IN THE NEWS: Congressional Black Caucus Split Between Clinton and Obama by Hazel Trice Edney; NNPA Editor-in-Chief Originally posted 12/23/2007 <<Picture (Metafile)>> WASHINGTON (NNPA) - As America prepares for a string of primaries and caucuses to determine who will be its next Democratic and Republican nominees for president, the majority of the 42-member Congressional Black Caucus who have chosen to endorse in the race is split 15-15 between CBC member Illinois Sen. Barack Obama and New York Sen. Hillary Clinton. In interviews this week, CBC members pointed mainly to the candidates' stances on specific issues as the reasons for their endorsements. "He is the most likely to actually produce change in areas that make a difference - home ownership, education, health care, crime policy," says U. S. Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), explaining his endorsement of Obama. Scott, who chairs the House Crime Subcommittee, says, "For years we've concentrated on and focused more on codifying... sound bites rather than seriously addressing crime.'' He adds that he is impressed with Obama's record on health care and the war in Iraq. "He led the charge to get more people health insurance in the Illinois legislature...He also had the strength of character and courage to stand up against the Iraqi war." U. S Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-Texas), who has announced her endorsement of Clinton, says she believes Clinton's long record of service to children shows where her heart really is. She says she is especially impressed that Clinton, as a young lawyer, served as a staff attorney for Marian Wright Edelman's Children's Defense Fund during her post graduate studies and that she served as a consultant to the Carnegie Council on Children. "This is a very important election and I do think that as people begin to know Sen. Clinton and they know her personally and they know her story, she has an enormously convincing story of someone who has empathy and out of empathy, one can act upon the pain of others and the joy of others," says Jackson-Lee. While Scott says his endorsement of Obama has nothing to do with the fact that he is Black, Jackson-Lee made no bones about what she sees as an opportunity to raise the ceiling for women in America. "I do think that as women, whether it is minority women or majority women, we have a long way to go. Now, it is frankly innovative and inspiring that America would find its way to possibly selecting someone who has both talent and experience who happens to be a woman, which would make us move to where countries around the world have already gone in selecting women as heads of state," Jackson-Lee says. John Edwards, a former North Carolina senator, has three endorsements from CBC members. ''Too many women are not getting the health care they need,'' said U. S. Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-Texas) in a statement posted on the Edwards campaign website. ''John Edwards is the only candidate to outline a specific plan to provide universal coverage and I'm proud to be part of a campaign-the only campaign-with a detailed plan to cover all Americans.'' Eight CBC members had not made public endorsements by NNPA deadline. The 15-15 Clinton-Obama split among the CBC members closely reflects the dividing lines among Black voters, according to polls. A poll taken between Oct. 5 and Nov. 2 by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies showed Clinton with 83 percent of Black votes, compared to Obama, who then had 74 percent. About 10 percent of those surveyed viewed them both negatively. Voters must decide between two Democratic front-runners in a heated race for the White House, which has been run by Republican President George Bush for eight years. Most Bush performance approval ratings are under 40 percent. Plus, about 160,000 troops are still stationed in Iraq in a war that more than half of Americans want ended, according to Pew Research opinion polls. Democrats are banking on these facts to win back the White House. Leading Republican candidates are former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, former Tennesee Sen. Thompson, Sen. John McCain and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. In recent history, Blacks have overwhelmingly supported Democratic candidates for president. The split between the all-Democratic members of the CBC is as follows: Endorsing Hillary Clinton are Lee, Stephanie Tubbs Jones of Ohio; Kendrick Meek, Corrine Brown and Alcee Hastings of Florida; Yvette Clarke, Charles Rangel, Gregory Meeks and Edolphus Towns of New York; Emanuel Cleaver of Missouri; Dianne Watson and Laura Richardson of California; David Scott and John Lewis of Georgia; and Donna Christian-Christensen (V.I.). Endorsing Barack Obama are Scott, Danny Davis, Bobby Rush and Jesse Jackson Jr. of Illinois; Barbara Lee of California; Artur Davis of Alabama; Gwen Moore of Wisconsin; Lacy Clay of Missouri; Elijah Cummings of Maryland; Sanford Bishop and Hank Johnson of Georgia; John Conyers of Michigan; Keith Ellison of Minnesota; Chaka Fattah of Pennsylvania; and Al Green of Texas. Endorsing John Edwards are: Johnson of Texas; Mel Watt and G. K. Butterfield of North Carolina. Those who had not endorsed by NNPA deadline were: Eleanor Holmes Norton of D.C.; Jim Clyburn of South Carolina; Bennie Thompson of Mississippi; Al Wynn of Maryland; William Jefferson of Louisiana; Donald Payne of New Jersey, Maxine Waters of California and CBC Chairwoman Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick of Michigan. The Clinton-Obama choice is complicated by questions over whether America will really elect Clinton as its first woman or Obama as its first African-American president while both race and gender - specifically the Black race and the female gender - have historically been excuses for prejudice and discrimination in America. However, poll readings show both Democratic front-runners as being well ahead of their Republican opponents. The focus is currently on the state of Iowa and its early Democratic Presidential Primary Jan. 3 and the New Hampshire primary Jan. 8. Obama leads slightly in Iowa and Clinton in New Hampshire. But, pundits predict that Super Tuesday, Feb. 5 will be the deciding factor for who will likely win enough delegates for the Democratic nomination in Denver, Colo. Aug. 25-28. Super Tuesday is when 22 states will hold primaries and caucuses. Scott says he believes Obama could win a general election despite racial prejudices. "If he wins Iowa, he would be favored in New Hampshire and if he wins New Hampshire, he'll have a lock on South Carolina, which would put him well-postured to compete on Super Tuesday and he'll have enough money," Scott says. It'll be easier for Obama to win a national election than a Republican, Scott predicts. "You have the worst job performance since Herbert Hoover. You've got the foreclosures at record highs. You've got the median income significantly lower," he says. "By the time the year is out, if people have a chance to look at the Republican administration, I think any Republican candidate will be hard-pressed to do well." http://www.amsterdamnews.com/News/article/article.asp?NewsID=14868&sID=3 * * * As Holiday Break Nears, Obama and Edwards Spar Over Outside Groups By Anne E. Kornblut and Perry Bacon Jr. Washington Post Staff Writers Monday, December 24, 2007; A04 MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa, Dec. 23 -- In a final day of campaigning before suspending their campaigns for Christmas, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton <http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/c001041/> (D-N.Y.) encouraged voters here Sunday to view the holiday as a time to become "instruments of peace and change," while Sen. Barack Obama <http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/o000167/> (D-Ill.) accused former senator John Edwards (D-N.C.) of using outside groups to shape an intense three-way race. Obama continued his attempt to undercut Edwards over the use of independent "527" groups, which are playing an increasing