Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton should take a page from Denzell
Washington’s character in the movie “American Gangster” and cut out the
middle man. Presidential surrogates are engaging in slash and burn
politics while the candidates posture as being above the fray, above
the personal attacks. If this continues, Democrats won’t have to worry
about a Republican beating them in November because by then, they would
have defeated themselves. This was clearly demonstrated by BET
Founder Robert L. Johnson’s back door attack on Obama. Johnson is a
long-time supporter of the Clintons and a major Democratic fundraiser.
Campaigning for Hillary in Columbia, S.C., Johnson said: “As an
African-American, I’m frankly insulted that the Obama campaign would
imply that we are so stupid that we would think Bill and Hillary
Clinton, who have been deeply and emotionally involved in black issues
when Barack Obama was doing something in the neighborhood that – and I
won’t say what he was doing, but he said it in his book – when they
have been involved.” It was clear that Johnson was referring to
Obama experimenting with drugs during his youth. Obama wrote about the
subject in “Dreams From My Father,” his 1995 memoir. If using
drugs disqualifies one from being president, neither Bill Clinton nor
George W. Bush would have been elected. Bush was noted for his heavy
drinking and who can ever forget Clinton’s tortured explanation of his
experience with marijuana – he tried it but didn’t inhale. Under
increasing pressure, Johnson issued a statement claiming that he had
been “referring to Barack Obama’s time spent as a community organizer
and nothing else. Any other suggestion is simply irresponsible and
incorrect.” Asked about Johnson’s comment during a debate in Las
Vegas, Hillary Clinton said, “Well, Bob has put out a statement saying
what he was trying to say and what he thought he had said. And we
accept him on his word.” In the end, it turned out that Bob Johnson had been the one irresponsible and incorrect. Black surrogates of Clinton in particular will go to any length to engage in slash and burn politics. Rep.
Charles Rangel defended Hillary Clinton’s poorly phrased comment that
although Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was a civil rights leader, it took
President Lyndon B. Johnson to sign civil rights legislation into law.
Obama called Clinton’s comment “ill-advised.” Rushing to the
defense of Clinton, Rangel said it was “absolutely stupid” for Obama to
attack Hillary for her comment and claimed that Obama, not Clinton, had
needlessly injected race into the presidential contest. “How race got
into this thing is because Obama said, ‘race.’” Rangel said in an
interview on NY1-TV. Civil rights icon John Lewis, another
Clinton middle man, could not resist joining the anti-Obama bandwagon.
After describing Obama as “a friend,” Lewis declared, “He is no Martin
Luther King Jr.” Come on John, despite your many contributions, you are
no Martin Luther King,Jr. Nor were Roy Wilkins, Whitney Young, Bayard
Rustin, Andy Young or even Martin Luther King III. There was only one
Martin Luther King Jr. and no one should look for a reincarnation of
him. NBA great Earvin “Magic” Johnson, who is 6’9,” is also one
of Hillary’s biggest supporters, physically and politically. In a radio
ad airing in South Carolina, Johnson recounts his first year with the
Los Angeles Lakers: "We won our first game on a last second shot. I was
so hyped. But the captain of my team said, 'Take it easy rookie, it's a
long season, it's a long road to the championship.' He was right." Of
course, the implication is that Obama is a political rookie. But the
rookie analogy can be turned on its head. In Johnson’s NBA rookie year,
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar suffered a sprained ankle and point guard Johnson
was switched to center. He responded by scoring 42 points, grabbing 15
rebounds, made seven assists and three steals. The Lakers won the
championship over the Philadelphia 76s and Johnson was named the NBA
finals’ Most Valuable Player. So, a rookie can lead a team to a
championship. Andy Young, perhaps the most conservative of the
Clinton surrogates, is the one who has gone off on the deep end. First,
there was the stupid statement that, “Bill Clinton is every bit as
Black as Barack.” And as if that wasn’t stupid enough, Young
added, “He’s probably gone with more Black women than Barack.” He
quickly added, “I’m clowning.” On that we agree – he was acting
like a clown. And so are many Clinton surrogates as they rush to prove
their loyalty to the Clintons by demeaning Barack Obama. It’s bad
enough that Bill Clinton is a middle man, leading some people to think
that he will become co-president. The candidates need to make their own
case. We don’t need middle men between them and the voters.
Next Column:
Clintons Playing the Race Card
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