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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
12.03.2008
Why Obama Should Ignore Ferraro


As Isaac notes below, Geraldine Ferraro was on national television the morning, defending her controversial comments about Barack Obama and race. Given that Hillary Clinton has officially disavowed Ferraro's statements, not once but twice, you may be wondering why Ferraro is still speaking for the campaign. It turns out that, officially, she isn't--at least according to Clinton campaign spokesman Phil Singer, who told me that Ferraro is speaking "on her own."

Still, the Clinton campaign has not asked Ferraro to sever her affiliation with the campaign. (Ferraro is a member of the campaign's finance committee.) And Clinton's disavowals last night seemed a little soft: "I do not agree with that and you know it's regrettable that any of our supporters on both sides say things that veer off into the personal." In other words, Ferraro was wrong but we're not going to get too uptight about it, since surrogates for both campaigns have been doing this sort of thing.

Since I'm not a regular on the candidates' buses, I'm not privy to all of the background conversations full-time campaign correspondents hear. But, at least from afar, this characteriziation seems pretty misleading to me. You just don't hear as many statements like this coming out of his campaign--in part, I think, because Obama has been more aggressive about condemning them. 

Back in June, for example, Obama's campaign released the now-infamous "Hillary Clinton (D-Punjab)" memo, suggesting Clinton was soft on outsourcing because of fundraising ties with prominent Indian-Americans. Obama apologized for the "unnecessarily caustic" statement, saying "It was a dumb mistake on our campaign's part, and I made it clear to my staff in no uncertain terms that it was a mistake." According to various media reports, Obama subsequently chastised his advisors for it and put in place safeguards to make sure senior staff had more control over press releases in the future.

Last week, after Obama foreign policy advisor Samantha Power told a Scottish interviewer that Clinton was a "monster," the Obama campaign also disavowed the comments promptly--and, within short order, an apologetic Power had resigned her position (even though she had tried to take the comment off the record immediately after giving it--and even though campaign staffers say things like this in private all the time).

So the Obama campaign has every right to be frustrated with the Clinton campaign's reaction. But that doesn't mean they would be smart to keep talking about it.

Ferraro's original statement to Daily Breeze, which suggested that Obama has gotten preferential political treatment because of his race, was a dog-whistle to white voters who resent affirmative action. (Her subsequent statement to the New York Times, in which she defiantly defended herself by proclaiming "I will not be discriminated against because I’m white," wasn't a dog whistle. It was a huge, screeching megaphone.) Dwelling on that probably won't help the Obama campaign in Pennsylavnia, particularly given the racial voting patterns yesterday's Mississippi result confirmed.

A cynic--ok, maybe even a non-cynic--might suggest that's precisely why the Clinton campaign isn't moving more swiftly to cut ties with Ferraro. Either way, though, Obama would be well advised to change the subject. He should force Clinton to answer questions about something in her record or policies--or try and shift the focus over to McCain. Whatever. This may be a case where the best defense is a good offense.

(Ugh. Dog whistles, best defense is a good offense--sorry for the two cliches. I'm all out of original phrasing this morning.)

--Jonathan Cohn

Posted: Wednesday, March 12, 2008 10:43 AM with 32 comment(s)

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virginiacentrist said:

It's likely that this is what Hillary Clinton believes - that Barack Obama, by virtue of being black, has stolen her special "moment".

March 12, 2008 11:56 AM

FWright said:

"Either way, though, Obama would be well advised to change the subject. He should force Clinton to answer questions about something in her record or policies--or try and shift the focus over to McCain. Whatever. This may be a case where the best defense is a good offense."

That worked spectacularly well for John Kerry.