role in the campaign. Such outside Democratic groups are backing Edwards and Clinton and have bought sizable blocks of broadcast advertising in the early-voting states, including Iowa. Obama cited one such group that is running ads on Edwards's behalf and is being operated, in part, by his former campaign manager and political director. By law, Edwards cannot coordinate with the group, but Obama said his rival should block it from participating in the process. "My attitude is that if you can't get your former campaign manager and political director to do what you'd like, then it's going to be hard to get the insurance companies and drug companies to do what you want," Obama said. Edwards aides struck back by noting that their candidate, unlike Obama, has never taken money from lobbyists or PACs. "John Edwards is the only candidate with the courage and the backbone to urge the Democratic Party to stop taking lobbyist contributions," said Jennifer O'Malley, Edwards's Iowa state director. "If Senator Obama is serious about reform, he should join John Edwards in this challenge." For her part, Clinton pushed through blinding snow to a sparsely attended church service in Waterloo, bringing her husband to introduce her to an African American congregation in one of the state's largest minority communities. She later visited a veterans home. All three Democrats will resume their campaigns in Iowa on Wednesday, eight days before the first votes of the 2008 election season are cast in the state's caucuses. Clinton is planning to restart her campaign with a new slogan, "Big Challenges, Real Solutions -- Time to Pick a President." She hopes it will convince undecided voters that she is more experienced than Obama. He is launching a "Stand for Change" tour in the final days, and aides said he will also focus on the question of electability. Even with the caucuses on the immediate horizon, Clinton and Edwards will make at least one more stop in New Hampshire before Jan. 3, with an eye toward that state's first-in-the-nation primary on Jan. 8. Black churches are not typically a mainstay of Iowa politics, but the Clintons sought one out on Sunday morning. Waterloo has five Democratic precincts with significant African American populations and, even though they will elect only 40 delegates, this pocket of the state was considered important enough for both Clintons to penetrate stormy weather for one final visit a few days before Christmas. Flying in from their home in Chappaqua, N.Y., the Clintons arrived shortly after noon at Mount Carmel Missionary Baptist Church, with the service already begun. They were joined by former Iowa governor Tom Vilsack and his wife, Christie; former Denver mayor Wellington Webb; and Bob Nash, a Clinton administration official and current campaign official. The church was more than half-empty, with only a few dozen people in the pews. Hailing Christmas as "the birth of the God of second chances," Bill Clinton introduced his wife as a "giver" and encouraged congregants to vote. He cited the Book of Romans, saying the Bible instructs people to "be good citizens as well as good followers of the Lord." "For as long as I have known Hillary, she has been giving of herself to benefit others. I think we want that sort of giver to lead our country," he said. Hillary Clinton has drawn women steadily to her events, holding female-focused appearances in New Hampshire on Saturday and referencing her gender on Sunday. "We've never had a woman president before," she told veterans. "We need it," an elderly woman shouted from the audience. Obama braved the storm to attend three town-hall meetings, after five events on Saturday, and also appeared on CBS's "Face the Nation." Speaking before crowds in central and western Iowa, where at least one-third said they were undecided, Obama added to his stump speech lines intended to address concerns about his candidacy. He repeatedly emphasized that voters should not consider his race a barrier to his being elected, an issue that he has begun discussing publicly in the past week. He also explained why he is running for president now, rather than waiting for more seasoning, by invoking a Martin Luther King Jr. quote about the "fierce urgency of now." In the past week, a late but extremely muscular effort by independent expenditure groups emerged in Iowa. The issue-oriented groups, known as 527s because of their designation in the federal tax code, are influential because they can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money. The only restrictions are that they cannot explicitly urge people to vote for or against a candidate, and they cannot coordinate their efforts with any active campaign. Three organizations, including two labor unions, have spent more than $2.1 million over the past month in Iowa and New Hampshire to help support Clinton's candidacy. Three more groups, all backed by labor, have spent nearly $1.3 million on Edwards's behalf. By contrast, there appears to be little independent expenditure activity in Iowa from groups backing Obama. The issue flared over the weekend as Obama criticized efforts of the Alliance for a New America, a group formed by the Service Employees International Union and run by Nick Baldick, who served this year as a top adviser to Edwards. Last week, the group spent $769,610 to reserve television ads that help promote Edwards's candidacy. Obama aides have questioned how the group could be operating without the inside knowledge that Baldick must have soaked up from his former boss. Baldick said Sunday that his work for the group has been thoroughly vetted by SEIU's lawyers. "This is an issue advocacy organization with its own agenda," Baldick said. "There is nothing inappropriate about a former adviser leaving a campaign and later working with an organization that is not about any campaign but about raising issues." The ease with which political operatives moved between campaigns and independent expenditure groups prompted several legal challenges four years ago, and some are still moving through the courts. Staff writer Matthew Mosk contributed to this report from Washington. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/23/AR2007122302443_pf.html * * * Obama reaches deep into S.C. -- His political machine could break through the state's longtime barrier to black candidates. By WES ALLISON, Times Staff Writer; Published December 23, 2007 <<Picture (Metafile)>> COLUMBIA, S.C. - On one of those steamy days in the middle of summer when even the flies seem to buzz slowly, a tall young white man pulled into the sand parking lot and knocked on the door of Styles of Distinction Beautique. He told the owner, Latrice Lewis, that he worked for Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic presidential candidate, and he wanted to leave some literature for her customers. But more than that, he wanted Lewis to help spread Obama's vision of hope for America, and to get her permission to check back every now and then. Lewis, 37, whose shop serves about 200 customers each week, was flattered to be asked. No candidate ever had. So Styles of Distinction joined scores of African-American barber shops and beauty salons across South Carolina serving as mini-campaign offices in Obama's quest to become president of the United States. "One thing about the African-American community, you're going to get your hair done," Lewis, a statuesque woman wearing white and black boots, said Wednesday. "While they're sitting in our chairs, we're giving them some of the points." In the race for the Democratic nomination, it is hard to overstate the importance of South Carolina, the first primary state with a large population of African-American voters. About 30 percent of the state's residents are black, as are about half the voters in its Democratic presidential primaries. Buoyed by the affection that her husband, former President Bill Clinton, enjoys among many African-Americans, by the strength of her national campaign, and by the support of the state's black political establishment, polls showed Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton