[AGL] here's an interesting comment from the New York Daily News
fmaverick at austin.rr.com
fmaverick at austin.rr.com
Mon Nov 3 12:26:07 EST 2008
In some weird way, this makes me feel better. It is the elephant in the room that was acknowledged, then covered with invisible fairy dust. I THINK that this is a worst case scenario. I also think that the Obama people are taking all of this into consideration and are very cleverly doing everything possible to counteract the elephant poop. We may see a very close race, but we will win, thanks to the fact that Obama hired the smartest people on the planet.
---- Michael Eisenstadt <mike.eisenstadt at gmail.com> wrote:
> But here's the thing. Even if we accept the conclusions of those who assert
> that, when we run the numbers, race is not depressing black candidates'
> Election Day performance, lessons learned from non-national contests, where
> black candidates sought to become mayor, governor or senator, are of little
> use this time around.
>
> With all due respect, none of these offices comes close to matching the
> symbolic heft of the presidency.
>
> The President is the man (or woman) we see every day. The one who stands for
> us in meetings with foreign leaders. Who commands the military. Who guides
> us through hard times. In short, he is the repository of the nation's hopes
> and fears. To the nation, he is government personified; to the world, he
> represents the American nation. Since childhood, people generally revere the
> office, if not the officeholder.
>
> There is another factor: undecided voters. As of last week, Pew estimates
> that roughly 8% of the electorate have yet to settle on a candidate.
>
> And as Larry Hugick observed in a 1993 report on contests between candidates
> of different races in the '80s and '90s, the overperformance of white
> candidates may be accounted for by undecided voters, most of whom were
> white. Likewise, once we consider the makeup of current undecided voters, we
> should expect them to side with McCain. They're 80% white, more than half
> have never attended college and more than 50% have seen their 50th birthday.
>
> We have never had a black man run on a presidential ticket before, so
> statistical analyses cannot help us much. It could well be the case that
> when some white Americans, especially those who claim to be indecisive, go
> into the voting booths, they will hesitate to vote for Obama.
>
> Under these circumstances, one should not be shocked to discover that, in a
> few key swing states - if that's what this comes down to - some racists may
> be misrepresenting their intentions to pollsters and reveal their true
> preference for Republican John McCain on Tuesday. As a result, we could be
> surprised. The polls may be wrong. And race may wind up the reason why.
>
> It would be naive to believe that race won't, in some way, affect the
> outcome of this election. The question is whether it'll ultimately cost
> Democrats the contest.
>
> Parker is assistant professor of political science at the University of
> Washington and the author of the forthcoming book "Fighting for Democracy:
> Race, Military Service, and Insurgency during Jim Crow."
>
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