THE OTHER SIDE OF THE STORY

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Rebutting Sean Wilentz on Obama.

 
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Sean Wilentz wrote in NEWSWEEK that he would like to see Barack Obama "succeed in fulfilling his promise" by winning in November. But nothing that follows in Wilentz's lengthy article suggests that he is sincere about that. Instead, Wilentz reveals himself as a bitter Hillary Clinton supporter, who has yet to come to terms with his candidate's defeat; and who is now completely out of step with Clinton, who told the Democratic convention, "No way. No how. No McCain! Barack Obama is my candidate. And he must be our president."

As a respected Princeton historian and a committed Democrat, Wilentz should know better than anyone that now is the time when all Democrats must come together to defeat our real enemy: a Republican candidate who is pro-war, anti-choice, and so out of touch with the common man, he doesn't even know how many houses he owns. Otherwise, we will repeat one of the greatest tragedies our party has suffered in the last forty years: the razor-thin victory of Richard Nixon in 1968, which occurred after thousands of anti-war supporters of Eugene McCarthy refused to rally around Hubert Humphrey, after another exceptionally bitter primary season.

Instead of offering useful advice that might increase Obama's chances of winning, Wilentz has written a thinly disguised hatchet-job that could easily have been produced by the McCain attack machine. Consider these examples:

  • Wilentz reinforces the canard that Obama's campaign is short on specifics, charging that his rhetoric amounts "chiefly to promising a dramatic break with the status quo"—and arguing that "millions of other Democrats still find his appeals wispy and unconvincing." The truth is, Obama has detailed positions on everything from Iraq and Afghanistan to universal health care and tax reduction—as was made clear by the cover story in the The New York Times magazine last Sunday dissecting his economic program. The Times concluded that of the two major candidates, Obama would be the real "tax cutter" for most Americans—except for the ones making an average of $9.1 million. That group would get a tax cut of $190,000 a year, from John McCain, versus a tax increase of $800,000 a year from Obama. So much for a lack of specifics.
  • Wilentz denigrates Obama's speech in 2002 opposing the American invasion of Iraq, because it was given at a "left-wing rally" and didn't even rate a mention in the Chicago Tribune story about the event. This, the professor writes, was "enough to convince many of his supporters that he is blessed with superior acumen" in foreign affairs. In fact, the speech did show superior acumen—and Clinton's repeated refusal to apologize for her vote authorizing the war gave Obama a crucial advantage in the first contests of the year. Obama's determination to end our military presence in Iraq as soon as possible is also one of the most vital differences between him and his Republican opponent.
  • Wilentz claims that Obama's promise to meet with "supporters of terrorism" without preconditions left "experienced diplomats in wonder at such half-baked formulations." In fact, the Bush administration's sole foreign policy success—the decision by Libya to abandon its nuclear program—was the result of the administration's willingness to meet with the representatives of a terrorist state, with no preconditions. And despite President Bush's continuing bluster about Iran, the United States sent its own representative to the latest meeting with Iranian representatives about its nuclear ambitions.
  • Wilentz faults liberal intellectuals for failing to press Obama for his "patently evasive accounts" of his connections to convicted wheeler-dealer Tony Rezko—months after the Chicago Tribune declared in an editorial that Obama had provided "a lengthy and, to us, plausible explanation for the presence of now-indicted businessman Tony Rezko in his personal and political lives. The most remarkable facet of Obama's 92-minute discussion [about his ties to Rezko] was that, at the outset, he pledged to answer every question the three dozen Tribune journalists crammed into the room would put to him. And he did."
  • Wilentz feeds another false rumor by writing "Some even imagine that Obama is a secret radical, and they see his emergence as an unparalleled opportunity for advancing their frustrated agendas about issues ranging from the redistribution of wealth to curtailing U.S. power abroad." The fact is—as anyone who has spent any time at all studying the specifics of Obama's positions—there is nothing remotely radical about the junior Senator from Illinois. As Ryan Lizza put it in his lengthy profile of the candidate in The New Yorker, "Perhaps the greatest misconception about Barack Obama is that he is some sort of anti-establishment revolutionary. Rather, every stage of his political career has been marked by an eagerness to accommodate himself to existing institutions rather than tear them down or replace them."

It's time for Wilentz to start focusing on the real Barack Obama—instead of repeating the caricature that he painted of him in the New Republic during the primary campaign. When Wilentz was a fervent supporter of Hillary Clinton for president, his distortions of Obama's positions were at least understandable. Now they can only be explained by his continuing bitterness over Clinton's defeat. Today he must follow Hillary's example, by making a genuine effort to put Barack Obama in the White House.

Charles Kaiser writes a blog called Full Court Press for radaronline.com. He is a former press critic for NEWSWEEK and a former reporter for The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. He is currently working on a book about a French family in the Resistance in Paris during World War II.

© 2008

 
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Member Comments
  • Posted By: HarleyisHere @ 09/06/2008 3:13:48 AM

    Comment: McPalin 08! Country First, Condoms Second!

  • Posted By: HarleyisHere @ 09/05/2008 3:42:16 AM

    Comment: Obama 298 McCain 227 Ties 13

  • Posted By: HarleyisHere @ 09/04/2008 9:33:58 PM

    Comment: I just watched the repig party invoke the image of 9/11 yet AGAIN in an election cycle. Showing images of the towers, the flames, the flowers people left on the ground, the fire fighters and police (who were killed because of Giuliani's fatal mistakes). They speak of the heroes and of the TERROR and FEAR we should NEVER FORGET, even though they forgot only months after it happened when they left Afghanistan and Bin Laden, and went to Iraq...McCain being one of the first to call for it, what judgment.

    There were 2740 Americans killed on Sept 11th 2001, it was a day I will never forget, none of us will. My heart was broken in a deeper way than I have ever known and for the first time since I lost my parents, I was glad they were not here to see this, or what has happened to this country since. My father was a WWII vet, 2 Purple Hearts, 2 Bronze Stars, and 1 Silver Star, not to mention a wealth of other medals, he was TRULY an American hero. He did not seek office, he did not ask for adoration, he came home (after being shot by a sniper just six months before the end of the war) and raised his children as did many other Americans who fought in that war. I am glad that he is not here to see what has become of our country, the country he took a bullet for, his friends died for, in a war NOT fought for OIL, but for the lives of millions of others...and oh yeah he won his war.

    My question is if you are going to speak of heroes and who have died for their country, why the BAN from the White House on showing the coffins of fallen American children who have given their lives for the OIL and EGO(s) of Bush and McCain? They have both tried to use this war to further themselves, just a second ago Senator Lindsay Gramm declared "VICTORY" in Iraq,...great so all of our kids should be home in no more than a few months, right?
    Why use the image of 9/11, an image they repigs forgot only weeks after it happened (unless there was an election), and use it any time they feel they NEED it to invoke fear, heart ache, or remind us of TERROR, as if we had forgotten, why use that image and BAN the other image, the image of 5180 Americans who have died following the orders of BUSH and the dreams of MCCAIN, for OIL and EGO. Why not show the flags draped over the boxes their shipped in, show the funerals and the flags being handed to the heart broken families, families who ask "why?" and have NEVER gotten a straight answer.

    Don't get me wrong, I don't want to see the bodies either, but don't politicize one (9/11) and try to hide the other (5180 of our sons and daughters coming home in flag draped boxes).

    If you care: http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2003/iraq/forces/casualties/

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