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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

 

It is tempting to simply dish on the details of last night, by noting how Barack Obama was far more magnanimous toward Hillary Clinton than she was toward him. Or how Clinton signaled her intention to remain a major player in the '08 campaign (I want the nearly 18 million Americans who voted for me to be respected"). Or how Obama signaled his intention to make her a major player in an Obama administration ("When we finally win the battle for universal health care - and we will win it - she will be central to that victory").

It is also tempting to simply dish the speculation, by wondering how well Clinton will pivot from her stated belief that the presumptive Democratic nominee lacks the requisite commander-in-chief credentials, to her inevitable claim on the stump that Obama is actually qualified after all. Or wondering how the elaborate dance between the two will actually play out, with Clinton presumably expecting Obama to make the first big overture about an autumn role, and with Obama presumably deciding to play it cool for awhile, because, after all, he's the nominee and chasing after her would look like a sign of weakness.

All this, and more, is great grist. But let us pause instead and simply acknowledge this historic American moment before it inevitably becomes subsumed by the day's political minutae:

An African-American has been chosen to lead a major party in a presidential election. In the space of four decades, the unimaginable has become reality.

When Obama was born on August 4, 1961, southern blacks could not sit with white patrons at lunch counters, or drink from the same water fountains, or use the same public toilets, or sit where they wanted on buses. They were routinely denied the right to vote. Civil rights workers known as Freedom Riders, who rode buses across state lines to protest segregation in transportation, were often dragged from the vehicles that spring and summer, and beaten with tire irons. Even accomplished black citizens got little respect; when NAACP lawyer Thurgood Marshall met that spring with attorney general Robert Kennedy to discuss the possibility of being nominated for a federal appeals court seat, RFK told him, "That's the problem with you people. You want too much too fast."

Even as recently as five years ago, the Democratic party - the self-advertised party of diversity, which officially vowed in 1973 to "achieve full participation of minorities...in all party affairs" - boasted not a single black U.S. senator, or black governor. And the two blacks running for president in 2004 were not worth any serious ink; the Rev. Al Sharpton had a long, sometimes sordid history of racial polarization, and Carol Moseley Braun was a former one-term senator who got dumped by the voters after a series of ethics violations.

Obama, joined in 2007 by Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, are the only black Democrats currently holding statewide elective office (Harold Ford came close to winning the Tennessee Senate race in 2006), so one can't exactly say that political integration has truly been achieved. But it can be argued that Obama's historic ascendence will pry open a lot of doors that will only swing wider over time.

It is also important to mark his other historic achievement, one that has often been overlooked, particularly during his spring season woes:

Hard to believe, but he was not always the frontrunner. He came out of nowhere and defeated the most prominent female politician in America (and arguably the world), someone who is wedded to the only two-term Democratic president of the last 60 years, someone who supposedly would blow out the competition (especially a freshman senator) thanks to a combination of organizational muscle and financial prowess.

And it's important to remember that the political media (the same media that Bill Clinton whines about today) basically declared her the winner last year before a singe citizen had cast a vote. Indeed, on the day Obama announced his candidacy, The New York Times took care to remind readers that Clinton was dominant, due to her "years of experience in presidential politics, a command of policy and political history, and an extraordinarily battle-tested network of fundraisers and advisers."

Yet without any serious executive experience, Obama oversaw a $250-million campaign operation that, among other achievements, pioneered new frontiers in small-donor Internet fundraising, captured the "change" theme and owned it, and managed to survive 16 months of unprecedented battle without any changes in senior campaign personnel. Clinton lagged in the money contest, lost out on "change," and had to overhaul her hierarchy. She was consistently reactive. She was outfought, although she remains too graceless to acknowledge it.

Obama is probably tempted to savor this moment in history, to reflect however briefly on how far he has come, in defiance of the odds, and on his implicit message to aspiring non-white Americans. (Indeed, by sheer coincidence, he will deliver his Democratic convention acceptance speech on the 45th anniversary of Martin Luther King's "I Have A Dream" speech). But this moment for Obama probably will have passed by the time you read this.

So, for instance, what message did Clinton mean to convey last night when she merely lauded Obama and his supporters "for the race they have run," as opposed to showing some grace and praising the race they have won...let the dish begin.