leading Obama among black voters here by 10 percentage points as recently as August. Now, several polls show them tied, or give Obama a slight edge. Campaign workers, Democratic activists and independent analysts cite two main reasons for his surge. First is a strong grass roots organizing effort, like the beauty salons and barber shop initiative - known in the campaign as B-and-B - that is now bearing fruit. Second is his recent success in the polls in lily-white New Hampshire and Iowa, where just 2 percent of residents are black. Contrary to the initial feelings of many African-Americans here, it now appears that white people just might vote for him. "If Obama demonstrates in Iowa that he's a winner, he's going to run away with South Carolina," said House Majority Whip James Clyburn, D-Sumter, South Carolina's top black politician, who isn't taking sides. "There's no question about that. He will run away with South Carolina." - - - Prominent lawyer Steve Benjamin adores former President Clinton and had discussed his wife's candidacy with him earlier this year. He had also met with Hillary Clinton, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, Obama and their surrogates. Benjamin, 37, is a Democratic activist who ran for state attorney general in 2002. He lost with 44 percent of the vote, a drubbing by almost any measure, but it was a record draw for a black candidate in a statewide race. Now he is chairman of the Democratic Party in Richland County, which includes Columbia, the state capital. Nearly half the county's residents are black, and it delivered about 17 percent of the total votes in the Democratic presidential primary back in 2004. But when the former president called again while in town for a banquet Monday night, Benjamin declined to meet with him. "I thought it would be somewhat disingenuous," he said. The next day, Benjamin and a dozen other attorneys gathered outside a courthouse named for the first black federal judge from the Deep South and pledged their allegiance to Barack Obama. "To not be part of it, I think I'd regret to my dying day," explained Benjamin, the father of two young girls. "The consistency of Barack Obama's message of hope, and America's better days being ahead of her, just won me over." He added, "I think the world of Bill Clinton. Hillary Clinton is bright and tough ... and I like the thought of a woman in charge." But Benjamin says he chose Obama in part because of his campaign's focus on reaching voters directly. He, Clyburn and other South Carolina operatives said Obama is far less dependent than Clinton on traditional conduits of black politics here, the preachers and elected leaders. "It's staff- and volunteer-driven, with a huge number of volunteers, not the old-school street politics," Benjamin said. "He's challenging the way politics have been done in this state for the last 50 years." Dick Harpootlian, a former state Democratic Party chairman who campaigned for Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996, said Obama's grass roots machine is the most sophisticated he has seen in 40 years, and it's one reason he's backing him. The campaign boasts seven offices around the state, vs. six for Clinton, and has teams of volunteers contacting potential voters in each of the 46 counties, including several poor, largely black counties that are rarely courted except on election day. Earlier this month in Columbia, an Obama rally with talk show host Oprah Winfrey drew nearly 30,000 people, most of them black, the largest crowd for a political event in state history. "It was awesome," gushed Nicole Dubose, 22, who attended and plans to vote for Obama. "He seemed so down to earth." But the event was more than just another rally. As the crowd passed through the stadium gates, everyone was handed the names and phone numbers of four likely Democratic voters to call during the program. The campaign rented mobile towers to handle the extra wireless traffic. And at the start of the show, the crowd was told to send a text message to a special number to register for an instant drawing. Three winners and their guests got to sit down front and meet Oprah and Obama. More than a sweet door prize, the drawing provided Obama's strategists with the cell phone numbers for thousands of likely supporters. "If they missed anything, I don't know what it was," Harpootlian said. "I've never seen anything like this, the scope of it, the scale of it, and the ability to squeeze every drop out of the effort they make." Clinton, of course, has a formidable machine as well, and she has won the backing of prominent black activists and politicians in every corner of the state. Her husband has visited several times in the past month on her behalf, as has Georgia Rep. John Lewis, an icon of the civil rights movement. Katie Catalon of Charleston, president of the National Beauty Cultural League, which represents black salons, is campaigning for her as well, and several Obama supporters say they expect Clinton to win the endorsement of the state chapter of the National Baptist Convention, the main association of black Baptist churches. Last week, she was endorsed by Don Fowler, a former chairman of the Democratic National Committee and the state Democratic Party whose wife, Carol, is the state party chairman. Fowler and other Clinton supporters say they aren't surprised that Obama is threatening Clinton in South Carolina and that her aura of inevitability was bound to fade as the Jan. 26 primary date neared and more voters began paying attention. "This is a close race," Fowler said. "Anyone who ever thought this was a done deal is a bit mistaken and perhaps naive." - - - Former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, who was born in Seneca, S.C., won South Carolina in 2004 but is running a distant third now, despite aggressive advertising. Polls put his support among black voters in the single digits. As they weigh Obama and Clinton, African-American voters sound a lot like all Democratic voters: Obama's backers see him as a fresh voice and an agent of change, and someone who could unite America, rather than deepen the fissures between Democrats and Republicans. Invariably, they say they fear Clinton is too polarizing to win nationwide. Clinton's supporters cite the New York senator's experience and her perceived toughness, and invariably say they believe she has the best chance to win nationwide. But in a state that hasn't elected an African-American to statewide office since Reconstruction, despite the large black population, and where at times it seems as if the Confederacy has somehow retained an embassy, a little poking easily brings Obama's race to the surface. In February, state Sen. Robert Ford of Charleston, a longtime political leader and organizer in the black community, threw his heft behind Clinton, saying that putting Obama atop the ballot next November would sink the entire Democratic ticket. Having a black leader suggest that a black candidate would "doom" the party caused quite a ruckus, and Ford later apologized. But he still believes Clinton is the Democrats' best hope. "I'm not willing to take any chance and experiment," Ford said Thursday. Benjamin, the Columbia lawyer who rebuffed Bill Clinton to ally with Obama, said his own campaign for state attorney general convinced him otherwise, and he has faith that South Carolina will put him on track toward the White House. "For the naysayers out there - and they come in every stripe - who say he can't win, this country is better than we think it is," Benjamin said. "The country and the state aren't where we ought to be, but we're a lot closer ... than we give ourselves credit for." Wes Allison can be reached at allison@sptimes.com or (202) 463-0577. http://www.sptimes.com/2007/12/23/news_pf/Worldandnation/Obama_reaches_deep_in.shtml * * * History creates 'place of fear' for some By JASON CLAYWORTH; REGISTER STAFF WRITER Mildred Otis won't caucus for Barack Obama for president largely for one reason: She wants to save his life. Otis, 87, remembers America's violent civil rights movement 40 years ago when Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. And, having lived through those events, the Des Moines woman and others fear that Obama's nomination could end in tragedy. "I think there's a lot of people not ready for an African-American to be a president," said Otis, a black woman. With less than two weeks remaining before the Iowa caucuses, the Democratic party could be poised to embark on a historic nominating process. Democrats could wind up with the first African-American or first woman nominated for president on a major ticket as Obama and Hillary Clinton rank first and second, in either order, in most Iowa polls. Obama and Clinton both travel in caravans that include Secret Service protection. Neither staff discusses campaign security, but Obama's wife, Michelle, addressed the topic in speeches, and his half-sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, has recently encouraged voters to set aside any apprehensions. "We can't work from a place of fear," Soetoro-Ng said. "This is a critical juncture in our nation's history, and we have to press forward with courage. ... I see so much love and affection from such a wide range of individuals. I think we are certainly ready for a man like Barack." Michelle Obama last month urged supporters to confront their own doubts, acknowledging that people want to protect themselves and her family from disappointment and failure but saying the right action is to show bravery and move ahead. "That veil of impossibility that keeps us down and keeps our children down - keeps us waiting and hoping for a turn that may never come," she said in a speech titled "A Challenge to Overcome," according to text provided by campaign staff. "It's the bitter legacy of racism and discrimination and oppression in this country. A legacy that hurts us all." Obama has had Secret Service protection since May. Neither national security nor campaign officials have disclosed the reason for the protection. The vast majority of Iowa's presidential campaign stops take place at small businesses or public places. Only on rare occasions are bomb-sniffing dogs or metal detectors used. For the most part - even at Obama campaign stops - people simply write their name on a sign-in sheet and walk into the venue without requests for identification. At some events, staffs of candidates don't even bother with sign-in sheets. Campaign security breaches are rare, but an event last month provided the nation with an example of how serious they can become. The incident occurred when a man walked into a Clinton campaign office in New Hampshire wearing what appeared to be a bomb, demanding to speak about mental health care. The event ended without injury when the man surrendered to police after nearly six hours. Mark Daley, a spokesman for Clinton's campaign, declined to comment for this article, noting that the campaign generally does not discuss security measures. The former first lady's campaign stops in Iowa after the incident appeared to have the same level of security as before. Abraham Funchess, who heads Iowa's Commission on the Status of African Americans, said those who chose to vote differently as a safety precaution have been disabled by fear. "We have to get away from that self-defeating attitude," Funchess said. "I would hope we would not allow that to keep people from participating in democracy. ... There are possibilities that something like that could happen, but there are possibilities at the same time that Hillary Clinton or Bill Richardson could deal with the same type of challenges." Valeria Sinclair-Chapman, an assistant professor of political science at the University of Rochester, said she's careful not to dismiss such fears because many times they're grounded in relevant history that is central in the African-American experience. "The strength of the Obama candidacy, I think, is an indication of how far the country has come," said Sinclair-Chapman. "If, in fact, voters are sincere when they say that they won't support a candidate because they fear for his or her life if they win the nomination, then that really completely undermines the progress that we think we see." http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071222/NEWS09/712220338/-1/SPORTS12 * * * The American Debate | A look at what Democrats will say Clinton will dominate the party's presidential debates. Which Clinton? Read on and find out. By Dick Polman; For The Philadelphia Inquirer Here's an exclusive advance transcript of the next Democratic presidential debate: Host: My first question goes to . . . excuse me, sir, this is highly irregular. Bill Clinton: Y'all had this extra lectern backstage, so I thought I'd bring it out, make myself at home. Hey, throw that spotlight over this way! Host: Sir, this stage is reserved - Bill: I'll just be a moment. Got a little gift here for my wife. Here, honey, open it up. Hillary: Awww, how precious! It's an itty-bitty kitten! Look how warm and fuzzy it is. I've got real tears in my eyes, just thinking about how, when I was a girl, I petted every kitty in my neighborhood each and every day, and the boys all flirted with me because I had so much human empathy for those kitties. They flirted with me even though I wore thick glasses, which I refused to remove as a matter of principle - Bill: Exactly, because you were fighting for change. A change agent. An agent for positive change. A lifetime advocate for a change agenda - Joe Biden: For Pete's sake, can anyone else talk around here? Host: Mr. President, please return that lectern to the stagehands. Sen. Obama, a question. In the upcoming South Carolina primary, nearly half the electorate will be African American. What will you say to them? Barack Obama: Well, I - Bill [bellowing]: I have a dream today! I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character! I have a dream today! Host: Mr. President, I thought you were leaving. Bill: That was from Martin Luther King's '63 speech at the Lincoln Memorial. Can Sen. Obama do that? You want to hear me do the whole speech? Hillary: Maybe later, dear. Thank you, goodbye. Obama: Let me speak to the larger issue here. I believe Americans want to reject the dynasty of the '90s. They're tired of the old, they yearn to hope anew. Those of you in the audience will find the song sheet for "Kumbaya" on page three of your Obama campaign brochure - John Edwards: As the son of a mill worker, I was too poor to have a kitten. Every day, a child in poverty wakes up without a kitten. You know, I learned a lot about poverty last year while earning half a million dollars for a hedge fund, and I believe that poor people opposed the Iraq war from the beginning. I was, too, except for when I voted for it. Mrs. Clinton also voted for it. She and her rich lobbyist pals marched us to war and sent poor people to fight it. Hillary: John, you don't want this warm and fuzzy kitten to bare its claws. Host: Seems like a good time for audience questions. What do we have here . . . a citizen dressed as a snowman! Didn't you show up at the Democratic debate sponsored by YouTube? Welcome back, snowman. Snowman: How are y'all tonight? Host: Mr. President? C'mon, you're not playing fair. Bill [removing snowman head]: My wife is being Swift-boated up there, and she needs my help. Honey, isn't it true that you and I were both against that war from the very beginning, despite what I'm on record as saying at the time? Hillary: Bill, let me handle this, since I am running on my own. It's true I voted yes on the Iraq war, but that doesn't mean I thought it was a good idea, any more than I saw it as a good idea to give drivers' licenses to illegal immigrants when I voiced support for the idea. With respect to the war vote, it's true I didn't read the National Intelligence Estimate, with all the footnotes that argued against war, but that's because I was so busy reminiscing about childhood. Did you know I was a crossing guard in sixth grade? And all the boys - Biden: Did that "snowman" leave? Good. Let's get some equal time around here. I'm the only one on this stage who can out-talk Bill Clinton - Chris