Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Oh, what a night

Tues. May 6th was a resounding victory for Sen. Barak Obama in North Carolina and Indiana primary elections, particularly in light of the firestorm around Rev. Jeremiah Wright that Obama's campaign withstood over the last four weeks.

The day before the May 6th primary, several television news program pundits considered both races as potential toss ups, speculating on what would happen if Clinton won both primaries or if Obama won both primaries, usually adding that Indiana was expected to go for Clinton. And it did--but by a slim margin of about 22,000+ votes, less of a margin than the number of people that attend some Obama rallies.

Despite the suggestion routinely lobbied at Obama--that he cannot close the deal--it is really Clinton who needed a knock out punch last night to convince superdelegates that she has a reason to continue to put the Democratic Party through more divisive campaigning. Clinton failed last night to do that. Since South Carolina, her campaigning has depended on fanning the fumes of racial division, stirring up animosity, resentment and fear among the electorate where these attitudes can most easily be ignited, among poor white uneducated.

The race-baiting tactics of the Clintons' and their supporters are despicable ("who do you want to answer the telephone at 3:00am?"; Jesse Jackson also won South Carolina; Obama would not still be in the race if he were white; Obama is winning because he is Black; next Obama will brag that he has not stolen cars; calling Obama "kid" and "that boy.")

By pursuing a desparate strategy of playing to racial bias, the Clintons spit in the face of Black voters, the faithful Democratic electorate that validated Bill and delivered him and Hillary to the White House in the first place. In 1992, it was not Saturday Night Live but The Arsenio Hall Show that launched Bill after his saxophone solo, which should be a lesson to the Black electorate not to sell its soul for a song.

Last night was the end for The Clintons; even Hillary's speech last night sounded in part like a swan song. Although she has not conducted herself respectably so far, Hillary Clinton should sound the first note of harmony to unify the Democratic Party by graciously exiting the primary campaign today.

Obama gave as close an acceptance speech for the Democratic nomination last night as he could. Clearly buoyed by his North Carolina victory, his confidence, energy and call for Americans to take back America was as appealing and inspiring as ever. Obama from the beginning has had the message that most Americans want to hear, the message that speaks to our hurt over the country's 8-year deterioration under Bush and our desire for the arc of democracy-for-all to once again lean toward justice and opportunity for every citizen.

Barak Obama should launch a salvo at McCain today, and by doing so, decisively declare the beginning of the general election campaign. Then, go on to run the campaign that he wants to run, and win in November.
Updated Thurs May 8

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