March 12, 2008 12:19 PM

BHLnyc said:

I tend to disagree. I don't think that it hurts the Obama campaign to shine a light on several Clinton vulnerabilities:

1. Her willingness to stick with failed, disgraced associates ("heckuva job, Ferraro")

2. Her two-faced attitude about race

3. The character and quality of her surrogates (Penn, Wolfson, Shaheen, Johnson, and especially Bill)

4. The lengths she's willing to go, even if it means sabotaging the Democratic nominee

5. The fact that she's still a disciple of 1990s style politicking

6. Her hypocrisy in the face of the "reject and denounce" drama

That said, I think that his response is best delivered using ridicule and a smile. Belittle Ferraro's comments, but don't sound like a scolding preacher. And he should rely on his surrogates to do much of the work, too.

March 12, 2008 12:22 PM

virginiacentrist said:

Agreed. ridicule is best.

Throw SInbad in there.

March 12, 2008 12:41 PM

prnoonan said:

Superdelegates, where are you?  There needs to be some consequences and repurcussions for this...

March 12, 2008 12:53 PM

raylward said:

virginiacentrist, that's the best explanation for this I have seen or heard.  I find it hard to believe that Ms. Ferraro believes Obama has an advantage because his father is black (blacks are, after all, a minority).  It's simply that Obama (the first African American with a good chance of being elected president) has stolen Hillary's (the first female with a good chance of being elected president) thunder.   It's amazing that the Democrats could be divided by race and sex, which are supposed to unite the Democrats.

March 12, 2008 12:54 PM

Rhubarbs said:

Said to the press in response to the first question about Ferraro:

"Listen, I know you all like to stir up trouble among Democrats, and since Ms. Ferraro is a TV pundit now, I understand that's all she's doing. Nobody should take her too seriously. I voted for Geraldine Ferraro in 1984, and I'm proud to have supported the first woman on a presidential ticket. But she didn't even win her own congressional district that year, and she hasn't won an election in twenty-six years. So I guess this illustrates one difference between my campaign and my opponent's campaign. She surrounds herself with advisers like Ms. Ferraro, big-money lobbyists who represent the failed, divisive politics of the past. When I need advice, I turn to people who know what they're talking about, folks who want to win the great battles of tomorrow, not refight the petty skirmishes of yesterday."

Only, you know, the smart and eloquent version of that.

March 12, 2008 12:57 PM

miceelf said:

Wasn't this the candidate who wasn't satisfied with Obama's denunciation of Farrakhan?

March 12, 2008 12:59 PM

ndmackenzie said:

Since Clinton has failed to jettison Ferraro I think Obama should bring back Samantha Power saying she has paid her penance for a minor misdeed and that a US President needs the best advisors available - regardless of whether or not a losing opponent likes them.

March 12, 2008 1:10 PM

arsonplus said:

"Agreed. ridicule is best."

Yeah. That's got my vote too. A nice joke about the health benefits of not being able to hail a cab would be fun to hear right around now.

Either that or Boxer and Pelosi could tell Clinton it's over. Chuck Todd is right 2004 was her moment but she blinked.

March 12, 2008 1:11 PM

dbhuff said:

It is time for this to end.  The continuation of divisive politics will only hurt the nominee in November.  Obama has insurmountable leads in delegates, popular vote, and number of states.  This Dem will vote john McCain if Clinton weasels a nomination out of this.  The veep offer was ridiculous, let the nice black man sit at the table, come on!  Yet, the gender vs. race gambit continue.  Clinton got busted hard for it in SC, but now we have it coming up again through surrogates (GF), and all the while reminding everyone about the scary black man running for president.  This helps no one.  Hillary, throw in the towel now for the good of the party!

March 12, 2008 1:16 PM

ralphnelle said:

Great post until this: "particularly given the racial voting patterns yesterday's Mississippi result confirmed." You and Judis are hopeless. Mississippi is not PA, and it's certainly not Washington or Virginia. Will you two please be more responsible in talking about this issue?

It's getting to the point where I feel angry when I see either of your names. Why? Because I read TNR for its good judgment as much as anything, and this is just C- critical thinking at best.