Dodd: Speaking of warm and fuzzy, I'm the only sixtysomething on this stage with two kids under the age of 7. Dennis Kucinich: I'm the only one on this stage who would sit down with space aliens, and negotiate with no preconditions - Bill Richardson: I'm the only one on this stage who served as U.N. ambassador, and, in that capacity, offered Monica Lewinsky a job. . . . No, let me amend that. There was much I didn't know at the time. . . . No, let me amend that. I love the Clintons, the vice presidency is open, and I - Obama: Let me speak to the larger issue here. What we've seen tonight is a demonstration of why we need a different kind of politics. I'll give you an example. Hundreds of thousands of donors are financing President Clinton's library, but we don't know who most of them are or whether they'd expect favors in a Hillary presidency. They'd get none from me. All special interests would be automatically in thrall to my unique life story. Host: I have a follow-up question. . . . Wait, give me back that microphone! Guards, remove the president from the premises! Bill: Y'all keep your hands offa me. I just have one question as guest host. Sen. Obama, would you agree there's no truth to the rumor that you were snorting coke in kindergarten while you were writing your essay about wanting to be president? Hillary: C'mon, Bill, I'm running a positive campaign. I once painted my kitchen orange, my mom loves me, I love this kitty - Host: Sir, you're being removed. I know this is not your last interruption. Bill [being carried off]: It all depends on what the meaning of the word is is! http://www.philly.com/inquirer/opinion/20071223_The_American_Debate___A_look_at_what_Democrats_will_say.html * * * Dallas Morning News (DMN) editorial board recommends Barack Obama for the Democratic nomination Sunday, December 23, 2007 America is at a historic crossroads as a woman, a Hispanic and an African-American vie for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination. Two of those candidates, Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, were finalists for our recommendation - not because of ethnicity or gender but because they most closely aligned with our positions on major domestic and international issues. Mr. Obama is our choice because of his consistently solid judgment, poise under pressure and ability to campaign effectively without resorting to the divisive politics of the past. Race is not an overriding factor for us. But it is undeniable that America has failed to heal its racial wounds, including here in Dallas. We need a motivated leader capable of confronting the problem, and no candidate is better equipped than Mr. Obama. His message isn't about anger and retribution. It's about moving forward. There's been lots of noise about his lack of experience. It is a legitimate concern, considering he's a 46-year-old first-term senator. But Mr. Obama's experience in elective office matches that of Abraham Lincoln before he became president. And he has served more time on Capitol Hill than four of the past five White House occupants. If youthful inexperience were such a liability, it has failed to resonate despite his opponents' best efforts. Mrs. Clinton, by contrast, flip-flopped over a plan to give driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. Her campaign accepted donations from questionable sources. When Mr. Obama's support recently surged in early primary states, her campaign tried to smear him over drug use in his youth. It's a tired ploy that has failed in four previous presidential elections. Bill Clinton twice won election after admitting he'd smoked (but not inhaled) marijuana. George W. Bush won despite an alcohol problem and drunken-driving conviction at age 30. Mrs. Clinton called Mr. Obama "irresponsible" and "naive" for saying he would talk to leaders of rogue nations like Syria and Iran. Considering the current failed strategy of confrontation and diplomatic isolation, we think Mr. Obama is wise to include direct negotiations among his tools to reduce regional tensions. Mr. Obama drew criticism for saying he would pursue terrorists, if necessary, by sending troops into Pakistan. The fact is, U.S. troops have been going into Pakistan for years in pursuit of terrorists. All Mr. Obama did, in effect, was to keep that option open for the future. To say otherwise is to declare Pakistan a sanctuary for America's enemies. Mr. Obama, the son of a white American mother and black Kenyan father, spent part of his childhood in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim country. His life experience gives him a unique perspective and a greater ability to build diplomatic bridges. We don't always agree with his positions, but we recognize his potential to unite disparate political factions and restore cooperation between the White House and Capitol Hill. Americans are tired of divisive, hard-edged politics. Democrats would inspire a refreshingly new approach by choosing Mr. Obama as their 2008 candidate. http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/opinion/editorials/stories/DN-demprezrec_23edi.ART.State.Edition1.36adeae.html * * * Racial Undercurrent Is Seen in Clinton Campaign By Chris Cillizza And Shailagh Murray PLAYERS and PLAYERS Sunday, December 23, 2007; A02 It has unfolded mostly under the radar. But an important development in the 2008 Democratic battle may be the building backlash among African Americans over comments from associates of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton <http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/c001041/> that could be construed as jabs at Sen. Barack Obama <http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/o000167/> 's race. These officials, including Clinton aides and prominent surrogates, have raised questions or dropped references about Obama's position on sentencing guidelines for crack vs. powder cocaine offenses; on his handgun control record; and on his admitted use of drugs as a youth. The context was always Obama's "electability." But the Illinois senator's campaign advisers said some African American leaders detect a pattern, and they believe it could erode Clinton's strong base of black support. Here's a sample of how the issue is playing out: From the "Tom Joyner Morning Show," Dec. 14: Tom Joyner: "Yeah, man, they are coming after you now. So the story about the Clinton campaign putting out this statement not to vote for Barack Obama because he used drugs, and then yesterday I understand that she apologized and the campaign worker quit." Obama: "Well, I think everybody knows, because I wrote about it in a book 10 years ago. . . . and part of the reason I wrote about it and I talk about it in schools is because I want young people out there to know that if they make the same kinds of mistakes that I made that they can get over it and that they can move on. . . ." From columnist Derrick Z. Jackson of the Boston Globe, Dec. 15: "That leaves open as to how far the Clinton campaign, whose poll leads have evaporated in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, will go to stereotype Obama as not only naive, but cast him in a sinister light in a nation where black drug use and criminality is exaggerated in the media . . . ." " 'I don't think these strategies are very subtle,' Obama said. 