Posted by Dick Polman @ 1:29 AM  Permalink | 44 comments
Comments   
Posted 12:29 PM, 06/05/2008
chazzbo
yobill, I like the town hall idea, and don't necessarily see this as fear in GOP eyes. This helps both candidates with an opportunity to go face to face with voters. Neither can claim the other is treated fairly (or themselves unfairly) by "agenda" journalism. And both will have to think on their feet, and I want to know the guys running for office can do just that.
Posted 10:35 AM, 06/05/2008
yobill626
Yesterday I saw two different Hillary supporters who stated they were insulted that she had the gall to appear to try to negotiate their GE votes to Obama. I certainly agree with that, but I have a question: If you know & support Hillary, why would you be shocked when she shows that she has "gall"?
Posted 10:10 AM, 06/05/2008
JeffA
This idea that Hillary supporters need to be kissed up to is a crock. They will have to wake up on election day and live with their own decision as an American. They can vote McCain, Obama, 3rd party, or not vote at all. But they and they alone need to decide what they will do regardless of how Hillary is treated. Personally, I think her handling of the loss has been ungracious. She's choosing her words carefully "lawyering'em up" so as to leave open all options to leverage something out of Obama in return for her delegates. Only the strong backlash from powerful Democrats has been able to force any kind of surrender out of her. She risks being cut out of any meaningful role in the Senate. She risks a tough primary challenge in NY as well at the end of her term. She has much to lose and little to gain at this point.
Posted 09:25 AM, 06/05/2008
suzym
hey djoko pritza what i said was "obama wants to increase the payroll tax for the not so rich" ... why would he choose to pick on people like myself who do struggle to get by
Posted 07:23 AM, 06/05/2008
pog
Isn't enough that Obama has won more delegates? You're setting Hillary up for the 'Ralph Nader' 2008 award. She's damned if she does, damned if she doesn't. Obama has the lead and could not put her away. Last time I checked, he'll need those votes too. Just keep driving the Hillary supporters away. Nice work.
Posted 03:21 AM, 06/05/2008
p-diddy
Maybe Obama should offer McCain the VP spot. You know, political compromise.
Posted 12:42 AM, 06/05/2008
judas_priest
Another PhillyDem: Read it a bit more carefully. Although it was inelegantly written, Polman did mention Patrick. Patterson was not elected Governor but succeeded on the resignation of Spitzer. (While Patterson was a statewide elected official as Lt-governor, he was elected as the seondary part of a combined ticket.)
Posted 12:02 AM, 06/05/2008
yobill626
Well, McCain finally threw down the gauntlet by challenging Obama to 10(?) Town Hall type meetings. Great idea for Americans, although one has to wonder, only the candidate who thinks he has the better chance of losing suggests this. The GOP is beginning to show their fear...
Posted 11:44 PM, 06/04/2008
p-diddy
I have no doubts about Obama's political toughness. We all know what's coming, as it has already started - they're trying to brand Obama as a terrorist sympathizer. They'll try to make it sound as if the fears are about Obama's policies, but the smear campaign is actually based on two things: that's he's black and has an Arabic middle name. It's not a very sophisticated attack, and I think Obama will counter it just fine.
Posted 10:01 PM, 06/04/2008
Djoko Pritza
Xi Jah -- You're just babbling.
Posted 08:34 PM, 06/04/2008
Mike H in Cali
A year ago, who would have thought Obambi could defeat Hillzilla (and Bubba King Kong). Now he must make sure to keep that monster off his ticket.
Comment removed.
Posted 05:13 PM, 06/04/2008
redshoes
Don't ignore the nearly 18 million people who voted for Hillary in the primaries. An Obama/Clinton ticket is the way for the Democrats to win in November.
Comment removed.
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Posted 04:35 PM, 06/04/2008
Djoko Pritza
Hey, suzym, get a clue. You’re buying the fraudulent Laffer curve that Republicans have used to roller-coaster this country to virtual fiscal insolvency. Guess who benefits from a philosophy of tax cuts for the rich as a solution for every problem? The rich! Duh! And the powerful – those who take their tax cuts and spend a tiny portion to finance the campaigns of Republicans, who then push for more tax cuts. That’s wonderful – as long as you don’t look at the debt the country owes, the price of gasoline, the unstable financial markets, the crumbling infrastructure, and the inability of most people (probably not you) to get by. But continue your tax fantasy. Then check back in a few years to see how your kids are doing. I suggest you investigate the truth of the claims Republicans make to support tax cuts before you go along with their seductive fairy tale.
Posted 04:04 PM, 06/04/2008
Rauol Duke