March 12, 2008 1:18 PM

shamh said:

The Clintons have broke the bond between Democrats and African Americans.  The Democrats will not recover from this.  

March 12, 2008 1:23 PM

clifton said:

I think I agree with Rhubarbs.  Obama shouldn't ignore this, he should use it to his advantage.  He should say something like:

You know, I grew up admiring Geraldine Ferraro.  I was proud to vote for her when she was the first woman nominated as VP.   Of course, there have been times when being of African-American descent has benefited me, just as there have been times when the Kennedies have benefited from being Irish, when Giulianni has benefited from being Italian, and when Hillary Clinton has benefited from being a woman, or being the wife of a former president.  For that matter, there have been times when being of Caucasian descent has helped me as well.  There have also been times when being a black man has meant that there are initial perceptions of me that I've had to overcome before people have been able to hear my message of hope and change.  Like everyone my background has given me both benefits and burdens.  I'll leave it to all of you to decide whether being a black man with a Muslim sounding middle name is overall a disadvantage or an advantage.  But the point isn't which of Hillary or I start out with more advantages.  The point is how we use these advantages.  Whatever advantages I have, I'm going to use them to bring change to Washington, to bring health care to Americans, to bring . . .

and from there into his stump speech.

March 12, 2008 1:53 PM

darieff said:

Yes, by all means, let's have more insight into HRC's foreign policy experience, courtesy of Sinbad. Gotta love that idea!

As for the inflammatory comments of Ferraro, an embittered political hack, consider this interpretation of events from today's "Daily Dish" by Andrew Sullivan at the Atlantic:

"THE FERRARO GAMBIT IS DELIBERATE"

The Clinton campaign's decision not to reject or denounce Geraldine Ferraro's racial gaffe strikes me as a conscious and deliberate one. The Obama campaign saw Samantha Power resign for a less offensive remark. But Ferraro is now on the networks and airwaves amping up the volume, and Clinton, in classic passive-aggressive mode, is merely "disagreeing." Isn't this obviously about Pennsylvania? Isn't this classic Rove-Morris politics - to keep designating Obama a beneficiary of affirmative action and Clinton a victimized white woman in order to racially polarize a primary where Clinton needs white ethnic votes?

Ferraro's original gaffe was an accident. The compounding of it is a strategy.

The blog excerpt continues, with the following comment from a reader:

I'm willing to bet damn near anything Bill thought this up himself. As a white male Bill realized he couldn't push Obama into the ghetto box, but what a brilliant strategy! - let's have another "disadvantaged group" lambaste Obama through an elderly white female surrogate to divide and conquer in the victimology sweepstakes.  Since whites outnumber blacks, and white females in particular outnumber black voters, it's an incredibly audacious gambit to win the nomination. Throwing the kitchen sink apparently means turning the Democratic Party into an all out race versus gender war, ultimately allowing Bill and Hillary to either emerge on top or for Obama to be so badly damaged that the Superdelegates will fear he's lost the white vote in the general election. That's exactly the game the Clinton's have set in motion here.

March 12, 2008 2:01 PM

jm_rice said:

"You and Judis are hopeless."

Don't forget the other Hillary-hating Obamaphiles, Chottle, Chait and Peretz.  With a couple of notable exceptions, who occasionally publish minority reports, TNR is an Obama fan club.

When a qualified black person is a candidate, then race will be utterly irrelevant.  America has been ready at least since Colin Powell.  Since Obama has thin qualifactions his race becomes a factor, both in favor of and against him.  Of course Ferraro is right.  Her mistake was in being outspoken.

Once again, if you're interested in getting a clue, take some time out to watch this:

rtsp://video.c-span.org/archive/arc_btv/btv012708_steele.rm

March 12, 2008 2:17 PM

blackton said:

yes, lets ignore this and give Hillary the nomination because we can be sure the Republicans will never use her race baiting and her arrogant belief that she will hold the black vote in her pocket in November against her. John McCain and Condi Rice or Colin Powell? Hmm.... and then we can watch Geraldine go on air and say that they are not fit for that spot either. I think there is a chance the Republicans could capture the majority of the black vote in November. Thanks Gerry.

