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davidpdx Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 07:40 PM
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New Math For November (WaPo Article)
When Obama wins Oregon will they stop saying he can't win "white voters"?

New Math for November

PORTLAND, Ore. — This state is known for many things — good wine, the imperial branding of the Nike swoosh, a political culture that produces contrarians of both parties — but ethnic diversity is not one of them. This state has an African-American population of less than 2 percent.

And yet on May 20, when voters here could finally end the Democratic presidential marathon by giving Senator Barack Obama an outright majority of pledged delegates, don’t expect to hear much about how a black man has broadened the playing field for his party by winning a heavily white state. Apparently, white people in Gore-Tex country don’t count as much as white people in Appalachia. Nor, if you look at Colorado, a Bush state that Obama won this year, do white people who sing “Rocky Mountain High” matter as much as white people who sing, “Almost heaven, West Virginia.”

It’s absurd, of course, to tout the implied superiority of “hard-working Americans, white Americans,” as Hillary Clinton said last week of her core supporters. And those other white Americans, in Iowa, Wisconsin, or here in Oregon — all heavy Obama supporters — are slackers? Not to mention black supporters.

In Oregon, in recent days, we’ve seen fresh themes for the general election presented by Obama and Senator John McCain — and they have very little to do with dated, tribal politics. The fruit trees in the Willamette Valley may be in full blossom, but in Oregon it’s November in May.

The map of counties that Hillary Clinton won big this year shows a broad swath of Appalachia and rural America, places where a Democrat is unlikely to prevail in the general election. The scab of racial animus can be thick in those counties, judging by exit polls of Clinton supporters who say they would never vote for a black man, and by anecdotal reporting.

The political math of the future lies with the new America — fast-growing communities in Virginia, Colorado, Nevada, Oregon and elsewhere, where people are trying to step out of the cement shoes of race. Yes, race is still a factor there — it’s coded and complex — but not as raw as in other states. The transient nature of these places, where nearly everybody is from somewhere else, makes it difficult for old biases to harden.


McCain surely knows this, even if his party has yet to get the message. The speech that he gave here on climate change marked a big break with President Bush and the troglodyte wing of his party. Look for similar divorce announcements in coming months, even on race. In that speech, McCain envisioned a nightmare of runaway forest fires, heat waves stifling the cities, storms swamping the coasts, unless something is done. “The United States will lead,” he said, “and will lead with a different approach.” In every way, the speech was a slap at know-nothings like Rush Limbaugh, who tells his 20 million listeners almost every day that global warming is a massive hoax.

It is buried deep in the Republican family tree, but the environment used to be an issue that the party owned. And here in Oregon, the stunning ocean beaches are accessible to all, cities are livable and open space is plenty because of a sainted, long-ago Republican governor, Tom McCall.

Meanwhile, McCain’s party tried to hold onto a Republican Congressional seat in Mississippi this week by using racial scare-mongering from the Jim Crow era. There, a Democrat, Travis Childers, won a district that President Bush carried by 25 percentage points in 2004, the third red seat lost this year in special elections for the House. Republicans aimed for the deepest fears of white southerners by tying Childers to Obama’s nutty former preacher, Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr.

The preacher may be good ratings for Fox News. But as it happens, he’s not as much ballot box poison as is Bush. The president with the lowest approval ratings in 70 years is more damaging to McCain than Rev. Wright is to Obama, according to a recent Gallup poll. “By November,” said David Plouffe, Obama’s campaign manager, “every voter will know McCain is offering a third Bush term.” That’s the election fight, in a nutshell.

Obama’s themes in Oregon were future-directed — new energy policy, new foreign policy, new thinking on race. It goes without saying that he needs to carry blue collar whites, as Democrats have usually done. But Obama can lose Ohio and West Virginia — both fell to Republicans in 2004 — and make up for it with Colorado and Virginia, a combined 22 electoral votes from Bush states now trending Democratic.

When Obama spoke in the central Oregon city of Bend, the crowd at Summit High School was nearly all-white, and as enthusiastic as any gathering of Beavers and Ducks on a Saturday afternoon. In the sea of white faces, there was one person who stood out — the woman who introduced Obama, Myrlie Evers-Williams, widow of Medgar Evers, the civil rights leader who was shot in the back in Mississippi in 1963.

It turns out she lives in Bend, one of the tomorrow communities that will decide this year’s election. The county that includes Bend has grown by 30 percent since 2000. It is full of independents, an Oregonian trait, and people like Mrs. Evers-Williams, who see something here they never saw in the place they left behind.
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livetohike Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 07:41 PM
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1. "The troglodyte wing" gotta love it
Thanks for posting this :hi:.
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featherman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 07:50 PM
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2. Great stuff... would love to see Obama take places like Deschutes County in the GE
Edited on Fri May-16-08 07:51 PM by featherman
in addition to the Willamette Valley and Portland. Great move to campaign there and in Pendleton and Roseburg. He's previously been in Medford, in Jackson County, a southern Oregon population center and another rapidly growing red county that could go blue with a great candidate.

I'm sure he'll be back in the fall.
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davidpdx Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 08:17 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. I think Obama will win the most of the counties in Oregon
I grew up in Jackson County (Medford area) and he'll take that county by a good margin. On Tuesday night (Wednesday here) I'll be excited to see the results.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 08:17 PM
Response to Original message
3. Do you have a link?
Advice: you might want to consider abiding to DU's copyright rules....and let the traffic go to the paper to read the full article. We want traffic to be tracked to this kind of an article, as it is very positive.
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davidpdx Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 10:44 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. yep
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 10:45 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. Thank yee!
:)
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Arugula Latte Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 10:51 PM
Response to Original message
7. Side note: It's interesting they chose to say "good wine" in that first line
I thought we were better known for the microbrew scene ... But, hey, I'll take a good Oregon pinot noir over a beer any day. :toast:
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AtomicKitten Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 10:58 PM
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8. Obama doesn't have a problem with white voters - he has a problem with racists.
And ya know what? That works for me. That kind of ugly divisive ignorant subhuman crap has no business in the Democratic Party. Barack has widened the electorate available to Democrats. It takes a blind person to not know he's not only going to be fine, he's putting in motion a fundamental realignment of the parties. A change is coming. :D
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davepdx Donating Member (117 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-16-08 11:23 PM
Response to Original message
9. I wonder what Pat Buchanan will say.
I was thinking about this subject last week and came to the same conclusion (and question). I really do want to see Pat Buchanan's head explode though.

BTW, do you live on the "West" side of Portland or on the "East" side? ;-)
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Leopolds Ghost Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-17-08 03:26 AM
Response to Original message
10. Nike has shit to do with Ore. Portland has outsourced all its factory jobs to overseas sweatshops.
Edited on Sat May-17-08 03:32 AM by Leopolds Ghost
Love how WaPo is still promoting transient, flexible labor pools.

Neoliberalism is a way of life for blue dog yuppies, it seems.

It is on Clinton's head that her particular brand of racism
resonates better in some areas than others.

WaPo is gleefully proclaiming the death of populism here.

By their math, populist = racist, Clinton = pro-working class

(but only when their Clintonite policies help the rich, because
everyone knows if it hurts the rich, it hurts the poor as well.)

They are of course banking on Clinton's fake populism
to push Obama to the right of where Bill was in 1999.

All part of manufacturing consent.

Like the absurd idea that Hillary has working class appeal.
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VotesForWomen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-17-08 04:23 AM
Response to Original message
11. yep, got it. we're racists. nt
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