April 24, 2008
Is Barack Obama “One Of Us”?
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
As one looks at the polls, the issues
and the candidates, the election of 2008 resembles what
poker players call a "lay-down hand."
Two-thirds of the nation believes the
Iraq war a blunder. Sixty-nine percent disapproves
of President Bush. Eighty-one percent thinks America is
on the wrong course.
Inflation is at 4 percent and rising.
Unemployment is 5 percent and rising.
Gasoline, heating oil and
food prices are soaring. The dollar has lost half
its values against the euro. Homes are being
foreclosed upon at Depression rates. The stock
market is in a swoon. And 3.5 million manufacturing jobs
have vanished under Bush.
Hillary and Obama have both raised far
more than John McCain.
Democratic turnout in the primaries and
caucuses is two and three times what it was for the GOP.
The youth, energy and enthusiasm are on the Democratic
side. Voter registration is rising dramatically, and the
new registrants are almost all Democrats or
independents.
Thirty Republican House members are
retiring. In the Senate, the big question is whether
Democrats will achieve a 60-40 margin to enable them to
kill Republican filibusters.
By all odds, Republican retention of the
White House should be as imperiled as it was in 1932,
when the hapless
Herbert Hoover faced
FDR.
Yet John McCain, who presides over a
disconsolate party many of whose leading lights not only
do not love him, they do not like him, is even money to
be the next president of the United States.
What explains this?
Answer: Barack Obama, the probable
nominee of the Democratic Party—his cool and pleasant
demeanor aside, and his
oratorical skills notwithstanding—is being steadily
pushed by his own mistakes, and rivals Hillary Clinton
and McCain, outside the social, cultural and ideological
mainstream of American politics.
Hillary's victory in Pennsylvania
confirmed what Texas, Ohio and Florida hinted at. Barack
has not closed the sale with Middle America.
Moreover, he may never close the sale.
What is Barack's problem?
Though he has stitched together the
McGovern wing of the party—the anti-war crowd, the
cause people, the professoriat—with the
Jesse Jackson wing—90 percent of the
African-American vote—he is being systematically pushed
out of the
heartland of the party, the white working and middle
class. And reinforcing the impression in Middle America
that Barack is "not one of us" is the core of
both the Clinton and Republican strategies. And they are
working.
In Ohio and Pennsylvania, resistance to
the probable nominee hardened and calcified among
Catholics, ethnics, union and blue-collar voters, even
as Barack outspent Hillary two and three to one.
Racism is the reason, wail the pundits.
But this is not a reason, it is an excuse. Barack, after
all, ran up record totals in virtually all-white Iowa
and is favored to win in virtually all-white Oregon.
Moreover, all politics are tribal. There
was resistance in rural Pennsylvania to voting for an
African-American, but there was also wild enthusiasm for
voting for an African-American in Philly, where
Hillary—spouse of
"our first black president"—was getting about
the same share of the black vote as
Barry Goldwater.
On balance, as Joe Biden
undiplomatically blurted out, the fact that Obama is a
black man is an extraordinary asset in 2008. It is the
reason a junior senator, three years out of the Illinois
legislature, is running first for the nomination, and
has become the favorite of a national media intoxicated
with the idea of a black president.
Barack's problem is social, cultural and
ideological.
Increasingly, he is seen not as a man of
the middle, but as radical chic, a man of the liberal
and leftist elite who confides to
closed-door meetings in
San Francisco that
folks in Pennsylvania cling to
guns, Bibles and
bigotries as crutches, because they cannot cope in
the Global Economy and government has failed them.
He is seen as a man comfortable with
friends still proud of the radical role they played
planting bombs in the 1960s, a man who feels relaxed
about sending his daughters on Sunday to hear the
racist rants of an anti-American berserker.
And if your wife, beneficiary of a
Princeton-Harvard Law education
denied to 99.9 percent of the people, says she
cannot recall ever being
proud of America before now, folks are naturally
going to be suspicious about why you dumped the American
flag pin.
On the big issues of 2008—amnesty, the
hemorrhaging of American jobs, Iraq—McCain is on the
same side as George Bush, whose approval rating is 28
percent. McCain can be defeated on those issues.
But if, with a little help from Hillary,
McCain can paint Barack indelibly as
a man of the trendy and radical left, he can win.
America will have nowhere else to go.
Journalists disagree on whether
immigration, Iraq or the economy will be the major
issue in 2008.
The real issue may be—and this is what
is causing heart palpitations among Democrats—is Barack
Obama one of us, or is he one of them?
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.