'I won't speak to the racial element of it because I think, you know, if I were a white candidate, obviously, somebody suggesting falsely they were a drug dealer, it's never good.' But in sum, Obama, who has written about his teenage drug use in his memoirs, said, 'There's been a series of these kinds of tactics that at some point we've just got to send a clear signal this is not what we're about.' " From Black Star News of New York, Dec. 19: "So the Clinton campaign decided to use the race card. A senior campaign official, Billy Shaheen, the co-chairman of Hillary Clinton's campaign in New Hampshire, warned voters that Obama might not be the suitable candidate because were he to win the Democratic nomination, those nasty Republicans could bring up the fact that Obama has admitted to using marijuana and cocaine in his youth. Might the Republicans not even ask whether Obama had also been a drug dealer? This was clearly playing to the deep seated stereotype that some white people harbor -- of Blacks as natural born criminals and drug dealers." Huckabee's Message Simple for Christmas Practically every candidate running for president is up with some sort of Christmas commercial ranging from the serious (Sen. John McCain <http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/m000303/> 's retelling of Christmas in a POW camp) to the humorous (Rudy Giuliani's appearance with Santa.) The Fix chose three of the ads -- Giuliani's, as well as the commercial by Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton in which she is wrapping a variety of presents corresponding to the issues of her campaign and former governor Mike Huckabee's "reason for the season" spot -- and asked a variety of unaffiliated political operatives for their takes. Here's what they had to say: The favorite, by far, of our informal panel was Huckabee's ad. "Huckabee's ad is the most effective because it was first, it is simple, and, in case there was any doubt, it reminds viewers of his singular strength -- that he's a Christian," said Democratic consultant Stephanie Cutter. "He is just so genuine that it really does give you a good feeling," said Democratic pollster John Anzalone, a sentiment echoed by Republican pollster Glen Bolger: "Huckabee's is the best, because it is not political and shows a sense of genuineness about the guy." Reviews were more mixed for the ads by Giuliani and Clinton. Of Giuliani's "Santa" commercial, Democratic pollster Dave Beattie said: "It attempts to use humor to makes promises and criticize the process, but unlike Huckabee's and even Hillary's ad, it is more about the process of politics rather than political belief and motivation." Jennifer Burton, a Democratic media consultant, was more complimentary -- arguing that Giuliani's ad "succeeds in hitting his message points and using humor to make Rudy two-dimensional." Not surprisingly the Clinton ad, like everything in her campaign, provoked strong feelings on both sides. "Hillary's ad is a clever treatment," said Republican media consultant Erik Potholm. "The spot does a good job of bringing the viewer in -- as if they are watching the latest ads for Macy's last-minute, holiday sale -- while reminding voters of her agenda." Beattie was far less sanguine about the ad's impact. "It treats the holidays as a prop, which probably does little to move voters and does little to keep expanding her image as a person rather than a politician." http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/22/AR2007122201762_pf.html * * * Obama, Clinton spar on foreign policy; Both say they have greater backing By Marcella Bombardieri, Globe Staff | December 23, 2007 MILFORD, N.H. - Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have opened a new front in their battle over who is best equipped to lead American foreign policy. The latest skirmish started when Obama boasted that he has more support than Clinton does from foreign policy specialists who served in President Bill Clinton's administration. "Why is the national security adviser, the secretary of the Navy for Bill Clinton, the assistant secretary of state for Bill Clinton, why are all these people endorsing me?" Obama asked in Iowa on Friday. "It's not just because I give a good speech. They apparently believe that my vision of foreign policy is better suited for the 21st century, and is not caught up in the politics of fear that we've been seeing out of George Bush for the last seven years." Visiting a diner here yesterday, Hillary Clinton waved away that assertion as something that "was easily disproved," and said she had far more support in the foreign policy community. But more fundamentally, she tried to turn the issue around and use it against Obama, suggesting his crowing about his advisers was a way to mask a personal lack of experience on the issue. "I'm not holding myself out by leaning on advisers. I'm saying, here I am, here's what I believe, here's what I've done for 35 years," she said in response to reporters' questions. "When the door closes, and when you're having to make those difficult decisions that presidents confront every day, ultimately there is no adviser." Both Hillary Clinton and Obama have cadres of highly respected foreign policy officials who served in Bill Clinton's administration. Hillary Clinton's kitchen cabinet includes former secretary of state Madeleine Albright, former ambassador to the United Nations Richard Holbrooke, and General Wesley Clark, former supreme allied commander of NATO. Obama's brain trust includes former national security adviser Anthony Lake, Richard Danzig, former secretary of the Navy, and Susan Rice, former assistant secretary of state for African affairs. On the question of who has more Bill Clinton foreign policy veterans, both sides could be accused of fudging. The Obama campaign said his assertion was based on a New York Times Magazine article that described an enormous reservoir of support for Obama in foreign policy circles, but that story was based in part on anonymous sources and did not say it represented a specific count. In response, the Clinton campaign offered a list of 83 foreign policy advisers. But some of them were minor ambassadors or people who made their names primarily in other arenas or other eras, such as Walter Mondale, former vice president. After Hillary Clinton's remarks yesterday, Obama spokeswoman Jen Psaki shot back again, saying, "If Senator Clinton wants to make this election about who's made the best decisions on foreign policy, that's a comparison we're happy to make since Barack Obama is the only major candidate who opposed the war in Iraq and refused to give George Bush the benefit of the doubt on Iran." Marcella Bombardieri can be reached at bombardieri@globe.com. * * * Wayne Ford Endorsement Gives Obama Legislative Lead by: John Deeth - Sunday (12/23) at 09:38 AM With Sunday's endorsement from Rep. Wayne Ford of Des Moines, Barack Obama takes the lead in endorsements from Iowa Legislators with 20 to Hillary Clinton's 19. Clinton still leads the Iowa Senate with 10, while Joe Biden has the most House endorsements with 14. Rumors had abounded <http://www.iowaindependent.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=1550> that Ford was planning to endorse Clinton immediately after the Dec. 1 Brown and Black Forum in Des Moines, but on Dec. 4 Ford issued a non-endorsement, saying, "In my opinion, none of the candidates aggressively dealt with the problems in the urban communities." In Sunday's Obama press release, Ford said Obama will be "a President who can successfully expand economic opportunity and access to affordable housing for every American - including those who live in urban communities." The release also noted that Ford's endorsement gives Obama support from all four of Iowa's African-American legislators. In addition to Ford, Obama recently picked up support from Council Bluffs Rep. Paul Shomshor, while Biden added Reps. Eric Palmer of Oskaloosa and Dennis Cohoon of Burlington. Only 14 of the 83 Democratic legislators remain uncommitted, including House Speaker Pat Murphy and Senate Majority Leader Mike Gronstal (whose family members are backing Clinton.) Below the fold, the roll call. TotalSenateHouse Obama20713 Clinton19109 Biden16214 Edwards1028 Dodd321 Richardson101 Kucinich000 Gravel000 Uncommitted1477 Total833053 NameDistrictHome CountyEndorsement2004 Endorsement Sen. Herman C. QuirmbachSenate District 23StoryBidennone Sen. Dr. Joe M. SengSenate District 43ScottBidennone Rep. McKinley BaileyHouse District 9HamiltonBidennew Rep. Doris KelleyHouse District 20Black HawkBidennew Rep. Roger ThomasHouse District 24ClaytonBidenKerry Rep. Polly BuktaHouse District 26ClintonBidenDean Rep. Dick TaylorHouse District 33LinnBidenKerry Rep. Lisa HeddensHouse District 46StoryBidenKerry Rep. Bruce HunterHouse District 62PolkBidenDean Rep. Kevin McCarthyHouse District 67PolkBidenLieberman