Luckily, between Wyomings +2 delegates and Miss. +7, obama has essentially turned the past week into a 3-3 tie, with delegate counts being tied too. The clock is ticking Hillary. Pa. will not save your ass.

March 12, 2008 2:21 PM

Political Animal said:

DOG WHISTLES....Jonathan Cohn says this about Geraldine Ferraro's recent comments to the press:Ferraro's original statement to Daily Breeze, which suggested that Obama has gotten preferential political treatment because of his race, was a dog-whistle

March 12, 2008 2:25 PM

blackton said:

Jonathan Cohn is and has been in the tank for Hillary since Hillary is in favor of Mandates for Health insurance. He condemns Obama for printing a truthful ad about his health care plan, saying it plays into the hands of the Republicans because it resembled Harry and Louise, and certainly did not advise Hillary to keep quiet about it, but this he wants Obama to keep quiet about?

I don't pretend to hide my bias, nor would I expect anyone to take whatever advice I have for Hillary too seriously. But I don't really need to give her bad advice, her advisors I doing that well enough for me.

March 12, 2008 2:34 PM

bwelch said:

I don't view this as a deliberate Hillaryish ploy or nefarious strategem of any sort. On the contrary, you couldn't have PAID anyone to more blatently discredit herself, and, by extension, her associates, than did Ferraro with this revelation of antiquated feminist petulance...  Obama as a  (more effective) opponent of the male gender who can be summarily dissed because he's just "a  Lucky Black Guy"?! Ouch. Then compound the slur with the hapless defense that White (women) Just Don't Get No Respect these days? Help! Any yahoos of either gender positively aroused by this were hopeless causes anyway, while the rest of us wax even more resolute in our abjuration of Clintonism.

March 12, 2008 3:36 PM

icarusr said:

Jon - as a "minorority" myself, I know all about the old dictum of running twice as fast just to stay in place.  I've broken through barriers and, even as I hit glass (and not so transparent) ceilings, was reminded by Da Man how I have be grateful for the leg up I'd been receiving all along.  Fact is, if Obama were to walk on water now, a Clinton lackey would prolly complain that he got his feet wet.

The problem with the Ferraro statement is not so much the content as the context.  You said it: dogwhistle and bullhorn in one, her statement aims to stoke the baser instincts of the electorate.  There is no shame in countering such cynicism; there will be much strategic benefit for Obama by demonstrating that he will not take hits like this quietly, as Kerry did in '04.  No need for him to do a shrill "shame on your Ferraro" or a pedantic demand for Mrs. Clinton to "reject AND denouce", only to state the obvious: "I have not won ten million votes because I'm black or white; Mrs. Ferraro insults the intelligence of the American voter when she states that the base of this support is only skin deep.  From the shores of the Chesapeake to the vast skies of the Prairies to the snowy peaks of the Rockies, people have voted for change, not for skin colour."

March 12, 2008 3:36 PM

Rhubarbs said:

icarusr, you nailed it in one.

Except he has to mention the Great Lakes, the fertile Mississippi Valley, and the sunset coast of the Pacific Ocean while he's at it.

March 12, 2008 4:21 PM

Sirhc said:

The proof is in the pudding.  Over the last 200 years we've had black man after black man just coast into the Oval Office based solely on his race.  It should be obvious to everyone that Obama is riding on the coattails of all of the other black men who have lived in the White House as servants.  

HRC, on the other hand, had to endure the humiliation of being given a Senate seat based upon her family connections.  

March 12, 2008 4:34 PM

Sirhc said:

One of Obama's surrogates should take one for the team and say that HRC only got where she is because she slept her way to the top.  Then when someone says, "wait that's sexist," protest that it is not sexist to say that HRC slept her way to the top.  There is a much more direct correlation between HRC's candidacy and her relationship with Bill than there is between merely being born black and then running for president.

