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Obama Responds To Bittergate, And Misses The Point Completely

by @ 11:46 pm on April 11, 2008.

Via Marc Ambinder comes this response from Barack Obama to the controversy over his earlier remarks about the alleged bitterness of people in small-town Pennsylvania:

“When I go around and I talk to people there is frustration and there is anger and there is bitterness. And what’s worse is when people are expressing their anger then politicians try to say what are you angry about? This just happened – I want to make a point here today.

“I was in San Francisco talking to a group at a fundraiser and somebody asked how’re you going to get votes in Pennsylvania? What’s going on there? We hear that’s its hard for some working class people to get behind you’re campaign. I said, “Well look, they’re frustrated and for good reason. Because for the last 25 years they’ve seen jobs shipped overseas. They’ve seen their economies collapse. They have lost their jobs. They have lost their pensions. They have lost their healthcare.

“And for 25, 30 years Democrats and Republicans have come before them and said we’re going to make your community better. We’re going to make it right and nothing ever happens. And of course they’re bitter. Of course they’re frustrated. You would be too. In fact many of you are. Because the same thing has happened here in Indiana. The same thing happened across the border in Decatur. The same thing has happened all across the country. Nobody is looking out for you. Nobody is thinking about you. And so people end up- they don’t vote on economic issues because they don’t expect anybody’s going to help them. So people end up, you know, voting on issues like guns, and are they going to have the right to bear arms. They vote on issues like gay marriage. And they take refuge in their faith and their community and their families and things they can count on. But they don’t believe they can count on Washington. So I made this statement– so, here’s what rich. Senator Clinton says ‘No, I don’t think that people are bitter in Pennsylvania. You know, I think Barack’s being condescending.’ John McCain says, ‘Oh, how could he say that? How could he say people are bitter? You know, he’s obviously out of touch with people.’

“Out of touch? Out of touch? I mean, John McCain—it took him three tries to finally figure out that the home foreclosure crisis was a problem and to come up with a plan for it, and he’s saying I’m out of touch? Senator Clinton voted for a credit card-sponsored bankruptcy bill that made it harder for people to get out of debt after taking money from the financial services companies, and she says I’m out of touch? No, I’m in touch. I know exactly what’s going on. I know what’s going on in Pennsylvania. I know what’s going on in Indiana. I know what’s going on in Illinois. People are fed-up. They’re angry and they’re frustrated and they’re bitter. And they want to see a change in Washington and that’s why I’m running for President of the United States of America.”

A McCain spokesman comes up with a response that I’ve got to agree with completely:

“Instead of apologizing to small town Americans for dismissing their values, Barack Obama arrogantly tried to spin his way out of his outrageous San Francisco remarks. Only an elitist who attributes religious faith and gun ownership to bitterness would think that tax cuts for the rich include families who make $75,000 per year. Only an elitist would say that people vote their values only out of frustration. Barack Obama thinks he knows your hopes and fears better than you do. You can’t be more out of touch than that.

And that, you see, is the point. The problem isn’t that these remarks reveal Barack Obama to be out of touch with small-town America. It’s that they show him, like most Ivy League education big-city elitists, to be completely dismissive of the values of small-town America. The things that he ascribes to bitterness are things that these people actually believe in.

And, by the way, like most Americans, they aren’t looking to Washington to solve their problems, they just want a chance to make it on their own. In Barack Obama’s America, though, they’d be subsidizing “hope” and “change” throughout the world.

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4 Responses to “Obama Responds To Bittergate, And Misses The Point Completely”

  1. vision Says:

    they just want a chance to make it on their own.

    the implication here is that they currently do not have a chance to make it on their own. that is due to bush’s policies, policies mccain will be very good at upholding.
    ultimately, washington DOES need to actually step in and solve some problems! Mccain is out of touch, not Obama.

    Also, he is not dismissing their values. He’s merely saying they vote on their values because they dont believe washington can help them economically. if they believed that it could, then they’d probably vote for the person who would help them most financially. instead, you get a bunch of working class people voting for the person who is increasing the wealth disparity and making them poorer all because that person promises to uphold their ‘values’.

  2. Jay McDonough Says:

    from swimming freestyle:

    “Barack Obama is a remarkably eloquent man and turning into a remarkably capable politician. But if the Senator believes it’s smart to insult voters from a state critical to your success, he’s hit one of the worst false notes yet in his campaign.

    Yeah, I know what his campaign said, and that may have been what he meant. But a sophisticated candidate doesn’t refer to voters in language that can be construed as derogatory or insulting. Obama asserted Pennsylvania voters are bitter and so simple and lacking in maturity and intelligence that they address their frustration by clinging to primitive and reactionary crutches rather than addressing their problems in constructive ways.

    It’s divisive. And not the way to attract the voters you need most.”

    http://swimmingfreestyle.typepad.com

  3. Below The Beltway » Blog Archive » Obama Gives Hillary An Opening And She’s Taking It Says:

    [...] I noted last night: The problem isn’t that these remarks reveal Barack Obama to be out of touch with small-town [...]

  4. Robert Willett Says:

    What was so elitist about Mr. Obama’s comments? Anyone who thinks that Obama’s statements were elitist has never been to Flint, Michigan and seen what an economically destroyed town really looks like. Why should we listen to someone like Hillary Clinton, a product of the white ‘burbs during the prosperous fifties talk about the “elitism” of a guy who worked a an organizer on Chicago’s south side. Hillary Clinton is just another yuppie sleazebag who doesn’t give a damn about any of us who worked blue collar jobs. In the end she just figures that most of us blue collar guys won’t vote for a black guy. She’s wrong!!!

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