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Row Heats Up Over Role of Race in Campaign

By NICHOLAS WAPSHOTT, Staff Reporter of the Sun | January 14, 2008

A heated brawl over the role of race in the primary elections between the two leading Democratic presidential hopefuls, Senators Clinton and Obama, will ensure that the sensitive subject the party tries hard to ignore will dominate tomorrow's candidates' debate in Nevada.

Surrogates from both camps have been waging an increasingly heated battle over the allegiance of black voters, with each accusing the other of introducing racism into the closely fought contest. Yesterday, the issue boiled over, with the competing senators making charge and counter-charge over who was responsible for raising a topic generally considered too treacherous to address.

Mrs. Clinton returned to a remark she made last week, contrasting her experience with Mr. Obama's persuasive oratory, in which she said Martin Luther King's eloquence needed President Johnson's Washington savvy before civil rights legislation could be enacted.

Calling Dr. King "one of the people I admire most in the world," Mrs. Clinton repeated her claim that it was Johnson's mastery of Congress as much as Dr. King's rhetoric that led to change. "Dr. King didn't just give speeches. He marched, he organized, he protested, he was gassed, he was beaten, he was jailed," she said on NBC's "Meet the Press."

"He understood that he had to move the political process and bring in those who were in political power. He campaigned for political leaders, including Lyndon Johnson, because he wanted somebody in the White House who would act on what he had devoted his life to achieving."

She bemoaned the fact that her views on Dr. King had been misinterpreted, causing her to draw fire from Rep. James Clyburn, one of America's top black congressmen, and Donna Brazile, who ran Vice President Gore's presidential bid and successfully lobbied to have Dr. King's birthday declared a federal holiday.

"This is an unfortunate story line the Obama campaign has pushed very successfully," Mrs. Clinton said. "Clearly, we know from media reports that the Obama campaign is deliberately distorting this."

Shortly afterward, Mr. Obama denied to reporters that he had sanctioned the garbling of Mrs. Clinton's remarks. "The notion that this is somehow our doing is ludicrous," he said,

Notwithstanding his denial, however, he could not resist taking a shot at his main rival. "Senator Clinton made an unfortunate remark, an ill advised remark, about Dr. King and Lyndon Johnson. … She, I think, offended some folks who felt that it somehow diminished King's role in bringing about the Civil Rights Act," he said.

"She started this campaign saying that she wanted to make history, and lately she's been spending a lot of time rewriting it," he said. Mr. Obama continued the attack, dismissing Mrs. Clinton's experience in government as a hindrance to achieving change. "What we saw this morning was why the American people are tired of Washington politicians and the games they play," he said.

The war of words over race may emerge as the issue that decides the eventual victor in the Democratic race. After the Nevada caucuses on Saturday, all eyes will turn to the January 26 primary in South Carolina, where a third of the population is black.

Speaking to the African-American Northminster Presbyterian Church congregation in Columbia, S.C., yesterday, Mrs. Clinton was careful to praise Mr. Obama. Claiming that to be a woman running for president was the result of the wider civil rights movement, she said, "I am so proud of my party, I am so proud of my country, and I am so proud of Senator Barack Obama. … I am standing here, Senator Obama stands before you, as a result of the generations of men and women who protested and picketed. … We are all in this struggle together."

Mr. Obama set out on his presidential campaign ignoring his ethnicity in the hope that he would reach well beyond African Americans for support. In the Iowa caucuses, where voters had to declare their allegiance in front of others, his color appeared not to be an issue.

However, the reluctance of white voters to vote for a black candidate in a secret primary ballot has been cited by some pollsters as a reason for Mr. Obama's surprise defeat in New Hampshire.

While Mrs. Clinton's appeal to minority voters might be diminished if the accusations of disrespecting black heroes were to stick, the introduction of race into the wider debate may benefit her campaign. If even registered Democrats cannot keep the issue of race out of their primary race, it is argued, Mr. Obama's ethnicity is sure to become an issue — and a liability — in the presidential election in November.

Mr. Obama's tactics came under fire yesterday from one of Mrs. Clinton's most prominent black woman supporters, Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, a Democrat of Texas. "You cannot transcend race and then use race as an issue," she told CNN.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

There is no race issue involved. Mr. Obama's birth mother is a well educated white woman. She and she alone... [MORE]

JoAnn Koepke Taylor 

Jan 14, 2008 13:10

I am a mother, single with 3 children. I have never voted or even been interested in candidates, politicalviews, policy... [MORE]

Lisa Brown 

Feb 21, 2008 03:35

Obama has no respect for Hilary Clinton he is rude and ignorante look at the news look all around you.He... [MORE]

Goncalves 

Mar 12, 2008 20:31

How about the media stop focusing on the Democratic nominee choice as a choice between an African American and a... [MORE]

Spencer 

Jan 14, 2008 14:26

Forty years ago Carl B. Stokes was elected the first black mayor of a major American city -- Cleveland. I... [MORE]

B. Kenneth McGee 

Jan 14, 2008 14:48

I do not know Mr. McGee personally but have written to him on numberous occasions. I have also had the... [MORE]

Dinah Farmer 

Jan 16, 2008 12:57

I think if anyone is making an issue about race it is Obama and his compaign. [MORE]

jane 

Feb 11, 2008 19:17

Sen. Obama aspires to be president. Sen. Obama inspires in his speaches. Sen.Obama has done nothing. I heard the other... [MORE]

Maria 

Feb 12, 2008 21:40

Excellent, execellent, execellent. Send this article to Msnbc, Cnn, Foxnews, editors of papers in up coming primary states. Do you lecture. [MORE]

julie 

Mar 13, 2008 14:36

Julie: Thanks so much for your kind words. I have sent tthe article to many news outless. Check out: b.... [MORE]

Ken McGee 

Mar 13, 2008 16:45

I have read with interest the comments regarding this article. My question: What kind of change? If you vote for Obama... [MORE]

Patrizia von Lutzow-Vorbeck 

Mar 16, 2008 17:56

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