Rep. Jim LykamHouse District 85ScottBidennone Rep. Mary GaskillHouse District 93WapelloBidenKerry Rep. John WhitakerHouse District 90Van BurenBidenGephardt Rep. Mike ReasonerHouse District 95UnionBidenLieberman Rep. Eric PalmerHouse District 75MahaskaBidennew Rep. Dennis CohoonHouse District 88Des MoinesBidenEdwards Sen. William A. Dotzler, Jr.Senate District 11Black HawkClintonGephardt Sen. Roger StewartSenate District 13JacksonClintonKerry Sen. Michael ConnollySenate District 14DubuqueClintonKerry Sen. Wally E. HornSenate District 17LinnClintonnone Sen. Rob HoggSenate District 19LinnClintonnone Sen. Dennis H. BlackSenate District 21JasperClintonKerry Sen. Dick L. DeardenSenate District 34PolkClintonGephardt Sen. Staci AppelSenate District 37WarrenClintonnew Sen. Becky SchmitzSenate District 45JeffersonClintonnew Sen. Gene FraiseSenate District 46LeeClintonnone Rep. Roger WendtHouse District 2WoodburyClintonKerry Rep. Mark KuhnHouse District 14FloydClintonGephardt Rep. Todd TaylorHouse District 34LinnClintonnone Rep. Swati DandekarHouse District 36LinnClintonKerry Rep. Paul BellHouse District 41JasperClintonKerry Rep. Beth Wessel-KroeschellHouse District 45StoryClintonnew Rep. Mary MascherHouse District 77JohnsonClintonKerry Rep. Vicki LensingHouse District 78JohnsonClintonnone Rep. Cindy WincklerHouse District 86ScottClintonDean Sen. Jeff DanielsonSenate District 10Black HawkDoddnew Sen. Tom HancockSenate District 16DubuqueDoddnew Rep. Ray ZirkelbachHouse District 31JonesDoddnew Rep. Bob KressigHouse District 19Black HawkEdwardsnew Sen. Daryl BeallSenate District 25WebsterEdwardsDean Sen. Keith A. KreimanSenate District 47DavisEdwardsEdwards Rep. Wes WhiteadHouse District 1WoodburyEdwardsGephardt Rep. Andrew WentheHouse District 18FayetteEdwardsnew Rep. Ro FoegeHouse District 29LinnEdwardsEdwards Rep. Art StaedHouse District 37LinnEdwardsnew Rep. Geri HuserHouse District 42PolkEdwardsEdwards Rep. Nathan ReichertHouse District 80MuscatineEdwardsnew Rep. Kurt SwaimHouse District 94DavisEdwardsEdwards Sen. Steve WarnstadtSenate District 1WoodburyObamaKerry Sen. Rich OliveSenate District 5StoryObamanew Sen. Bill HeckrothSenate District 9BremerObamanew Sen. Robert E. DvorskySenate District 15JohnsonObamaGephardt Sen. Tom RiellySenate District 38MahaskaObamanew Sen. Joe BolkcomSenate District 39JohnsonObamaDean Sen. Frank WoodSenate District 42ScottObamanew Rep. Brian QuirkHouse District 15ChickasawObamaKerry Rep. Deborah BerryHouse District 22Black HawkObamaKerry Rep. Pam JochumHouse District 27DubuqueObamaKerry Rep. David JacobyHouse District 30JohnsonObamaKerry Rep. Tyler OlsonHouse District 38LinnObamanew Rep. Mark SmithHouse District 43MarshallObamaKerry Rep. Donovan OlsonHouse District 48BooneObamaKerry Rep. Helen MillerHouse District 49WebsterObama</TD<Gephardt Rep. Janet PetersenHouse District 64PolkObamaKerry Rep. Ako Abdul-SamadHouse District 66PolkObamanew Rep. Elesha GaymanHouse District 84ScottObamanew Rep. Wayne FordHouse District 65PolkObamaEdwards Rep. Paul ShomshorHouse District 100PottawattamieObamaLieberman Rep. Marcella FrevertHouse District 7Palo AltoRichardsonDean Sen. John P. "Jack" KibbieSenate District 4Palo Alto Kerry Sen. Amanda RaganSenate District 7Cerro Gordo none Sen. Brian SchoenjahnSenate District 12Fayette new Sen. Matt McCoySenate District 31Polk Kerry Sen. Jack HatchSenate District 33Polk Kerry Sen. Thomas G. CourtneySenate District 44Des Moines Gephardt Sen. Michael E. GronstalSenate District 50Pottawattamie none Rep. Dolores MertzHouse District 8Kossuth none Rep. Tom SchuellerHouse District 25Jackson new Rep. Pat MurphyHouse District 28Dubuque none Rep. Jo OldsonHouse District 61Polk Kerry Rep. Rick OlsonHouse District 68Polk new Rep. Mark DavittHouse District 74Warren Kerry Rep. Philip L. WiseHouse District 92Lee Lieberman http://www.iowaindependent.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=1711 * * * Paul B. Hertneky: Let's compare the public accomplishments of Clinton and Obama By PAUL B. HERTNEKY - Union Leader (NH) INSTEAD OF COMPARING Hillary Clinton's and Barack Obama's experience -- a vague set of claims -- I turned my attention toward accomplishments. Not what they've accomplished for themselves, but what they've accomplished for others. In doing so, I excluded purely personal gains. I also eliminated all distinctions or honors. For similar reasons, I ignored the elections they've won. These credentials are well-known. Also, like any alert prospective employer, I am informed by what they support, worked on, worked toward and fought for, but I am more interested in what they have accomplished for their constituents. After graduating from Columbia, Obama went to work with churches that organized job training and other programs for residents of a massive housing project in Chicago. He persuaded the city to provide summer jobs, remove asbestos, repair toilets, pipes and ceilings. He went door to door, offering help for three years, then went to Harvard Law School. Upon graduating from Wellesley, Hillary Rodham made a commencement speech that moved her audience. She went immediately to Yale Law School. Obama returned to Chicago to lead Project Vote, which signed up about 150,000 new African-American voters. He also joined a big law firm. Following Yale, and a year in Washington, Rodham moved to Arkansas and married Bill Clinton. She taught at the University of Arkansas and joined a big law firm. Clinton established a legal aid clinic at the university, where she taught for two years. Obama began teaching at the University of Chicago, where he would continue to lecture for 11 years. I mention teaching because I consider it an accomplishment in the service of others. During her time as an attorney in Arkansas, Clinton gave birth to Chelsea. Her husband ran unsuccessfully for Congress, successfully for attorney general, and governor. During Obama's time as an attorney in Chicago, he became a husband and father of two daughters. He entered the Illinois Senate in 1994. As a member of the minority party of the Senate for six of his eight years there, Obama wrote a health insurance law that covered an additional 20,000 children, a welfare reform law, an earned-income-tax-credit law for working-poor families, and death penalty reform that passed unanimously. During his last two years in the majority, he sponsored 780 bills, 280 of which became law. As first lady of Arkansas, and of the United States, Clinton served on many boards. She chaired only one: the Task Force on National Health Care Reform, which failed, accomplishing only political traction for Republicans and a setback for her husband. She fended off prosecution involving the White House Travel Office and her investments with Whitewater. Although these are personal accomplishments, they also served constituents by protecting her husband. A year after Clinton became a senator, she secured $20 billion for New York City in the wake of 9/11. Among other funding measures she directed toward her state, she prevented the closing of a military base there. Although she is considered to be one of the most influential Democrats in the Senate, most of her sponsored legislation has been symbolic -- naming two post offices, two courthouses, honoring and congratulating sports teams and historic figures from New York. Since Obama entered the U.S. Senate in 2004, he has joined Republican Richard Lugar in writing a law that funds the destruction or securing of loose nuclear and conventional weapons (shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles, for example) throughout the world. He also introduced the first bill, that soon became law, to fund and address pandemic flu preparedness. In one inspiring discovery, Obama and Clinton teamed up to pass a law that helps hospitals disclose medical errors. It goes a long way toward serving patients while reducing malpractice claims. There is no way to assess the value of each candidate's participation in collective efforts to serve our country. Clinton has given time to many efforts and lived approximately 5,000 more days than Obama, amassing supporters, money and fame. But time spent achieving such goals can hardly be seen as accomplishments for the good of the people. Obama's accomplishments show greater efficiency and clarity of purpose, forming productive alliances, making the most of his comparatively short career. People talk about his charisma, but give me that skill and focus, trained on a four-year term, and we could see unprecedented results. Paul B. Hertneky is a freelance writer who teaches at Antioch University New England in Keene. Opinions expressed in this weekly column aren't necessarily those of the New Hampshire Union Leader. All readers are welcome to submit essays of up to 750 words for the editors consideration. Please include a word or two about yourself, along with name, address, phone number and, if possible, a photograph. Mail to: Your Turn, c/o New Hampshire Union Leader, P.O. Box 9555, Manchester, NH 03108, or by e-mail to opinion@unionleader.com. All submissions become property of the Union Leader and can't be returned. http://www.unionleader.com/article.aspx?headline=Paul+B.