Rachel Maddow: Mccain's Ayers smear distracts from real issues, the economy

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John McCain wants you to consider whether Barack Obama's association with unrepentant terrorist William Ayers makes him fit to be president. Actually, that's not quite right: McCain and Republican Party leaders would prefer we didn't waste time considering this question. They want you to simply reject Obama out of hand for his past ties. If that doesn't work, they hope to raise doubts about Obama's character in the past (why would he associate with someone like that?) and in the present (why hasn't Obama been straight with us about Ayers now?). At the moment, this strategy appears to be working only with Republicans. Obama's poll numbers continue to improve. Voters want to hear about solutions to the current economic crisis, and this line of attack has nothing to do with that. The press is covering the Ayers association not as a question of character but as a symbol of McCain's increasing desperation. But there's another reason this strategy isn't working: Voters are cynical. Obama doesn't want them to be, implores them not to be at almost every campaign stop, yet in this episode he benefits from their cynicism. If Obama weathers the Ayers controversy, it will be in part because voters judge his association with Ayers, and his weak answers about that association, to be nothing more than a politician's garden-variety duplicity. The McCain campaign faces a high bar in making the Ayers charge stick. It's not trying to sway partisans—they're already outraged. Instead, this is a pitch to undecided voters, and they're thinking about something else right now. The Dow just had its worst week in history and the global financial markets are collapsing. You want to talk about what, senator?..Ayers was an accepted member of the community when Obama first got to know him. He worked for a university and was well-respected in education reform circles. If Obama was being ambitious, it was within community standards. To condemn him on this point, you'd have to condemn all of Chicago. As a political argument, that takes you pretty far afield for the voters you're trying to convince. Which brings us to the second question: Is Obama being truthful now? The McCain campaign knows that simply offering guilt by association isn't enough, and McCain is uncomfortable about the tactic (or at least the way his supporters are interpreting his criticisms of Obama's character). In Minneapolis Friday, McCain repeatedly told the audience—which was just as ferocious as his others this week—that he respected Obama. When a woman said she was scared of Obama, McCain interrupted her to say, "I have to tell you, he is a decent person, a person that you do not have to be scared [of] as president of the United States." He was booed. To shift from talking about Ayers' past, McCain has said that the most important part of the Ayers-Obama relationship is what it says about Obama. As McCain's new ad characterizes it: "When convenient, he worked with terrorist Bill Ayers. When discovered, he lied." It's a legitimate point. Obama has not been candid. When asked about Ayers in a debate, he said he was "a guy who lives in my neighborhood." This is true, but misleadingly so and has a whiff of the big weasel. The two men served together on the board of an anti-poverty group, and Ayers contributed $200 to Obama's re-election campaign for the Illinois state senate in 2001. So Obama was dissembling. But for this to be politically damaging it has to be a whopper of a fib—and it just isn't. Voters are cynical enough, and have refused to punish either Obama or McCain for worse offenses, that they're not going to find this disqualifying. McCain needs the siren. If you're a purist, you'd like politicians to talk straight. But that kind of purist would have to disqualify John McCain, too. One notable example was when he was asked about his opposition to Bush's tax cuts. When asked in a debate whether he had opposed them in 2001 because they were "too tilted to the wealthy," McCain offered another reason. He claimed he had opposed them because Bush's plan didn't include spending cuts. That's not true. McCain needs to win those soft, uncommitted voters who have moved to Barack Obama in recent weeks. But the Ayers charge doesn't seem big enough to move them to his side. Perhaps that's why the McCain campaign has also started pressing Obama's connection to ACORN, Tony Rezko, and Obama's former pastor. They're trying to create a question mark about Barack Obama that's big enough to make him seem too risky on Election Day. http://www.slate.com/id/2202048/pagenum/all/#page_start

Category: News
Uploaded: October 13th, 2008 @ 5:24 pm
Author: AntiConformist911

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Tags: ad attack ayers barack bill governor him hussein interview john kill maddow mccain mexico new obama on palin rachel racist rally richardson sarah show smear speech terrorist the wright

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