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Obama's Demographic Problem
The American Prospect ^ | February 11, 2008 | Dana Goldstein

Posted on 02/12/2008 11:22:05 AM PST by forkinsocket

Even some supporters worry that Obama is doing little to retool his message to reach the demographic groups that have challenged him -- working-class whites and Latinos.

When Barack Obama wins, he often wins big. This weekend's primaries in Maine, Nebraska, Washington state, and Louisiana played to his strengths in small caucus states and among African Americans. And demographics will favor him again this Tuesday in Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia, which will feature not only large African American communities but also significant numbers of affluent, highly educated voters and, in Virginia, independents.

But February's post-Super Tuesday primary schedule obscures Obama's central demographic weakness, one that could come back to haunt him in the crucial March and April contests of Ohio, Texas, and Pennsylvania: In the more populous, heterogeneous states where Obama's victories have been narrower or where he came in second, Hillary Clinton consistently outperformed him among white and Latino working-class voters. In Clinton's most significant Super Tuesday pick-ups, New Jersey, California, and Massachusetts, her margin of victory as much as doubled among voters making less than $50,000, as well as among those without college degrees.

Ohio, Texas, and Pennsylvania all have significant populations of working class whites, and Texas' Democratic electorate is also more than a third Latino, a group that has heavily favored Clinton. Each state is about 10 percent black, as is Missouri, where Obama eked out just a 1 percentage-point win last week.

Some supporters worry Obama is doing little to retool his message to reach the demographic groups that have challenged him. His talk of "hope" and "change" could sound risky to blue-collar voters more comfortable with the known quantity of the Clinton name. And Obama's recent attempts to frame his urban community organizing experience as a credential for turning around the economy could misfire. The average American is simply unfamiliar with the vocabulary of social-justice work, and many white working-class voters in particular—the vast majority of whom live in suburban and rural areas—feel disconnected from the problems of the inner city.

Indeed, Obama has long been pegged as a possible inheritor of the losing "wine track" (as opposed to "beer track") legacies of Gary Hart, Paul Tsongas, Bill Bradley, and Howard Dean—reformers beloved by liberal intellectuals but ultimately unable to win the Democratic base of women, people of color, and working-class voters concerned about economic insecurity.

Obama, of course, improves upon the wine track formula in several important ways; he enjoys unprecedented support among African Americans and voters under 30, and, ever since the Iowa caucuses, it's been clear he holds special sway over the upper Midwest. In part, that's because the Obama campaign's field operation is adept at organizing activist Democrats to participate in caucuses, which are time-consuming and favor highly educated, upper-income voters. But Obama's rhetoric of unity does seem to resonate in the Midwest. Ohio and Pennsylvania have some cultural similarities to Minnesota, Missouri, and Iowa, which could bode well for his campaign.

But perhaps Obama's biggest advantage over past wine-track candidates is his fundraising muscle, and the extent of establishment support he's picked up along his journey from anti-war upstart to leading contender. "Obama's candidacy is a one-time experience that we have not seen before," said Ed Reilly, president of the consulting firm FD and a veteran of the Bill Bradley, Dick Gephardt, and John Kerry presidential campaigns. "This is a well-funded insurgent, and in all those other [wine track] situations, you were dealing with a huge resource differential."

Obama's funds will be critical to his effort to overcome the name recognition gap he still faces, in large part through radio and television advertisements. Though most Democratic primary voters now know who Barack Obama is, many know very little about his personal history or political platform. That contrasts starkly with Hillary Clinton, who has been on the national stage for 16 years.

"Hillary Clinton's support among working-class voters isn't necessarily a deficiency of the Obama campaign," said former Democratic pollster Mark Blumenthal. "It speaks to the popularity of the Clintons with that group, a stronger loyalty."

Many have expected Obama to chip away at that loyalty with pointed reminders that Fortune magazine named Clinton the candidate of corporate America last year, and that Bill Clinton's administration supported free trade deals, such as NAFTA, which contributed to the loss of American jobs. Instead, it is Hillary Clinton who rails more often against off-shoring. She has moved quickly to assume the populist mantle John Edwards surrendered when he dropped out of the race on Jan. 30, and in laundry-list policy speeches, she often mentions income inequality, making higher education more affordable, and passing a new GI bill.

Meanwhile, Obama's advertisements remain largely focused on the candidate's biography and post-partisan vision. In the run-up to Super Tuesday, a television commercial targeting California Latinos mentioned Obama's community organizing experience in Chicago and his personal experience with ethnic "scapegoating." Clinton's Spanish-language California ad took a totally different tack, promising to provide health insurance, solve the economic crisis, and bring down the cost of living. Newer television ads from the Clinton campaign play off fears of an economic recession, and promise to decrease mortgage foreclosures, create jobs, and cut taxes for the middle class.

Obama, too, has a similar, detailed plan to turn around the economy—it's just that he isn't talking about recession anxiety. In part, that may be because he wants to remain consistent with the positive message of change that has brought him this far, even in the face of bad news on the economic front.

"He has to be careful; he can't take a few old John Edwards speeches off the Web and start reading them, because a big part of his appeal is authenticity," said Guy Molyneux, a partner at the public opinion firm Hart Research. "A transparent change in his message might seem too Clinton-like."

Instead, Obama is likely to continue painting both Clinton and John McCain as "politics as usual," occasionally folding that rhetoric into a message with more overt references to what Edwards called the "two Americas."

