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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
29.04.2008
Making the Wright Enemy

I thought Obama put the distance he needed to between himself and Wright just now. Key passage (and this is a rough, contemporaneous transcript):

His [Wright's] comments were not only divisive and destructive, but I believe that they end up giving comfort to those who prey on hate. They do not portray accurately the perspective of the black church. They certainly don’t portray accurately my attitude and beliefs. If Reverend Wright thinks that’s political posturing, then he doesn’t know me well. Based on his remarks, I may not know him either.

The question, as Chris Matthews suggests, is what's Wright's next move--and, when it comes, how will voters react. Given what we've seen so far, it's hard to believe Wright will keep quiet after being so thoroughly thrashed. My guess is that when the Wright reaction comes, people will view it through the prism of Obama's harsh criticism. As my colleague Leon Wieseltier puts it (and Bill Clinton demonstrated with Sister Souljah), sometimes it's just as important to have the right enemies as the right friends. And Obama, for better or for worse, now has the right enemy. Or at least he will once Wright goes live with his response.

The other lingering question is whether people will wonder all over again how Obama could have been friends with this guy for 20 years. It's a legitimate concern, but if it didn't weigh him down too much after the Phildelphia speech in March, I wouldn't expect it to do him in this time. Wright's "performance" yesterday struck me as new and brazen enough to warrant a different reaction than Obama would have had in the past.

For what it's worth, MSNBC anchor Tamron Hall, who lived in Chicago for years and heard Wright preach at Trinity several times, said she was shocked by Wright's National Press Club performance yesterday, too. She says she suspects that lots of her and Obama's fellow parishioners had the same reaction. It'll be interesting to see if other Trinity members come forward with similar responses--and, in general, whether the church membership sides with Obama or Wright in this back-and-forth.

Update: Here's the lede to Tom Edsall's piece in The Washington Post the day after the famous Clinton speech in June 1992:

Bill Clinton yesterday stunned Jesse L. Jackson and members of the Rainbow Coalition by criticizing the organization for giving a public forum to rap singer Sister Souljah, whose words in the aftermath of the Los Angeles rioting Clinton said were "filled with hatred."

At the end of a relatively routine speech to the Rainbow Coalition, and with Jackson seated to his left, Clinton -- who has clinched the Democratic presidential nomination -- said:

"You had a rap singer here last night [on a panel] named Sister Souljah. . . . Her comments before and after Los Angeles were filled with a kind of hatred that you do not honor today and tonight. Just listen to this, what she said: She told The Washington Post about a month ago, and I quote, 'If black people kill black people every day, why not have a week and kill white people? . . . So if you're a gang member and you would normally be killing somebody, why not kill a white person?' "

As Jackson -- who just minutes before mentioned specifically and with obvious pride that Souljah had been on the previous night's program -- stared straight ahead, Clinton said: "If you took the words 'white' and 'black' and reversed them, you might think David Duke was giving that speech."

Clinton's frank remarks seemed designed to demonstrate his willingness to challenge core Democratic constituent groups and to begin to break his image in the public as a "political" person who would bend to pressure from major forces within his party. 

Update 2: Commenter virginiacentrist has an interesting thought:

The problem isn't just that Rev. Wright will lash back against Obama. The problem is that Rev. Wright probably KNOWS TOO MUCH. I'm not talking about illegal activity...but there HAS to be something embarassing that Rev. Wright knows about Obama to use against him.

My guess is that the HRC people are quietly contacting Rev. Wright and mining him for dirt on Obama. This would be the time to do it - right when Wright is most angry, and Obama is most vulnerable.

This is why Obama has refrained from attacking Wright. Not because of friendship - but because he always feared that Wright would lash back, and the media would be all to willing to hand over the microphone to this clown.

I don't see Wright dishing to Clinton operatives. But it wouldn't shock me if he unloaded to the media, which would be damaging. On the other hand, the guy's credibility isn't the highest it's ever been at this point...

--Noam Scheiber 

Posted: Tuesday, April 29, 2008 3:01 PM with 22 comment(s)

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virginiacentrist said:

Noam:

The problem isn't just that Rev. Wright will lash back against Obama. The problem is that Rev. Wright probably KNOWS TOO MUCH. I'm not talking about illegal activity...but there HAS to be something embarassing that Rev. Wright knows about Obama to use against him.

My guess is that the HRC people are quietly contacting Rev. Wright and mining him for dirt on Obama. This would be the time to do it - right when Wright is most angry, and Obama is most vulnerable.

This is why Obama has refrained from attacking Wright. Not because of friendship - but because he always feared that Wright would lash back, and the media would be all to willing to hand over the microphone to this clown.

