniel - Atlanta, Thursday Aug 07, 2008
Ed, you might have a point IF the Republican Party had not played the race card in every presidential election since 1968 (remember the Nixon tapes?). That strategy is entrenched in Republican politics. How do you think they got the South? It wasn't because they liked julips. It was the race card, played low and under the table and in the gutter. Bush played it against McCain in 2000 in South Carolina. McCain learned. His campaign is using race now. So, don't be fooled. McCain's campaign is playing the race card for sure. I grew up in the racist South and recognize the tactics all too well.
2  |  steve - dallas, Thursday Aug 07, 2008
Obama was trying to blunt all attacks as racism. However, there are some attacks worth making such as his inexperience. His experience is a joke. Things are so weird this year that the people have refused to key on this issue even against Hillary. This is 1976, and Jimmy Carter all over again. Jimmy Carter had only 4 years governing experience in Georgia and that was it. Things were so stupidly weird that even the Democrat Ed Koch stayed away from him. Jimmy Carter preached the same line.... Love thy enemy!!! UGH!!!!!
3  |  David Katcoff, Jericho, Vt, Thursday Aug 07, 2008
I don't care what any candidate looks like as long as they act like a Republican and quack like a Republican. Now maybe they can look like a Republican, but they may be only be a duck.
4  |  Jay Houston, Thursday Aug 07, 2008
You know the old mantra is in play here. If you lie often enough, people begin to accept it as the truth.
5  |  Alphonse Denayer, Thursday Aug 07, 2008
Obama was a member and supporter of an organization characterized by its leader as following a doctrine propounded by Black Liberation theologists whose politics were based on Marxism and a belief that the principles on which our country is founded are fundamentally wrong. This has been Jeremiah Wright's consistent message for the past 30 years, with Obama sitting in front of him. It is the message that attracted Obama and why Obama referred to him as a mentor until the truth became inconvenient. Obama is about nothing but “distributing the wealth”, dismantling western civilization as it now exists, government control of society and the means of producing capitol, and apologizing for the values that make the U.S. a great nation. In brief, he is a Marxist nihilist.
6  |  steve-atlanta, Friday Aug 08, 2008
steve-dallas.. there were some in the UK gov't that thought Carter was a Russian mole and I believe we can lay the current middle east to our friend Jimmy... He did everything he could to get rid of the Shah in the name of human rights... much of what Carter claimed has been discounted...Carter made deals with the crazy mullah who doublecrossed Carter and made the administration ineffective in foreign policy. Carter was by far the worst president we've had.. If the marxist obama is elected we may see the carter years looking pretty good.....
7  |  JB Canada, Friday Aug 08, 2008
On another CNN program Gergen explicitly said that he thought the subtext of the McCain ads was ' By the way did I mention that he's black'. I don't know where Gergen got this inference, and I don't know where Obama got the 'other presidents' inference, whether or not it was racial. Its irrelevance to the discourse is itself enough to prove that it was a racial counter-slur.
8  |  Alan-USA, Friday Aug 08, 2008
Black, White, Red, Yellow...It's not about color, it's about Obama's LACK of Experience, His Judgement, His Associations and Incompetency. He is the second coming, of Jimmy Carter. Carter's solution to the energy "crisis" of the 70's, "Wear Sweaters." Obama's solution, "Inflate your tires." Neither advocates INCREASING supply. Problem exists. Problem persists. Platitudes and speeches don't solve problems, ACTION does. The choice in this election is Black and White (NOT COLOR) but Competent-Incompetent, Ready to Lead-Not Ready to Lead. And there is only ONE race-The HUMAN Race
9  |  David Migdal - Manaus Brazil, Saturday Aug 09, 2008
David .Migdal- Amazonas -Friday Aug 08, 2008 How we can expect someone like Obama to administrate a country like the USA. He never was a governor apparently never had positions of leadership. Like every good speaker he can convince masses to yell, to make people think that ever thing is wrong in the country. But besides talking and promising what he can do to change the world, to change people's mind. The American institutions luckily are an example for the liberal word, and the other part of the liberal world is trying to imitate those institutiuons.
10  |  Spencer Schein Lynbrook New York, Saturday Aug 09, 2008
Experience should count. What exactly is there in McCain's experience as a politician that shows he is anything but a hack? After all those years in the senate, he says he knows very little about economics. Shouldn't that be enough to have the Republicans looking for a competent candidate? I still can't get past Obama's duplicity about his relationship to his church and Rev. White, but I know I can't vote for another clueless Republican after two terms of dismantling of our constitutional rights, unregulated and toxic financial markets, environmental degradation, and profligate spending.
11  |  BobfromIowa, Sunday Aug 10, 2008
the Russians and Iranians will promptly challenge Obama and our electorate to produce the next war president. God help us that I.T.E.R. works because we can unload resisting these monsters and make our plastics, medicines and you name it out of coal and run our cars of from hydrogen peroxide like we ought to be. I just don't see how we can realistically oppose the russians with a supply line from here to Georgia. We are about to be proven out as ineffective over there and then there will be the Russian giant to pay for passage of the oil through the disputed region.
12  |  edward shorr richfield way boynton beach, fl 33437, Sunday Aug 10, 2008
about 1 year ago, i told my friends that i thought obama was the most dangerous man in america! they all thoughht i was suffering from a fall on my head. furthermore, i stated that this election would be a landslide; mccain getting about 40 states. now, they thought i was suffering from alzheimers. well, just about all of my friends will be voting for mccain and the other part of my prediction remains to be seen.
13  |  Geza Cseri, Mc Lean VA 22101, Wednesday Aug 13, 2008
There is racism in this election regadless how you slice it. When, according to the polls, 90% of the Black- Americans are voting for Obama just because of the color of his skin. That is racism. If 90% of Assians would be voting for a candidate of Asian decent that would be racism also. We need to step outside of our skin and vote for the one who is best qualified with integrity,forsight and realism. Unfortunately, Obama is like a ball of mercury that you cannot hold on to because he is all over the place. He has charisma and he is a good prompter reader but that is all. Wish it otherwise.
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Koch's Comments New York's legendary Jewish former mayor Ed Koch scopes out the scene in the US.

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