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On Saturday, Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), a central figure
in the civil rights movement, accused McCain of
poisoning the political atmosphere, comparing him to
former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, a proponent of
racial segregation.
"He never fired a gun, but he created the climate and
the conditions that encouraged vicious attacks against
innocent Americans who only desired to exercise their
constitutional rights," wrote Lewis, who is black. "As
public figures with the power to influence and persuade,
Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin are playing with fire, and if
they are not careful, that fire will consume us all. . .
. The American people deserve better." |
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WASHINGTON (By Anne E. Kornblut,
Washington Post) October 12, 2008 — In the first presidential campaign involving
an African American nominee of a major party, both candidates have agreed on
this much: They would rather not dwell on the subject of race.
But their allies have other ideas.
Yesterday, civil rights leader
John Lewis, a Democratic congressman from Georgia, became the latest advocate to
excite the racial debate, condemning Sen. John McCain for "sowing the seeds of
hatred and division" and accusing the Republican nominee of potentially inciting
violence.
In a provocative twist, Lewis drew
a rhetorical line connecting McCain to the segregationist Alabama governor
George Wallace, and through Wallace to the 1963 church bombing in Birmingham
that killed four girls. McCain voiced outrage at the comments, which also drew a
mild rebuke from an aide to Sen. Barack Obama.
McCain has treated the subject of
race gingerly, moving quickly to reject loaded remarks by some supporters while
at other times accusing the Obama campaign of "playing the race card" and
claiming racism to avoid legitimate criticism.
Obama, meanwhile, has made a
studied effort to avoid bringing race to the forefront throughout the general
election. After giving one major address on race during the primaries, he raised
the subject only obliquely over the summer, saying he expected his rivals to
note that he "doesn't look like all those other presidents on the dollar bills."
He has mostly avoided the topic
since, handing off to a network of friends, including Pennsylvania Gov. Edward
G. Rendell and Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, the task of talking directly to their
constituencies about electing a black president.
Yet allies of the campaigns and
activists on both sides have increasingly strayed outside the unofficial
boundaries. At two McCain rallies last week, individuals introducing the
candidate referred to the Democratic nominee as "Barack Hussein Obama,"
emphasizing his middle name. Former Oklahoma governor Frank Keating called him a
"man of the street."
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the
Republican vice presidential nominee, said Obama was "palling around with
terrorists," a reference to his association with the 1960s radical William
Ayers, and a turn of phrase that critics said was racially loaded.
On the other side of the aisle, in
September, two Democratic state legislators in Ohio caused an uproar when they
accused independents who support McCain of doing so because they are racist.
Each instance has provoked rounds
of finger-pointing and apology, but often without the involvement of either
candidate.
Lewis yesterday used a racial
frame to leverage one of the harshest cases against McCain this year. "As one
who was a victim of violence and hate during the height of the Civil Rights
Movement, I am deeply disturbed by the negative tone of the McCain-Palin
campaign. What I am seeing reminds me too much of another destructive period in
American history," Lewis, 68, wrote in a statement.
Wallace "never fired a gun," Lewis
added, "but he created the climate and the conditions that encouraged vicious
attacks against innocent Americans who were simply trying to exercise their
constitutional rights. Because of this atmosphere of hate, four little girls
were killed. . . . Senator McCain and Governor Palin are playing with fire, and
if they are not careful, that fire will consume us all."
McCain, who has repeatedly hailed
Lewis as a personal hero, immediately called the comments "shocking and beyond
the pale."
Obama's spokesman, Bill Burton,
distanced the campaign from Lewis's remarks, saying Obama "does not believe that
John McCain or his policy criticism is in any way comparable to George Wallace
or his segregationist policies. But John Lewis was right to condemn some of the
hateful rhetoric."
Late yesterday, Lewis released
another statement, saying it was not his "intention or desire" to directly
compare McCain or Palin to Wallace. "My statement was a reminder to all
Americans that toxic language can lead to destructive behavior," he said.
In a series of interviews last
week, senior Obama advisers offered one explanation for the candidate's relative
reluctance to talk about race: Their extensive voter research, they said, shows
no sign that race -- or racism -- will play a meaningful role in the outcome of
the election. Overwhelming economic concerns have wiped away lingering
prejudice, they said, in a country that was already rapidly changing to the
point where it would accept a black candidate.
"I think this is a completely
overblown story," said Obama's campaign manager, David Plouffe, saying concerns
about hidden racism skewing polling data are "ridiculous."
"It's not the thing I lie awake
worrying about," adviser David Axelrod said. "If we don't win this election, I
don't think it's going to be because of race. We spend a lot of time talking
about a lot of things. That's not one we spend a lot of time talking about."
To explain their confidence, Obama
advisers predicted that they will win roughly 95 or 96 percent of African
Americans, up from the 88 percent that voted for Sen. John F. Kerry in 2004,
and, they contend, enough to offset any losses among white voters. Obama and his
wife, Michelle, have campaigned at times in heavily African American areas to
help drive up turnout; yesterday, Obama held several rallies in and around
Philadelphia.