That's exactly what he did at Virginia's Jefferson-Jackson dinner on Saturday, where he spoke after winning the Washington state, Louisiana, Nebraska, and Virgin Islands primaries. "[McCain] once opposed George Bush's tax cuts for the wealthiest few, who don't need them and didn't even ask for them. He said they were too expensive and unwise, that we should never cut taxes for the wealthy at a time of war," Obama said. "And he was absolutely right then. But somewhere along the lines the wheels came off the Straight Talk Express, because he now supports the very same tax cuts he voted against. That's what happens when you spend too long in Washington."

National polls show Obama with a small advantage over Clinton against McCain. In part, that's because of Clinton's deficit with male voters, but that would be a very difficult topic for Obama to broach. "I don't see him out with a shotgun and a hunting jacket," joked Molyneux. "But now voters know who the GOP nominee will be, and he can go out there and verbally beat the crap out of John McCain, and start to position himself as a plausible opponent."

With a campaign built more around unity than anger, "beating the crap" out of anyone hasn't exactly been Barack Obama's style. But his ability to portray himself as a reliable fighter for the working class could determine the outcome of the Democratic nominating contest. Ohioans, Texans, and Pennsylvanians are taking note.


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: demographics; elections; latinos; obama; whites
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1 posted on 02/12/2008 11:22:08 AM PST by forkinsocket
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To: forkinsocket

Oprah and her PR will re-tool him.

However, they will never erase the fact that he is half-black, half-white and a Muslim.


2 posted on 02/12/2008 11:26:17 AM PST by freekitty (Give me back my conservative vote.)
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To: forkinsocket

“Even some supporters worry that Obama is doing little to retool his message”.....

What?....from “hope and change” to “change and hope”?


3 posted on 02/12/2008 11:27:00 AM PST by AngelesCrestHighway
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To: forkinsocket

>the vocabulary of social justice work

“Social justice” just means taking property from one person and giving it to another.


4 posted on 02/12/2008 11:39:40 AM PST by oblomov (Molok Obama is so inspirational. He inspires me to offshore assets & buy as many guns as I can.)
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To: oblomov
This is from a very left-wing magazine so naturally they use leftist terminology. How many "working-class" Americans even know they have been consigned to a "class" by their intellectual and social betters who run the Democratic Party?

Obama doesn't seem to want to go for the jugular, and it may eventually be what does him in--the Clintons have no inhibitions.

5 posted on 02/12/2008 12:04:30 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: freekitty
Half what? The legal standard in the Old Souf' was 1/32, although there are still some who peddle the "one drop" sort of thing ~ which was certainly not universal.

Still, none of that matters (and he's hardly a Moslem anyway ~ that was his baby-daddy and step daddy ~ Momma was an atheist). What does count is that among Democrats there's this 20% to 30% bunch who will not now nor ever vote for anyone who is not, to their understanding, "pure white", whatever that might be.

Best bet for Republicans to screw up the Democrats is to go to the Dem primaries and vote for Obama.

Presuming Obama can grab the nomination and run in the Fall, that gives the Republican opponent just about a landslide's difference in the popular vote since those Democrats who won't vote for Obama will either scratch (not vote for President), or actually vote for the Republican.

I see it as an insurmountable advantage for the Republicans.

6 posted on 02/12/2008 1:19:09 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
No offense, but suspect being black is probably an advantage, these days. Folks will vote for Obama just to prove to themselves that they are not “racists.”

Also, I think you are far too optimistic. The ‘Pubbies can’t win no matter what they do - the Democrats will have to lose the election.
Not that they won't work really hard at it...

7 posted on 02/12/2008 1:27:59 PM PST by Little Ray (So its McCain or Huckabee? Pass me the bloody KoolAid.)
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To: Little Ray

“being black is probably an advantage”

To an African-American like Clarence Thomas being black is not an advantage. Only being liberal and “of color” makes a difference with the dems.

My own belief is that Obama is a BINO - Black In Name Only.


8 posted on 02/12/2008 1:48:05 PM PST by BeAllYouCanBe (Until Americans love their own children more than they love Nancy Pelosi this suicide will continue.)
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To: forkinsocket
Obama's message


9 posted on 02/12/2008 1:51:16 PM PST by N. Theknow (Kennedys: Can't drive, can't fly, can't ski, can't skipper a boat; but they know what's best for us)
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To: Little Ray
The Dems are working hard to lose the election.

Plus, it's highly probable that the final nominee for the Republicans will be discovered at the convention ~ just like the good old days.

10 posted on 02/12/2008 3:06:35 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah

I don’t really care what the legal standard in the ole South is or was. The man won’t admit he is half white regardless. Nor will he admit he is a Muslim. That’s my point.

This man with absoultely no experience should never be running for POTUS anyway.


11 posted on 02/12/2008 4:16:39 PM PST by freekitty (Give me back my conservative vote.)
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To: forkinsocket
Though most Democratic primary voters now know who Barack Obama is, many know very little about his personal history or political platform.

Er, does anybody know much about his personal history or, in particular, his political platform.

Beyond "Hope" and "Change", that is...

12 posted on 02/12/2008 4:22:49 PM PST by okie01 (THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA: Ignorance on Parade)
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To: freekitty

I would imagine that the reason that he won’t admit being a Moslem is that he is, in fact, not a Moslem.


13 posted on 02/12/2008 4:35:28 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah

He is.


14 posted on 02/12/2008 4:40:39 PM PST by freekitty (Give me back my conservative vote.)
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