+Hertneky%3A+Let's+compare+the+public+accomplishments+of+Clinton+and+Obama&articleId=11dc4bb6-bc19-4f73-97a4-400fbd3dad27 * * * FROM THE BLOGS On CNN, Donahue claimed Penn repeated "drug issue ... over and over and over" -- but Matthews first asked about drugs http://mediamatters.org/items/200712220004 * * * Clinton Launches Obama Attack Web Sites Clinton Campaign Registered Names of Two Web Sites to Attack Ill. Senator http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=4032659 * * * JOHN BRACKEN BLOG: "I Want Some Obama Republicans" http://bracken.wordpress.com/2007/12/21/i-want-some-obama-republicans-obamamedia-posts-for-1221/ * * * THE COFFEE HOUSE Blog: USING HIS RACE AGAINST OBAMA http://www.tpmcafe.com/blog/coffeehouse/2007/dec/23/using_his_race_against_obama * * * VDARE Blog: Hillary, Obama, and the Press http://blog.vdare.com/archives/2007/12/23/hillary-obama-and-the-press/ * * * THE SWAMP: Jackson stumps for Obama, history by Christi Parsons SUMTER, S.C. - Jesse Jackson Jr. was bound and determined to get some unregistered voters on the rolls. If only he could find them. But the first door the young congressman knocked on belonged to an elderly man who already had a valid voter card. Next door lived a retiree who had done better than simply register herself. She had a sheaf of her own registration forms handy in case there were any stragglers among her holiday visitors. Eventually, Jackson just decided to give a rousing pep talk for his fellow canvassers, fifteen volunteers who paused on a street curb to listen. "This is God's work in the vineyard," Jackson said. "You are on the winning side." A high rate of registration on his call list was good political news for Jackson, in town over the weekend to promote his friend and fellow Chicagoan Barack Obama for the Democratic presidential nomination. Most of those he visited were fully registered, Obama-friendly voters. But as he worked his way around the state in the final days before the Wednesday registration deadline, Jackson - son of the civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson, who twice sought the presidency - couldn't help but see things in more sweeping terms. In a region with a history of disenfranchising its black voters, African-Americans are poised to play a critical role in the selection of the Democratic nominee. "People on the South Side of Chicago are waiting to hear from the state of South Carolina," Jackson told one gathering in Columbia. "People in Harlem are waiting to hear from the state of South Carolina . . . They are waiting for you to write a new chapter." That arguably happens even before the first vote is cast. Democratic officials deliberately set the early primary in South Carolina to give a greater voice to African-Americans, who account for roughly half the Democratic voters here. Democrats are competing hard for their support and addressing the things they care about. Hillary Clinton, John Edwards and Obama especially have been working to identify supporters and to make sure they're eligible to vote. Republican candidates also worked to reach their voters before the registration deadline for their Jan. 19 primary passed last week. The rise of the South Carolina primary for the GOP likely gives more influence to the state's heavy concentration of social conservatives, who have traditionally had a strong say in the Iowa caucuses. But for Democrats, this is an unprecedented opportunity. Their last big voter registration push took place in the past few days and weeks, in advance of the day-after-Christmas deadline. The Edwards team say they registered more than 900 high school seniors one recent day. Clinton's volunteers worked the phones and went door-to-door over the weekend, and also made a few final stops at the barbershops and beauty salons that have become a point of competition for Democrats this year. And for Obama, Jackson flew down from Chicago to campaign, participating in one canvass in a multi-racial neighborhood of large brick ranch-style homes and tidy lawns. Angela Willis came from just a few blocks away to help him out. The Saraf-Tulsky family drove down from Durham, N.C., in their SUV. Danny Kim arrived in a car full of volunteers from Atlanta, and kicked off the afternoon canvass with the familiar Obama call-and-response: "Fire it up!" and "Ready to go!" "You'll be able to tell your high school classmates you were out here for Barack Obama," Jackson told Noah and Zeke Tulsky, both young teenagers, as they set out. The boys and their parents ended up registering three voters. Jackson wasn't so lucky. His first stop was at the home of Caroline Bohanon, a retired radiologist and Air Force colonel who didn't need to be registered. She had papers in her kitchen, and had already signed up eight voters of her own - including a granddaughter home from college at North Carolina's High Point University. "Is she going back to campus . . . " Jackson started to ask, but Bohanon was way ahead of him. "She's already voting absentee," she said. Next door, Edward Porter also turned out to be a registered voter of long standing. As long as Jackson was on his doorstep, though, Porter wanted to express his concern about Obama's safety as a fellow African-American seeking such a high station. Jackson paused by a white rocking chair on Porter's front porch for a few minutes. He talked about Martin Luther King's speech "I've Been to the Mountaintop," in which the civil rights leader told a Memphis crowd that he cared less about dying than about working for freedom and equality. King was assassinated the next day, he reminded Porter. "In a sense, it was his last will and testament for us," Jackson said. "We have to move beyond fear." Jackson was 3 years old at the time of that speech, the same age as the Voting Rights Act passed in 1965 to protect poll access for minority voters in South Carolina and other Southern states. As he headed toward his car to go to a town hall meeting nearby, Jackson said he thinks of the current effort in the same terms. "This is not a generation of Americans that is separate and apart from any other struggle that women have undertaken that led to the 19th Amendment, or that African-Americans have undertaken that led to the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments," he said. "These are profound historical revelations and times." As the congressman left his doorstep, Porter asked the name of the young man to whom he'd been speaking. "That was Rev. Jackson's son?" Porter said. "Wish I could have let him sign me up." http://www.swamppolitics.com/news/politics/blog/2007/12/jackson_stumps_for_obama_histo.html Traci Otey Blunt Hillary Clinton for President Press Office -- African American Media 4420 N. Fairfax Drive Arlington, VA 22203 direct dial: 703.875.1282 cell: 202.315.8117 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Contributions to Hillary Clinton for President are not deductible for federal income tax purposes. ---------------------------------- Paid for by Hillary Clinton for President ----------------------------------