Additionally, his advisers said,
the white voters who will not back Obama because of his race were unlikely to
have supported the Democratic ticket in any event. And the remaining undecided
voters -- a mixture of largely older women, suburban women and Hispanics,
depending on the state -- are motivated by other concerns, Plouffe said.
"Here's the thing: We're doing
better with white women, we're doing better with white working-class men, than
either Kerry or [Al] Gore did," Plouffe said.
"And you know what's interesting
is so much of the coverage is around, 'Let's examine if Obama has a problem with
X voter group' instead of, 'Why is McCain struggling with white, working-class
men?' " he continued, adding that McCain "said he was going to be competitive
with Hispanics; instead he's getting clobbered."
Plouffe said the media coverage of
race had remained rooted in conceptions that took hold in the Democratic
primaries, when Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) won white voters and
Hispanics, although he denied that race had been a factor in the outcome there,
either.
Whether race played a role in
helping Clinton win states such as Pennsylvania during the primaries is a matter
of debate. One in eight Democratic primary voters in that state were whites who
said race was a big factor in their vote, and more than three-quarters of those
voters opted for Clinton. Obama advisers insist their results matched their
predictions and public polls in most places, although they acknowledge that most
voters who were undecided late in the process broke for Clinton.
That late-breaking trend has been
interpreted by some to mean that voters had hesitations about voting for an
African American. Some Democrats fear the same could happen on Nov. 4, referring
to the phenomenon sometimes called the Bradley effect, after the Los Angeles
mayor Tom Bradley, who lost the 1982 California governor's race despite being
ahead in the polls. ("The Bradley race was 26 years ago, okay?" Plouffe
countered. "That's before the Internet, before cellphones. It's ridiculous.")
But the campaign is using Clinton
to campaign for Obama in areas where a Bradley effect would be considered most
possible. Today, she and her husband are campaigning with Obama's running mate,
Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (Del.), in Scranton, Pa., a largely white,
working-class city where both she and Biden have family ties.
There were, before this weekend,
few race-related clashes during the general election campaign. One took place in
Missouri on July 31, when Obama issued something of a preemptive strike: "What
they're going to try to do is make you scared of me. You know: 'He's not
patriotic enough. He's got a funny name.' You know, 'He doesn't look like all
those other presidents on the dollar bills.' "
McCain campaign manager Rick Davis
quickly charged that Obama "played the race card, and he played it from the
bottom of the deck" -- a line the campaign has used when it felt that Obama, far
from being a victim, was seeking to turn the race issue to his advantage.
During the second presidential
debate, McCain offhandedly referred to Obama as "that one," a term that black
commentators and others seized on as racially derogatory. Again, the McCain
campaign suggested that its hands were tied: It cannot say anything negative
without being accused of racism. Nicolle Wallace, a senior strategist for
McCain, was later quoted as saying that complaints about the remark showed that
the Obama campaign was "again proving to be the fussiest campaign in American
history."
Since McCain became the Republican
nominee, aides stress, he has taken pains to reach out to blacks, addressing
both the NAACP and the Urban League. In April, he stood in front of the Edmund
Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., where he promised to be the president of "all the
people."
But each new incident reinforces
what operatives on the ground describe as a perpetually volatile matter, however
calm Obama's strategists might be.
Local elected officials have had
to devise their own playbooks for handling and discussing race, several said. In
Youngstown, Ohio, last month, two Democratic state legislators accused swing
voters who were not backing Obama of being racist. "Race -- that's the only
reason people in the Valley won't vote for him," state Rep. Thomas Letson said,
referring to the Mahoning Valley, in remarks printed in the city newspaper.
Local Republicans denounced the
comments, and the Obama campaign distanced itself from the incident.
But supporters elsewhere say it is
foolish to pretend race is a nonissue. Rendell, in a line that makes some Obama
advisers cringe, frequently tells audiences that they simply cannot afford to be
racist. "If you're drowning in the middle of a river, and there is someone on
the shore with a rope," Rendell says, "you don't care what religion he is, what
race he is, what his family situation is. All you care about is, does he have a
strong right arm? And Senator Obama has a strong right arm."
In Ohio, Strickland delivered his
own version of the fear-not speech Friday, as he campaigned with Obama in
Chillicothe.
"I also know you to believe in
this region that we are a people who honor family and faith, and in this
campaign, unfortunately, there have been those who have tried to spread untruths
about Barack Obama," Strickland said. "Barack Obama is a strong, Christian,
family man."
In New Mexico, Gov. Bill
Richardson (D) said Hispanics are not holding back on voting for an African
American, as some Democrats had feared.
"Look, there will still be some that
vote based on race, but I think it will be a very, very small minority, because
of the economic crisis we find ourselves in," he said. Referring to race,
Richardson said: "I don't have to talk about that. The economy is doing it for
us."