April 29, 2008 3:16 PM

virginiacentrist said:

The question that Wright's friends need to ask him is this: Does he want to be personally responsible for stopping the first black president from being elected? Does he want that to be his footnote in the history books? There's something for this lunatic to ponder.

April 29, 2008 3:21 PM

adaglas said:

VC - so you think this is an Isiah/Starbury situation?

April 29, 2008 3:49 PM

icarusr said:

Oscar said it best: "You can never be too careful in the choice of your enemies."

April 29, 2008 3:50 PM

Noam Scheiber said:

interesting thoughts. i'll post.

April 29, 2008 3:53 PM

virginiacentrist said:

adaglas: Being a Wizards fan, I prefer to focus on the James/Stevenson situation.

April 29, 2008 4:02 PM

teplukhin2you said:

Bring it on. Now is the time for Obama to go mano a mano with this disgusting little twerp, and put him away. Bobby vs Hoffa.

Obama has nothing but upside from a knock-down drag out fight with Wright. The afr-amer voters aren't going anywhere, they'll never vote for McCain over the first afr-amer candidate for POTUS, and Hillary has no shot at the nomination.

Surprise us, Barack. Show some steel.  

April 29, 2008 4:13 PM

icarusr said:

VC: I really don't think Obama has anything to hide; the man's been running for President of the United States since kindergarten, for heaven's sake ;-) ...

April 29, 2008 4:15 PM

Annabella2 said:

virginiacentrist... that is much too conspiratorial... I think obama simply felt a certain restraint until Wright went right over the top... besides whatever wright comes out with now... would even Fox News believe it was anything other than the rantings of an ego maniac?

April 29, 2008 4:43 PM

lymon1 said:

Noam -- while I'd wish this topic would go away already, is it Wright's "credibility" that is low at the moment?  If anything, had he gone back on his wacky rants he'd seem less credible.  

April 29, 2008 5:13 PM

sbmike said:

Noam

I knew there was a movie I had seen that seemed to foreshadow this campaign - I finally remembered what it was:  The Best Man with Henry Fonda playing Obama and Cliff Robertson as Hillary Clinton, well sort of.  Now if only Obama could shift his support to Gore the Dems could run the table in November.

April 29, 2008 5:36 PM

virginiacentrist said:

All -

All Wright has to do is come out and say, "Obama told me privately that he believes [X] about race. Or [Y] negative about Hillary Clinton." Whatever. I'm sure there's something juicy there.

Lymon-

The funny thing is that as soon as Rev. Wright starts spouting off against Obama, all of the Hillary Clinton fans who have been trashing him will suddenly hold him up in the highest esteem possible as an infallable vessel of truth.

April 29, 2008 5:46 PM

anonevent said:

VC - have you never had a friend or family member where the first time they said something kind of out in left field, you bit your lip, and when someone asked you said that generally they're a really nice person, but eventually when they repeat it, you have to tell them no, that's not how it works?  Mine are either my mother or my conservative friends.

I think we've had enough of one person believing conspiracy theories.

April 29, 2008 5:55 PM

matthawk said:

I think all of this way overblown and is based on the "monster" image of Rev. Wright. Wright knows that Obama is not his enemy. He also knows that to attack Obama, even if he were inclined to do so, would not further his own cause, which is to promote understanding of African American culture and the stylized nature of African American church services. Many African Americans rightly believe that  the culture that informs African American churches has been under attack the past few weeks, even though many whites may not see this and think that it is laughable.

If I read him correctly (and I don't know the man, so I know I could be way off on this) he will not discredit himself as a pastor by sharing confidential information with Hillary or anyone else, and he will use the current spotlight on him to talk about African American churches, African American culture, and how that culture is often interpreted through a lens of "inferiority," which fosters bad public policy, resentment, and misunderstanding.

There will not be a public wave of anger directed from Wright toward Obama. As Bill Clinton once said, "people need to just chill out."

April 29, 2008 6:06 PM

matthawk said:

teplukhin2you,  African Americans were not born to entertain you.

April 29, 2008 6:09 PM

mollysimon said:

matthawk:  You're assuming that Wright is entirely coherent, which he's not.  He probably always had these narcissistic tendencies, but when people get older, it can get far worse.  (Believe me, I know from experience.)  He feels hurt, and he's on the attack because at this point, it's the only response he can fathom.   He could give a shit whom he's helping and whom he's destroying.  