Then all of Obama's supporters can feign shock that everyone can't see why it is offensive to say that a woman is powerful only because she had sex with the right man.  

March 12, 2008 4:47 PM

tomeg said:

Ferraro has resigned. Wash Post

March 12, 2008 5:59 PM

matthawk said:

The Clinton campaign has very skillfully shifted the focus of this campaign from "change" to "race." This was their intention. It is the only hope they have in order to win. The problem is that by doing this the Clintons will further divide the Democratic Party and the nation. They will stop at nothing to try to win back power and influence in Washington.

March 12, 2008 6:18 PM

roidubouloi said:

Too bad Ferraro resigned.  I would have preferred to have the damage to Hillary go on and on and on.  Hillary shoots herself in the foot again.  Obama had the good sense to limit the damage done by Powers by dumping her right away.  Hillary had to try and milk Ferraro's racist remarks first by letting her make the tour of a bunch of talk shows.  But, Oh No!  What if this was a carefully thought out scheme by Hillary to stoke racist anger even more by having Ferraro become the victim of the dreaded ------------ POLITICAL CORRECTNESS,  Maybe that was Hillary's devious scheme all along.

March 12, 2008 6:24 PM

BHLnyc said:

Ferraro's exit statement was completely self-serving and unapologetic. She gets no credit for finally doing the right thing after spending three days belittling Obama's bona fides. I sort of agree with roidubouloi that it might actually have been better for Obama if she stayed with the campaign a while longer and continued to disgrace herself. Now she gets to play the victim -- like her mentor, Hillary -- but now she's unencumbered by the restraints of her campaign commitment.

March 12, 2008 7:28 PM

matthawk said:

The Shelby Steele unflattering thesis in "A Bound Man," cited earlier in this thread, may be a reasonable way of thinking about Obama and his campaign. It would also go a long way toward explain the Clinton camp's repeated and escalating strategy of race-baiting. If they can transform Obama into an "angry black man" who "challenges" America on a history of racism then it is all over for him. It is amazing how hard they have tried to provoke him thus far, to no avail. Having failed with provocations, they are now trying to slap the label of "angry black man concerned about racism" on him anyway by re-interpreting every response from the Obama camp as a racially-charged attack against the Clinton machine. The Clintons are clearly masters at the politics of cynicism.

March 12, 2008 8:15 PM

jm_rice said:

"re-interpreting every response from the Obama camp as a racially-charged attack against the Clinton machine."

How ironic, when this is exactly what the Obamaphiles have been doing to Clinton since Day One.

Ferraro makes the quite reasonable assertion that Obama is about electing a black man.  He has few other qualifications.  Now, one may take issue with that, but to call it some kind of sleazy race-baiting is childish and hysterical.

Anyway, the children get what they want, and Ferraro is out.  Which proves her point.  Obama groupies are like Muslims and the cartoons.

March 13, 2008 12:47 PM

roidubouloi said:

Allow me to be childish and hysterical.  

Ferraro's remarks were openly and obviously racist and race-baiting.  They had no other purpose.  And they are not only not true and not reasonable, they are preposterous.  If Obama were white, the utterly talentless, shrill, politically incompetent, unaccomplished, victim-playing, Hillary Clinton would have been gone after Iowa when her political inevitability argument collapsed.

I didn't get what I wanted.  I wanted Ferraro to hang on with the Clinton campaign until not only was it in the toilet, where it is, but everyone in America knew it.  Unfortunately, Hillary decided it was time to cut her losses and dumped Ferraro.

No, Obama supporters are not like Muslims and the cartoons.  But aybe Hillary groupies are like racists.  Maybe this means you, jm.  Are you a racist?  Shall we infer that you are because you support Hillary or because of your trashy mouth?

March 13, 2008 2:29 PM

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