A victory in Oregon, yes, but a 35-point thrashing in Kentucky on Tuesday for presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama. Although both states are populated predominantly by white voters, together they prove white comes in many different shades. Oregonians are progressive to a fare-thee-well (I know, I spent two years at Reed College in Portland, Ore.) Kentucky voters are less affluent, less well-educated and considerably more conservative.
The Kentucky results and the state's impact on the Obama campaign were summed up most succinctly by this L.A. Times blog entry:
"Barack Obama, assuming that two consecutive primary thrashings don't cause the pause among Democratic superdelegates Hillary Clinton is hoping for, will get within shouting distance of Kentucky later this year as the party's presidential nominee. The key swing states of Ohio and Missouri border it. So do Virginia and Indiana, which Obama might be able to put in play ... (West Virginia) exit poll data showed her (Clinton) voters feel none too kindly toward him. Those figures found that only a third of Clinton supporters would vote for Obama in November, while about 40 percent would cast their ballot for Republican John McCain and the rest -- roughly a quarter -- would stay home."
It's obvious both Democratic candidates have recognized
this race is largely about race and gender. Why is Sen. Obama not leaning harder on Sen. Clinton to drop out? He knows he'd be accused of sexism if he did, whether those charges are warranted or not. Why is the African-American vote going so solidly for him and the white working class so heavily for her? To ascribe these divisions to anything but race is to mimic Nero while Rome burned.
Democrats' strongest chance of bridging the racial chasm comes, ironically enough, from the lily-white GOP. As reported by the Politico, "the GOP is heading into the 2008 election without a single minority candidate with a plausible chance of winning a campaign for the House, the Senate or governor ... Republicans are now on the verge of going six -- and probably more -- years without an African-American governor, senator or House member. That's the longest such streak since the 1980s."
John McCain has the chance to pick a running mate who could help exhume the GOP from its self-inflicted diversity rut. Oft-touted names are Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice and her predecessor, Colin Powell.
But I believe a much smarter choice would be Republican governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana. Yes, he's only been in office less than a year. But who is Sen. Obama to knock the opposition for lack of experience?
|