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Tags: clinton, Clinton strategy, clinton wright, democratic nominee, Jeremiah Wright, obama, Obama Pastor
These comments are not meant to endorse either of the two candidates for the Democratic nomination. They simply point out my thoughts on the recent uproar over Jeremiah Wright and the Clinton campaign's response.
"Clinton Facing Narrower Path to Nomination" -- New York Times
A couple of days ago, the New York Times put out a Political Memo titled "Clinton Facing Narrower Path to Nomination." The article analyzes the waning chance of Mrs. Clinton winning the Democratic nomination for President. With the popular vote and delegate count in Mr. Obama's advantage, only around ten contests to go, and a growing concern for weakened party unity if the contest were to last up to the Democratic National Convention, there is little room for error on behalf of the Clinton campaign.
Recognizing this, Clinton's campaign has shifted the focus onto Obama's relationship with his pastor Jeremiah Wright Jr., who has made racially charged criticisms and harsh condemnations of U.S. behavior. NYT reports that Clinton's campaign hopes that in the weeks leading up to the Pennsylvania primary, scrutiny of Obama's past will uncover more doubts "that would underscore Mrs. Clinton's warning to Democrats that they were rallying around someone who was untested and unvetted," (NYT).
Therefore, the Clinton campaign is not going to emphasize her superior policies or her thirty-five years of experience. They surely will not make the argument that she is the more effective leader of one of the most participative and scrutinized elections in U.S. history. Rather, the Clinton machine will focus on what is truly important: Obama's relationship with his pastor, Jeremiah A. Wright Jr.
"Mrs. Clinton's advisers said they had spent recent days making the case to wavering superdelegates that Mr. Obama's association with Mr. Wright would doom their party in the general election," (New York Times).
Unfortunately for Clinton, framing Obama as unreliable due to his relationship with his outspoken pastor is weak at best. This reality, to which the Clinton campaign is trying hard not to give any credence, can easily be seen by asking a few questions.
First, is Obama's association with a pastor who made anti-American comments worse than Clinton's vote for the resolution to use force in Iraq (a concrete vote enabling us to get where we are in Iraq today? Or, association with pastor critical of U.S. policies?)?
Secondly, does the fact that Pastor Wright has made inflammatory anti-American remarks mean that Obama holds the views expressed in those remarks? Unless there exists a proven, omnipotent process of pastor-to-layperson osmosis of views, this writer would have to say no. After all, members of Congress, Supreme Court Justices, and other government officials sat through each one of George W. Bush's State of the Union Addresses. Does it follow that they all agreed that North Korea, Iran, and Iraq should have been defined as an axis of evil?
A third question to ask in order to vet the Clinton campaign's logic: does Clinton have associations with shady or controversial persons, and if so, does that mean she is "untested and unvetted" as well? If Clinton's argument that Obama is "untested and unvetted" due to his association with Pastor Wright is capable of holding water, then in order for her to be tested and vetted, which Mark Penn deems a process that "will make a big defference," Clinton cannot have associations with controversial figures. Unfortunately, she does, but perhaps friends convicted in the Whitewater scandal don't count because they are associations that have passed the "controversial threshold," which means--as everyone knows--they have been known for at least seven years.
Despite the characteristically hollow nature of the argument that is to form the foundation of the Clinton campaign's new strategy, you can be sure that they will advance it anyway.
The Clinton campaign should stick to making the argument the Hillary is ready to be president. Focusing on Obama's pastor's incendiary sermons does not create a dialogue with the American people that can create the ideas and motivation needed to accomplish the goals we should be setting for ourselves.

The fact is that the Clinton camp style of top-down leadership is outdated. I don't need another Clinton telling me how they're running the government.
Nick