Didn’t Hillary say if you can not stand the heat get out of the kitchen? Tell me why this does not apply here? I have never seen this much complaining coming from a non-republican campaign. But that was Hillary’s problem; she ran a republican campaign in the democratic primary and her legions where so blinded by the possibility of a female president; they failed to see that she was the wrong women at the wrong time. These people need to take a step back and reassess this fiasco and realize she lost because she acted like she was entitled to this and her so called Dream Team did know the what they where doing. Never under estimate the stupidity of the American public. These are the same people which voted for TWO TERMS of George W. Bush. Let’s hope that this campaign was truly transforming for Hillary and she is capable of returning to the senate with a true populist mentality and fill the void of Ted Kennedy.
Posted 04:00 PM, 06/04/2008
JeffA
SuzyM - I'll bite. How will you repay all the $ America has borrowed over the past 7 years? Bush and the bankers have expanded money supply and driven debt up from 5 trillion to over 9 trillion. Major private banks are borrowing from the Fed and foreign investment banks in Saudi Arabia, S.Korea and Dubai. If Revenue doesn't go up, then spending must go down. If McCain gets in, the Bush policy stays in place and we keep passing deficit budgets. Which decade will America run out of equity? And do we want that legacy for future generations?
Posted 03:58 PM, 06/04/2008
jwad56
I am glad Hillary lost cause she would have easily won the general election but now it will be a race.
Posted 03:19 PM, 06/04/2008
yobill626
BOHICA --- Have to tell you that your comment was very "un-PC" --- but hilarious! Not far from the truth, however. In college, its OK to stay at parties too long. I guess the Clintons still think they're in college...
Posted 03:02 PM, 06/04/2008
suzym
if obama wins in november ... he promised all of you whose salaries range from 95,000 and 250,000 a big payroll tax ... and that's a pretty big range .. don't ya think??? did you obama supporters know this fact???
Posted 02:57 PM, 06/04/2008
LJL
"Muslims have been raising havoc in the world for the last 40 yrs..." Yeah, and the Jews and Christians have been innocent victims. Are you trying to write the textbook example for "generalization"?.....Here's a great stat: John McCain - Graduated 894 out of 899 in his Annapolis class. Can you say "dim bulb"?
Comment removed.
Posted 01:56 PM, 06/04/2008
Djoko Pritza
Down in the Basement, fbpdplt and Patrick M all remind us why it’s important to get the Democrats organized and beat McCain. Their nasty, negative, distorted comments reflect what the Republican Party has become under the neocons. Not only is the GOP repulsive, but it is totally incompetent and has left this country on its knees. Small people, small minds.
Posted 01:46 PM, 06/04/2008
p-diddy
Senator Clinton ought to have graciously accepted defeat last night. She didn't even acknowledge that she had lost. Now she's trying to use her vote totals to force Obama to give her a good job in his potential administrations. You don't go about it like that. You don't publicly campaign for a cabinet position. Lord help us. Have some dignity for crying out loud. She's like a little kid playing checkers who flips the board when she realizes she's lost.
Posted 01:30 PM, 06/04/2008
Patrick M
Historical moment, indeed. The day the liberals stopped whining about Hillary and started whining about Sen. McCain. Same whine, different day.
Posted 01:12 PM, 06/04/2008
Down in the Basement
I am sure Dick Polman is having "orgasms" that his candidate won... I don't even have to read the article to know this...Obama would be a disaster for America...maybe Americans need to ruin their country to appreciate it... t_dmanns...you think Wes Clark is great? Tell that to all the Serbs he helped slay when he led the invasion of Serbia...against UN directives... Wes Clark is a has been...and a cowboy, who is out of control...other than that, he would make a terrible vice president...
Posted 12:33 PM, 06/04/2008
politicod
Dick, you focus on the right thing. This is indeed an historic moment for the DNC as well as the USA. The fact that Hillary Clinton did not take a moment to signify that fact reminds me why the entire Democratic pary apparatus lined up to support Obama at the end of the campaign. It also tells me why in vote after vote across America, Democrats are saying "no" to Hillary as vp. Today, as AIPAC following a speech by Obama, she sounded more like McCain than the Senator from Arizona. I think putting her on the ticket would be a big mistake.
Posted 12:17 PM, 06/04/2008
Djoko Pritza
The most amazing thing to me was that as Clinton piled up wins and big majorities in the late primaries, the superdelegates weren’t buying her arguments and kept lining up behind Obama. Those are the most knowledgeable people who were following the contest, the ones with the most to lose in the fall. Although Ed Rendell said he couldn’t understand it, it is plain that the party people didn’t want the Clintons (plural), didn’t think she could more easily beat McCain than could Obama. I was opposed to Hillary from the beginning because, although I had voted for Bad News Bill twice, I could not stand the idea of him back on center stage. As it turned out, he was even more pathetic than I had anticipated.
Posted 10:51 AM, 06/04/2008
chazzbo
And if he caves to the Clintons and puts her on the ticket, how can we expect him to stand up to anybody else, like Congress, or Iran, or North Korea, etc etc?
Posted 10:42 AM, 06/04/2008
anotherPhillyDem
Dick, Thanks for putting last night into perspective. But when you say Obama is "the only black Democrat currently holding a statewide elective office," what about the 2 governors (Patrick and Patterson) in Mass. and New York?
Posted 10:42 AM, 06/04/2008
t_dmanns
VPs I'd get behind... Wes Clark - Military experience Jim Webb - Ditto Ed Rendell - Helps you win PA
Posted 10:22 AM, 06/04/2008
JeffA
Hillary hard-core supporters vowing to never support Obama will commence in 3 - 2 - 1 ...
Posted 10:20 AM, 06/04/2008
JeffA
Just the thought of Bill Clinton in and around the White House again, spouting off about this-that and the other, is enough to drop any thoughts of HRC as Veep.
Posted 10:18 AM, 06/04/2008
JeffA
Hillary's lack of grace is very telling.
Posted 10:12 AM, 06/04/2008
syj
what si so ironic is that months ago any Obama gaffe was blamed on his youth and inexperience and many thought his mistakes were proof of his lack of readiness for this job. As the race unfolded the more experiences candidate continuously stumbled and looked more and more desperate. At the end of this contest the more experienced candidate managed to make herself seem unfit for the presidency. she lost her cool and appeared petty, angry and selfish. while some of Obamas missteps may be understandable considering his lack of experience there is no excuse for Clinton's lack of composure and ill advised comments.
Posted 10:11 AM, 06/04/2008
Wally
The country (and the Democrats) need to come to their senses and finally elect someone with character and good judgement - Obama. Clinton's selfish refusal to concede is now hurting that possibility.
Posted 09:54 AM, 06/04/2008
yobill626
One of the great things that has come out of this l-o-n-g primary process is that it is clear what the personal characterisitics are that drive these candidates. Although smarter, Clinton has shown that she has some of Bush's horrible characteristics (with an extra helping of pettiness). When the primaries started, I was a Clinton supporter. Despite her strengths, now I can't wait for her to leave...
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Posted 09:29 AM, 06/04/2008
Political Junkie
Robo has it right. I originally supported Senator Clinton over Senator Obama because I thought the Republican mastery of fear and smear would eat him alive if he were nominated, and that Clinton was better able to handle it. I switched to Obama several months ago when it was clear that he and his staff were smarter than I gave them credit for; the primary process also hardened them a lot. I am now confident that Obama can handle any slime the Republicans will surely throw at him and go on to win in November.
Posted 09:09 AM, 06/04/2008
robo
No doubt in looking back Obama will be able to see how historic his journey has been....but he has handled Clinton.....he can handle anything after this!
Posted 09:02 AM, 06/04/2008
jack russell
Hillary Clinton 2012
Posted 07:07 AM, 06/04/2008
jack russell
dick-obama won the race and you are still bashing Hillary Clinton,obama is in a tuff spot because he cannot win with out Hillary,all the Hillary bashers now they have to pander to Hillary if they want obama to win.
Posted 07:04 AM, 06/04/2008
vc bear
The real telling thing this morning was Google News. Google picks its stories and prioritizes them mathmatically. They use an Algorithm to stack rank them and change the stories constantly as the flow of intenet clicks show what the eye balls are looking at. THERE WAS NOT ONE STORY ON HILLARY ON GOOGLE NEWS THIS MORNING. Follow the eye balls. For a good read go to Micheal Powells NY Times piece on Obama. ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE IN AMERICA! Lets savor an important moment in American History. THE WHOLE WORLD IS WATCHING what liberty loving people can do.
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About Dick Polman

Cited by the Columbia Journalism Review as one of the nation's top political reporters, and lauded by the ABC News political website as "one of the finest political journalists of his generation," Dick Polman is a national political columnist at the Philadelphia Inquirer. He is on the full-time faculty at the University of Pennsylvania, as "writer in residence." Dick has been a frequent guest on C-Span, MSNBC, CNN, NPR and the BBC. He covered the 1992, 1996, 2000, and 2004 presidential campaigns.

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All commentaries posted before April 18, 2008, can be accessed at www.dickpolman.blogspot.com.