Tags for This Article:

Obama-Barack (2043)  Campaigns- Races Candidates (497)  Campaign Strategies Skills Techniques (273)  Campaign Related (200)  Campaign Finance And Reform (194)  Campaign Contributions (136)  Campaign Advertising (112)  Campaign Endorsements (102)  Campaign Resources (79)  Campaign Finance Reform (45)  Campaign Tactics Robocalling (20) 

Populum Tag Cloud
       Control Panel
Fine tune your search to access content
Articles
Diaries Products
Events All
All time
Last 6 mos
Last month
Last week
Last 24 hrs
From:
Month  Day   Year

To:
Month  Day   Year
Alphabet
Popularity
Count ON
Count OFF
This Level
Sub-levels

 

 

 

Tag(s): ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; (more...)  (less...)
Add to My Group
February 25, 2008 at 17:07:53

An Increasingly Smarmy Obama Campaign

by Cody Lyon     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

www.opednews.com

 
Tell A Friend

View Ratings | Rate It  

Cody Lyon

OPINION

Once again, charges over misleading allegations are put on the back burner and met with a smarmy dismissive by spokespeople and even the candidate himself, Barack Obama. This time it’s regarding loud allegations by Hillary Clinton over a pair of recent mailings by the Obama campaign in Ohio.

CNN reported that Obama said "There's nothing in that mailing that is inaccurate," adding that he was puzzled by the sudden scrutiny since the mailers had been around for days, if not weeks.

True, some of the campaign material which Clinton blasted as “right out of Karl Rove’s playbook” had already been called into question by Clinton and others, but, as has been the case with much of this campaign, the media along with other players with platforms failed to take much notice.

One of the mailers says that "Hillary Clinton thought NAFTA was a 'boon' to the economy,” going on to say that the New York Senator is "changing her tune" now that she's campaigning in the Buckeye State,” of Ohio.

But Sam Stein at the Huffington Post wrote a piece on February 14 noting former Clinton officials and biographers like Carl Bernstein and Mickey Kantor had spoken in the media and elsewhere noting that Hillary had long held political and philosophical opposition to NAFTA, but being first lady, was unable to publicly oppose the legislation at that time it was enacted.

The other mailer, on the hot button, sensitive issue of healthcare coverage had drawn a loud condemnation from the Clinton campaign because of what it saw as a use of visual images that harkens back to the insurance industry sponsored 1993 ad campaign well known as the “Harry and Louise” commercials.

Whether or not the images of the kitchen table couple worrying over healthcare costs offers similarities to Harry and Louise is subjective to some, the text does engage in “misleading politicking 101.”

According to Factcheck.org, the mailer opens with the claim that “Hillary’s health care plan forces everyone to buy insurance, even if you can’t afford it.

But Factcheck.org says “the mailer leaves out any information on cost reduction any information on cost reduction measures and low income help that Clinton’s plan offers, while it touts such measures found in his plan, some of which very closely mirror Clinton’s.”

Naturally, politicians in the heat of campaign are going to engage in slippery talk and a tendency to plant seeds of doubt aimed at potential voters that is often laden with fact challenged or questionable text and messages. But in the end, voters suffer because they are misled into believing messages that simply aren’t true. And that’s where the news people come in since its there job to expose that sort of material and behavior to readers, viewers and listeners for what it is, misleading.

But, as this campaign season has shown, over the past few weeks, they’ve done a pretty lame job and have according to those on the Clinton side, appeared almost biased.

In fact, some in the public forum have already spun Clinton’s attack over the mailers a desperate candidate resorting to harsher tactics to save her campaign.

Well hooray for Clinton for putting on the political hot foot because she and plenty of her supporters recognize that this is a fight for her political life and potentially a fight for a Democratic victory come November. Maybe a little drama is necessary to capture the attention of those watching the cameras. And, hopefully, those watching the footage will realize, that in November, when allegations over tactics and other questions start hurling from Republicans, it will be necessary for them to be met with answers, and not dismissive and arrogant missives. For one, the American people don’t like that sort of condescension.

Eventually, they figure out when they are being misled or hoodwinked.

 1  |  2

 

http://codylyonblogolater.blogspot.com

New York Writer

Contact Author
Contact Editor
View Other Articles by Author

 

Bookmark this page: (what's this?)

NETSCAPE      DIGG THIS      Add This Page to Mr Wong!           NEWSVINE      DEl.ICIO.US      Looksmart Furl      My Web      Tag!RawSugar      Blink List     (More...)
Comments: Expand   Shrink   Hide  
1 comments

Nezua is an author and illustrator by trade, a rebel at heart, and a fugitive from the iron claw of ennui. You can find more of his writing at http://www.theunapologeticmexican.org , his videos at http://think.mtv.com/profile/Nezua , and graphic art at http://www.xolagrafik.com
NezuaNezua is an author and illustrator by trade, a rebel at heart, and a fugitive from the iron claw of ennui. You can find more of his writing at http://www.theunapologeticmexican.org , his videos at http://think.mtv.com/profile/Nezua , and graphic art at http://www.xolagrafik.com

thank you

Thanks for a well-thought out article. It does seem to contain all the standard Clinton talking points, however. And honestly, if Clinton is going to be employing the negative tactics she has been, I hope she realizes that she is moving against the tide of public desire. People are rejecting her brand of politicking. 

 Furthermore, "Smarmy" as an attack on Obama, as well as "Arrogant" feels far too close to my liking to "Uppity Negro." People are not used to seeing such a self-confident and powerful black man, and I think it feels as if he has a lot of nerve, eh? Damn smarmy fella. But really, he is just the smarter politician, the more effective speaker, the one with the better ground game and the larger amount of delegates. Fault him for what? "Smarminess?" Weak.

Ultimately, for this voter at least, "Smarminess" is a far more acceptable trait in a candidate than faulty judgment on preemptive invasion of a sovereign nation. 

by Nezua (42 articles, 0 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 93 comments) on Monday, February 25, 2008 at 6:34:56 PM
 

 

1 comments

 

Tell A Friend

 


Copyright © OpEdNews, 2002-2008

Blog Ads

 

 

 

 

Most Popular Articles
in the Last 2 Days
(by Recommend Emails)

Obama Must Appoint a Consumer Protectionist as FDA Commissioner by Stephen Fox

Documentation on Sarah Palin's IQ, Academic Record, and Job Performance Posted by Stephen Fox

Bailout Fraud: Does the bailout pass the smell test? by Paul Craig Roberts

Resignation letter from the McCain Palin Campaign by Robyn Crane

Aries Full Moon October 14, 2008 by C.L. Pagano

What you should know about Barack Obama by miles mathis

Johnstown, PA McCain-Palin rally, view it and weep for America by Ed Tubbs

This is Your Nation on White Privilege Posted by Siv O'Neall

Race in the 2008 Election by Sally Liuzzo-Prado

Marx, Globalization, and the Death of Neo-Liberalism by David Schultz

Go To Top 50 Most Popular