May 12, 2008
Race Cards and Speech Codes In The Democrats' Civil War
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
"Give me a break. This whole thing is the biggest
fairy tale I've ever seen."
So said
Bill Clinton in New Hampshire of Obama's claim to
have been a constant opponent of the war. Clinton cited
Obama's voting record, which was the same as Hillary's
in his early Senate years.
Yet, for this, the ex-president, designated by Toni
Morrison as
"our first black president,"
was charged with
playing the race card.
Clinton spent days explaining the "fairy tale"
remark.
Came then the morning of the South Carolina primary,
where Barack was rolling up a smashing victory. Bill
volunteered: "Jesse Jackson won in South
Carolina, twice, in '84 and '88. And he ran a good
campaign, and Sen. Obama's running a good campaign."
That broke it. Bill Clinton was openly "playing
the race card."
Now, undoubtedly, Clinton was trying to belittle, to
diminish the importance of the South Carolina vote for
Obama. But why is it racist to say what Clinton was
implying: That, in a Southern state where a huge share
of the Democratic vote is African-American, a strong
black presidential candidate can be expected to do well?
Political history proves this. What is racist about
saying it?
Aware of the truism, every political analyst was
looking closely at the racial breakdown of the South
Carolina vote.
Last week came Hillary's turn. After her victory in
Indiana and loss in North Carolina, which pundits said
rang down the curtain on her presidential bid, she
advanced an argument candidates have used since primary
elections began.
"I can win—and my opponent can't."
The argument was made against Goldwater, Nixon,
Reagan.
In an
interview with USA TODAY, Hillary argued that the
coalition she has put together would be stronger against
John McCain than the coalition Barack has cobbled
together.
She began by relating an AP article "that found
how Sen. Obama's support among working, hard-working
Americans, white Americans, is weakening again, and how
whites in both states who had not completed college were
supporting me."
"There's a pattern emerging here," said
Hillary. "I have a much broader base to build a
winning coalition on."
This shot Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post
into low orbit.
"As a rationale for why
Democratic Party superdelegates should pick her over
Obama, it's a slap in the face to the party's most loyal
constituency—African Americans—and a repudiation of
principles the party claims to stand for. Here's what
she's really saying to party leaders: There's no way
that white people are going to vote for the black guy.
Come November, you'll be sorry ...
"Clinton implies but
doesn't quite come out and say ... that Obama is
black—and that
white people who are not wealthy are irredeemably
racist." [The
Card Clinton Is Playing, May 9, 2008]
But Hillary was saying no such thing. Describing her
coalition, she was implying that Obama's coalition—a
George McGovern-Jesse Jackson combine embracing 90
percent of
African-Americans, plus liberals, students and
cause people—has less chance of beating McCain than
does she and her more Middle American coalition.
Democrats, not liberal Democrats, are the swing votes
who decide presidential races. Here Hillary beats Obama
three to two or two to one, North and South.
Has she no right to make this argument? Can Brother
Robinson explain exactly how Hillary can describe her
Ohio-Pennsylvania coalition
without using the dread word "white"?
Some of the reaction to the Clintons, whose
once-universal support among African-Americans has
crashed, is due to the immense stake black Americans
have come to invest in the Obama candidacy. But some of
this is something else, something more sinister.
Bill and Hillary Clinton are not playing a race card.
Rather, the liberal media and some black journalists
with sentimental, emotional or ideological investments
in Obama are playing the intimidation card.
They are setting limits around what may and may not
be said about Obama. They are seeking to censor robust
adversarial speech where Barack is concerned, by
branding as racists "playing the race card" any
who make Barack run the same paces as anyone else.
The Clintons are today victims of a double standard
that has long been employed against conservatives.
Even African-Americans critical of Obama are feeling
the lash. In Saturday's Washington Post article,
"Black
Community Is Increasingly Protective of Obama,"
reporter Darryl Fears writes, "Standing in the path
of Obama's campaign has been dangerous" for
prominent blacks.
Bill and Hillary have lost luster and sustained
damage to their reputations because, in the Democrats'
universe, such smears stick. The question for
Republicans is whether they will
let themselves be intimidated, as they too often
are, from using legitimate political weapons to defend
what they still have.
It is thus a sign of trouble ahead that John McCain
declared the Rev. Wright off limits and berated the
North Carolina GOP for bringing him up. Let your
adversaries circumscribe the content of your campaign,
and you usually end up losing your campaign.
Patrick J. Buchanan
needs
no introduction
to VDARE.COM readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from Amazon.com. His new book
is
Day of Reckoning: How
Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart.