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by BooMan
Barack Obama's father was Kenyan and his mother was a white woman from Kansas. Bill Richardson's father was a white banker from California and his mother was a Mexican, named María Luisa López-Collada Márquez. Barack Obama spent part of his childhood in Indonesia. Bill Richardson spent part of his childhood in Mexico City.
It shouldn't be any surprise that Bill Richardson feels a certain kinship with Barack Obama. Nor should it surprise anyone that Gov. Richardson might take offense at the sight of Howard Ickes going around telling superdelegates that Obama can't win because he attends a black church (which, in fairness, is what the Rev. Wright flap really amounts to). Bill Clinton should have thought about these things before he let the campaign go into the racial gutter. I understand that he is outraged because:
"Five times to my face (Richardson) said that he would never [endorse Obama]." But maybe Richardson's broken promises are a result of a broken heart. I don't think he would lightly break his word. I can imagine that Richardson is picturing a situation where he, rather than Obama, was leading in the delegate race and Howard Ickes was saying that he can't win because his mother was a Mexican. If you think the situations are not comparable, they're still more alike than not. Remember, it was Hillary Clinton herself that made it a point to implicitly criticize Obama for attending his church when she said that she would not. Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter went out and said the same thing, even after he was attacked for his choice of church in his recent successful primary election.
In the end, most pundits hailed the campaign as an issue-driven race with few attacks based on any particular candidate's religious and ethnic background. They did occur, though, particularly on the last Sunday before the primary, when flyers were distributed at Catholic churches in several neighborhoods, claiming that Nutter had left Catholicism and become a Baptist for political reasons, and that Brady had greatly exaggerated the extent of his church attendance. Nutter's response at the time?
Nutter called his closest rival, Tom Knox, a white millionaire businessman and a churchgoing Catholic, a “low life” and “scumbag” and accused him of being behind the flyers. The racial subtext was not hard to see. Disgust doesn't even begin to describe my estimation of Nutter's hypocrisy. Somehow, I doubt Gov. Richardson is impressed either. Which is why Bill Clinton's sense of betrayal rings so hollow. And he isn't winning any friends with performances like the one he gave at the California Democratic Convention.
In fact, before his speech Clinton had one of his famous meltdowns Sunday, blasting away at former presidential contender Bill Richardson for having endorsed Obama, the media and the entire nomination process. I keep hearing the Clintonistas saying that Clinton only trails by one percentage point and 110 delegates. That's some pretty fuzzy math because Real Clear Politics had Obama ahead by 2.6 percentage points and 164 delegates (131, if you include supers). I don't think making shit up and wishful thinking is helping us in Iraq and I don't think it is helping Bill Clinton make his case. He is their own worst enemy. Maybe Bill Richardson did promise five times not to endorse Obama. But he shouldn't have had to ask that the Clintons not attack their opponent for the church that he attends. Sometimes a broken heart is worse than a broken promise.
Broken Promises, Broken Hearts | 15 comments (15 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Broken Promises, Broken Hearts | 15 comments (15 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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