Saturday, February 16, 2008

Lean to the Left

Lean to the left,
Lean to the right
Don’t confuse what we want
With doing what’s right.

Eli Parser, MoveOn.org’s executive director responds to a reporter what he would say to Hillary supporters who may perceive MoveOn’s campaign to push the super-delegates into line with the popular vote as a power-play in support of Barack Obama: “Well, I actually think the Obama campaign has a very good chance of coming out ahead in super-delegates. But, you know, for us this really isn’t about our support of Barack Obama. I think it’s a open question which one of them will come out ahead on super delegates. What we want to avoid is that situation where lots and lots of people vote and then their votes are essentially overturned. And we’ve said publicly if Hillary comes out ahead with pledged delegates we’d feel the same way.”

Karl Rove couldn’t have said it better.

Friday, February 1, 2008

KENYAN-AMERICAN

clipped from www.salon.com

Multiracial man


The Obama campaign's deft use of the candidate's mixed heritage is making it harder to read his candidacy in terms of race.

By James Hannaham

Feb. 2, 2008 | In a campaign marked by firsts, this might be one of the most striking: A photo of a young, radiantly smiling, tan-skinned Barack Obama seated in the lap of his late mother, Ann Dunham, who, while dark-haired, is considerably paler than her son. Another first: Earlier this week, Obama traveled to El Dorado, Kan., the home of his maternal grandfather, and in the course of accepting an endorsement from Gov. Kathleen Sibelius, put special emphasis on his connection to the Midwest through his maternal -- that is to say white -- lineage.

In a campaign in which he has struggled early on to win the confidence of black Americans and gradually won endorsements from revered black cultural icons like Oprah Winfrey and Toni Morrison, this is one of the riskiest moves Obama has made -- but also one of the most genuine.

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