VC--I'm 100 percent with you.  I've been thinking it all morning and then saw you'd posted my thoughts (as usual).  This isn't conspiracy theory:  The possibility is very real.  He was Obama's pastor, and he and Michelle have gone to him for advice and help with their marriage.  I don't think it's too dark and deep.  Maybe a strain in the marriage.  Hopefully, we'll never find out.  

April 29, 2008 6:24 PM

ironyroad said:

matthawk:  "He also knows that to attack Obama, even if he were inclined to do so, would not further his own cause, which is to promote understanding of African American culture and the stylized nature of African American church services. Many African Americans rightly believe that  the culture that informs African American churches has been under attack the past few weeks, even though many whites may not see this and think that it is laughable."

Um . . . that's his cause?  I so doubt it.  And your announcement that "Wright knows that to attack Obama . . . would . . . " suggests a conditional that has already been transformed into an active verb.  Wright HAS attacked Obama, as Obama well recognizes, and has directly challenged his Philly speech by (a) disputing its theory of where America is on race in 2008, and (b) asserting that Obama only gave the speech as a kind of cynical politial maneuver to pacify whitey.  Indeed, I'd call this not only an attack but a carefully targeted desire to drag Obama down and poison his chance of getting the nomination.

If you don't think that his own statement today showed that Obama knows this, I wonder if we're talking about the same person.

April 29, 2008 6:32 PM

michael said:

I think this is 'get-a-grip' time. It's too late to drag Hillary across the finish line and this is the poorest way to try and pull it off. She would be McCain's best way of uniting his party while (pick a gigantic %) of Obama supporters would stay home in November.

Enough of the nuttin' to lose Clinton surrogates predicting doom and gloom Where are the people who will need strong a Obama win in the Fall?  Maybe Lanny Davis or Carville don't have a stake in McCain rolling over Hillary but I don't think any current D. office holder should hope for any more harm to come to Obama.

No, a weaker or out of the race Barack won't help anyone but McCain and his party. I understand that being called Judas might have made some timid. If the party doesn't close around Barack their worry won't be insults from Carville. Or, they better find some courage and get behind him now or they'll be panic stricken in the fall when it's too late.

Or, will Lanny & Carville save your ass in sis months?

April 29, 2008 6:33 PM

eweiss said:

I just heard the Obama presser for the first time and have to say that it was absolutely bogus. When this thing broke in March some of us asked why he had not taken care of this idiot a year ago. We lamented the fact that he did not completely repudiate him in the Philadelphia speech. By not doing so, he gave up the chance to do what he did today (which is to pretend that Wright has just gone off the reservation this week). But he did not do that in March and despite his protestations to the contrary, he knew full well that Wright was a ticking time bomb. So once again, I make the argument that Obama’s association with Wright is important for one reason and for one reason only: It raises serious concerns about his judgment. In the press conference, Obama did not even attempt to address this. Instead, he made all sorts of excuses like: “this is not the man I knew” or “he was never really my spiritual advisor.” There was absolutely nothing to address the very real questions moderate voters have regarding why he ever let this guy into his inner circle. I for one would like him to acknowledge that he recognized how kooky the guy was a long time ago. I would have loved to hear that he had been struggling with this (as he clearly has) for a long time, but that he had to navigate very difficult political and personal issues. I wish he had said that he wishes he had severed the relationship a long time ago. I wish he had given me some reason to believe that he won’t be hosting White House Dinners with a bunch of Wright types come January. In the end, this does damage to him on several levels. It clearly plays badly with the moderate-conservative voters in rural NC and IN. But it also reinforces his very real political naiveté.

April 29, 2008 8:19 PM

hayleykelse said:

I've always thought it was a little too tidy that Wright retired when he did, and in the way he did -- into the comfort of a multi-million dollar house paid for by his church.  If he was somehow ushered out the door to make Obama's life easier -- or, worse, paid to go away --  WE WILL CERTAINLY FIND OUT NOW.

April 29, 2008 8:29 PM

virginiacentrist said:

hayleykelse:

AND THE MORE PEOPLE WHO WRITE ABOUT IT IN ALL CAPS, THE MORE LIKELY THAT THE REAL TRUTH (NOT JUST THE TRUTH THAT THE PEOPLE IN CHARGE __THIS WEEK__ WANT YOU TO BELIEVE) WILL BE REVEALED.

But seriously - if he was ushered away by Obama's Chicago goon squad into a comfortable retirement, wouldn't that demonstrate both sound judgement and compassion on Obama's part? He realized early that the guy was a nut, but he was HIS nut, dammit, and he wanted him taken care of and coddled and nurtured and hidden away so that he could not embarass himself.

April 29, 2008 9:14 PM

UNCoRRELATED said:

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June 5, 2008 12:17 PM