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Negative Campaigns

New York Times Calls Out McCain

by Nick on July 31, 2008

The New York Times Editorial Board has responded to John McCain’s latest race-baiting tactics.  And they are not at all happy.  Here it is in full:

We know that operatives in modern-day presidential campaigns are supposed to say things that everyone knows are ridiculous — and to do it with a straight face.

Still, there was something surreal, and offensive, about today’s soundbite from the campaign of Senator John McCain.

The presumptive Republican nominee has embarked on a bare-knuckled barrage of negative advertising aimed at belittling Mr. Obama. The most recent ad compares the presumptive Democratic nominee for president to Britney Spears and Paris Hilton — suggesting to voters that he’s nothing more than a bubble-headed, publicity-seeking celebrity.

The ad gave us an uneasy feeling that the McCain campaign was starting up the same sort of racially tinged attack on Mr. Obama that Republican operatives, some of whom work for Mr. McCain now, ran against Harold Ford, a black candidate for Senate in Tennessee in 2006. That assault, too, began with videos juxtaposing Mr. Ford with young, white women.

Mr. Obama called Mr. McCain on the ploy, saying, quite rightly, that the Republicans are trying to scare voters by pointing out that he “doesn’t look like all those other Presidents on those dollar bills.’’

But Rick Davis, Mr. McCain’s campaign manager, had a snappy answer. “Barack Obama has played the race card, and he played it from the bottom of the deck,” he said. “It’s divisive, negative, shameful and wrong.’’

The retort was, we must say, not only contemptible, but shrewd. It puts the sin for the racial attack not on those who made it, but on the victim of the attack.

It also — and we wish this were coincidence, but we doubt it — conjures up another loaded racial image.

The phrase dealing the race card “from the bottom of the deck” entered the national lexicon during the O.J. Simpson saga. Robert Shapiro, one of Mr. Simpson’s lawyers, famously declared of himself, Johnny Cochran and the rest of the Simpson defense team, “Not only did we play the race card, we dealt it from the bottom of the deck.”

It’s ugly stuff. How about we leave Britney, Paris, and O.J. out of this — and have a presidential campaign?

McCain’s dirty tactics may be backfiring on him.  Serves him right for trying to stoke the fires of bigotry and racism that should have no role in this campaign.  Let’s see if the rest of the media has the integrity to call McCain’s latest strategy what it is: disgusting race-baiting.

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McCain Proud of Negative Campaigning

by Nick on July 31, 2008

John McCain is proud of how negative his campaign has become:

“Campaigns are tough, but I’m proud of the campaign we’re running,” McCain told the crowd. “We’re proud of that commercial.”

The commercial he refers to is the Britney/Paris commercial.

Careful John.  You’re on thin ice here.

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The Race Card

by Nick on July 31, 2008

The Presidential race is taking an ugly turn today.  McCain campaign manager Rick Davis is accusing Obama of playing the race card:

John McCain’s campaign manager is accusing Barack Obama of unfairly using the issue of race, a significant accusation in a campaign featuring the first African-American major party nominee.

“Barack Obama has played the race card, and he played it from the bottom of the deck,” said Rick Davis, in a statement issued from the McCain campaign.  “It’s divisive, negative, shameful and wrong.”

What the McCain camp is doing here is pretty disgusting, and they might just get away with it.

The strategy is this: the McCain campaign can’t appear to attack Obama because he’s Black.  That would quickly alienate large numbers of voters and let Obama win easily.  But they do have an interest in portraying Obama as the “scary black man.”  So how can they achieve that without appearing racist?  Accuse Obama of playing the race card, and hope he takes the bait.  If they can draw him into a fight over whether he played the race card or not, they will effectively drive the narrative.  The news story will be (at best) “Did Obama Play the Race Card?”

And so it doesn’t matter that Obama didn’t play the race card, and is in fact running a campaign about ideas and the future of this country.  The voters will start to question whether we can have a President as divisive as Obama.

The Obama campaign has to play this one very carefully.  I think their best option is to be direct and to the point.  Call the McCain camp out on the tactic.  Don’t address the race issue, address the campaign tactic of making the election about race.

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Obama Strikes Back

by Nick on July 30, 2008

Barack Obama hit back against McCain’s childish, misleading, and incredibly silly ad.

I do notice that he doesn’t seem to have anything very positive to say about himself, does he.  He seems to only be talking about me.  You need to ask John McCain what he’s for, not just what he’s against.

Exactly what he should be saying.  McCain’s so focused on trashing Obama, he isn’t spending any time talking about what his plans for the country are.

McCain’s campaign responds:

“This is a typically superfluous response from Barack Obama. Like most celebrities, he reacts to fair criticism with a mix of fussiness and hysteria,” says McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds, before trying to link the attack back to offshore drilling.

That doesn’t even make sense.  But they sure are focused on this “Barack Obama is a celebrity” idea.  And that somehow ties to offshore drilling….  Jesus, the McCain campaign is really pathetic.

And the Obama Campaign releases it’s own ad:

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McCain’s New Negative Ad

by Nick on July 30, 2008

The McCain campaign has this new ad apparently hitting Obama for being too popular.  Because Obama is so much like Britney and Paris that we just can’t let him be president.  I’m not sure how smart it is to remind people that everyone loves Obama.

It also claims that Obama’s opposition to Offshore Drilling is causing increased oil prices and furthering our dependence on foreign oil.  While this is not true at all, it’ll probably convince some people.

The Obama Campaign’s response:

On a day when major news organizations across the country are taking Senator McCain to task for a steady stream of false, negative attacks, his campaign has launched yet another. Or, as some might say, ‘Oops! He did it again.’

Our dependence on foreign oil is one of the greatest challenges we face. In this election the American people have a real choice — between Obama’s plan to provide tax rebates to American families while creating a renewable energy economy in America that frees us from our dependence on foreign oil, and Senator McCain’s plan to continue the same failed energy policies by handing out nearly $4 billion in tax breaks to oil companies while investing almost nothing in the new energy sources that represent our future.

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John McCain Goes Negative

by Nick on July 29, 2008

john-mccain-is-insaneIn the 2000 Republican Primaries John McCain fell victim to some of the most vicious and dirty negative campaigning this country has ever seen.  Long an opponent of these sorts of tactics, McCain was bitter about the tactics used by George W. Bush and his chief adviser Karl Rove.  But, as we all know, McCain supported the Bush’s policies.  He supported Bush’s reelection.  And now, it appears he supports Bush’s campaign tactics.  For John McCain, winning is all that matters.  Damn the moral high ground; damn “straight talk;” winning is all that matters.

But this might backfire.  McCain’s whole image is wrapped up in the idea of him being a straight talker and a different kind of politician.  He’s perceived as someone of integrity and honor.  He might get away with a bit of negativity here and there, and his image might even lend those attacks some credit.  But he’s taking things pretty far these days.  At some point, it’ll backfire.

The NYTimes points out:

Well, that certainly didn’t take long. On July 3, news reports said Senator John McCain, worried that he might lose the election before it truly started, opened his doors to disciples of Karl Rove from the 2004 campaign and the Bush White House. Less than a month later, the results are on full display. The candidate who started out talking about high-minded, civil debate has wholeheartedly adopted Mr. Rove’s low-minded and uncivil playbook.

And that may prove to be his undoing.  Despite all signs that this will be a huge Democratic year, McCain has stayed close to Barack Obama in the polls.  He’d better be careful though.  Americans are sick and tired of dirty politics; they will like such tactics even less from someone who has always claimed to be better than that.

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