After Hillary Clinton fell off of her white horse with a third-place
finish in Iowa and by barely edging Barack Obama in New Hampshire
despite a 17-point lead just two weeks before the election, “Billary”
Clinton are playing the race card by unfairly accusing Obama of
injecting race into the presidential contest. Billary -- Bill and
Hillary – have forcefully attacked Obama after his victory in Iowa, a
state that is 94.6 percent White and New Hampshire, with a population
that is 95.8 percent White. Heading into the South Carolina primary,
they accuse him of playing the race card by exploiting an insensitive
remark Hillary uttered about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. In an
interview, the former First Lady said, “Dr. King’s dream began to be
realized when President Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964…It
took a president to get it done.” Bill Clinton attempted to
engage in damage control by calling Black radio talk shows, including
one hosted by Al Sharpton, to contend that his wife’s comments were
taken out of context. Hillary, in an interview on NBC’s “Meet the
Press,” said, “This is an unfortunate story line that the Obama
campaign has pushed very successfully. I don’t think this campaign is
about gender, and I sure hope it’s not about race.” A White presidential contender, John Edwards, also criticized Hillary. “I
must say I was troubled recently to see a suggestion that real change
came not through the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, but through a
Washington politician. I fundamentally disagree with that,” the former
senator from North Carolina said at a Baptist church in Sumter, S.C. Because he disagreed with Hillary, does that mean that somehow Edwards also injected race into the campaign? The
New York Times obviously doesn’t think so. In an editorial, the
newspaper said Hillary “Came Perilously Close to Injecting Racial
Tension” into the contest. It stated, “Why Mrs. Clinton would compare
herself to Mr. Johnson, who escalated the war in Vietnam into a
generational disaster, was baffling enough. It was hard to escape the
distasteful implication that a black man needed the help of a white man
to effect change.” Hillary Clinton understated the contributions
of Dr. King and now she and her high-profile surrogates are trying to
blame Obama for her mistake. The candidate has dismissed Hillary’s
accusation as “ludicrous.” Bill Clinton didn’t make matters
better by referring to Obama in “fairy tale” terms. He would later
declare that he was referencing Obama’s position on the war in Iraq.
But Michelle Obama, the candidate’s wife, doesn’t see it that way. In
a visit to the state in November, she made it clear that in contrast to
Hillary Clinton’s upper class background, her husband has lived
anything but a fairy tale life. “Dream of a president who was
raised like Barack was by a single mom who had to work and go to school
and raise her kids and accept food stamps once in a while,” she said.
“Imagine a president who knows what that’s like.” It is no
accident that as we move closer to Feb. 5, when voters in 22 states
will cast their ballots in primaries and caucuses, that the Black vote
will take center stage in the Democratic contests. According to
the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Blacks make up 56
percent of the Democratic electorate in Mississippi, 47 percent in
South Carolina and Georgia, 35 percent in Maryland, 33 percent in
Virginia, 23 percent in Tennessee, 20 percent in New York, 15 percent
in Missouri and 14 percent in Ohio. In fact, with its January 26
voting, South Carolina becomes the first state to showcase the Black
vote and an Obama victory there would force Clinton to have a strong
showing on Super Tuesday or fold her tent. That’s why she’s racing to
play the race card. If the polls are accurate – and after New
Hampshire, no one can count on that anymore –Hillary Clinton might be
headed for a loss South Carolina. A poll released Sunday by the
Public Policy Polling in Raleigh, N.C. shows Obama holding a 42-37 lead
over Clinton among likely Democratic voters, followed by South
Carolina-born Edwards with 16 percent. In a key finding, Obama has
overtaken Clinton among Black voters and now holds a 68 percent to 19
percent lead, with Edwards getting only 4 percent. Hillary
Clinton can only beat Obama is if she can persuade Democratic voters
that he is unelectable or somehow she is more deserving because of her
last name. At the ballot box, Obama is dispelling both myths and it is
therefore no wonder that Hillary Clinton is having to play the race
card and have her husband pretend he is running for a third term.
Next Column:
Voters Focusing on Ideas, not Race
Back To Columns |