Get these FREE newsletters in your email!

Mark Shields

See more great free newsletters
on the subscribe page.

Type your email address:

Your email address is safe with us. View our Privacy policy.

Religion:
Enjoy religious news and spiritual inspiration on the religion page
The Funnies:
Get free jokes, comics, and more! See them all on
our funnies page
Author Bio:
Political commentator Mark Shields began his career as a campaign manager in 1968, when he helped to organize Robert F. Kennedy's campaign for the ...

Read more about Mark Shields.
Books:
Read the classics online or by email. More details on the books page
Games:
Fun online games, quizzes, hangman and more on the games page
Mark Shields

The Fierce Urgency of Indiana for Obama

Mark Shields
In the wake of Hillary Clinton's rock-solid Pennsylvania victory, David Axelrod, the able chief strategist of Barack Obama's campaign, attempted to minimize the political significance of his candidate's having been overwhelmingly rejected by Pennsylvania's working-class voters: "Let's understand -- the white working class has gone to the Republican nominee for many elections. This is not new. Democratic candidates don't rely on these votes."

Whoa! First, to be accurate, Bill Clinton, the only Democratic president since FDR to win re-election, did -- narrowly -- carry white, working-class voters twice. Second, David, we are talking here about Obama's having lost badly working-class voters who are registered Democrats and who voted in a Democrats-only primary. Third, earlier in 2008, Obama had run quite strongly among these very same voters.

In Connecticut, Obama had carried white men by a three-to-two margin as well as labor union voters. In Wisconsin, he won white men by 63 percent to 34 percent and carried 55 percent of all working-class voters with family incomes under $75,000. In both Maryland and Virginia, he won voters in households with union members by 20 percent, and carried white men, as well as working-class voters, in households earning under $75,000 by more than 20 percent.

Barack Obama must figure out again how to win white voters with household incomes under $75,000. He must do so in Indiana, a state where, in his favor, many voters already know him as a neighboring U.S. senator, not just as some stranger with an exotic name. He even has a model to guide him in his urgent quest.

The last time the Indiana presidential primary really mattered was 1968, when the state's amiable Democratic governor, Roger Branigin, campaigned with the formidable backing of the state party organization as the favorite-son stand-in for, first, President Lyndon Johnson and then, following LBJ's withdrawal, Vice President Hubert Humphrey.

The better-educated and anti-(Vietnam) war voters already had their favorite in Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy. That left the late-entering Sen. Robert Kennedy, confronting charges of ruthlessness and opportunism, with political problems.

Robert Kennedy was the Change Candidate that year. Both the Establishment and many not in the Establishment -- but who resented and who resisted the change they knew a Kennedy victory would mean -- opposed him vehemently. Like Obama now, Kennedy did have a money advantage over his opponents.

More than a few Hoosiers were made uneasy by the passion and excitement Kennedy generated in his public appearances. (Sound familiar?) Almost alone among American politicians of his era, RFK had a personal sense of identification with the casualties of the American experiment -- the forgotten and the marginalized.

In the informed judgment of pollster Peter Hart, "America in 1968 was full of anger, while America in 2008 is wracked with anxiety."

In that angry year, some Indiana voters who heard Kennedy were inspired. Some were engaged. Others were critical, even hostile. But those who heard him were rarely indifferent. He could mock himself, like the day when a sudden gust blew away a sheet of paper and he quipped: "That's my entire farm program. Please get it back."

But what Robert Kennedy's winning campaign did in Indiana -- and what Barack Obama's must do now -- according to Peter Hart, was "to capture his time. Ultimately, the campaign was about who we are and who we can become."

Those of us privileged to hear that remembered passion, delivered often too rapidly, will never forget his summons to heal the divisions among us between races, between generations, between classes and on the war. "We are a great country, an unselfish country," he told his audiences, followed always with the quote from George Bernard Shaw: "Some people see things as they are and say: Why? I dream things that never were and say: Why not?"

Indiana is the test. By once again inspiring voters and by reminding us who we are and who, with common sacrifice, we can become, he, too, can win Indiana and, with that victory, the presidential nomination.

========

To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

Distributed By Creators Syndicate Inc.


Copyright 2008 Mark Shields

This news arrived on: 04/26/2008
Share this Story
Digg   del.icio.us   Yahoo   Reddit   Facebook   Google

Printer Friendly Version | Send this page to a friend | Post Comment


Rate This Story:

Great - 5 - 4 - 3 - 2 - 1 - Bad




Posted Comments:

04-29-2008 03:43
Sean wrote:

You're missing the point..again.

What you state in your own article and then seem to gloss over is the precise reason that there is still a contest for the nomination.What real life voters want in a time of high anxiety is a clear path to an end to the source of their anxiety.When one candidate can say this is what I've done,this is how I helped solve this problem,this is my idea of how to overcome this obstacle people will eventually respond.
When the other candidate says simply "I want to change everything" it shows not only shallowness of message,but,I think, a lack of the basic knowledge of our people and system of government.Our country is based on diverse opinions,the people who represent us give voice to the majority of voters in their particular area,district,state or whatever.To think that you are just going to stroll into office and tell everyone to get along is either the height of arrogance or the height of ignorance.Those in office are fighting to protect the interests of their constituents.That is the job they were elected to do.It would make for a short career in DC if they just decided to stop standing up for their own.



04-28-2008 15:41
IrishDave3 wrote:

RFK in Indiana

If memory serves, Kennedy made a blatant racist appeal to Hoosier voters under the cover of law n order(former AG). Think BHO can get away with that...or EVEN SHOULD?




Comment archive | Comment FAQ's

Post Comment::

Author:
Subject:



Recent archives Featured news

View Mark Shields ezine stories by date or visit the complete archive

Featured Channel: Politics

The ArcaMax Politics channel is one of 70 content categories offered by ArcaMax Publishing on this ...