Posted on 05/12/2008 2:54:17 AM PDT by personalaccts
W Virginia keeps distance from Obama By Andrew Ward
Published: May 11 2008 20:13 | Last updated: May 11 2008 20:13
Like most people in Mingo County, West Virginia, Leonard Simpson is a lifelong Democrat. But given a choice between Barack Obama and John McCain in November, the 67-year-old retired coalminer would vote Republican.
I heard that Obama is a Muslim and his wifes an atheist, said Mr Simpson, drawing on a cigarette outside the fire station in Williamson, a coalmining town of 3,400 people surrounded by lush wooded hillsides.
EDITORS CHOICE Editorial comment: Obama profits not from Jeremiah - Mar-23Obama wins support from Richardson - Mar-21Editorial Comment: Democrats dirty tricks - Mar-12Obama under fire over Nafta memo - Mar-03Obama feted in Clinton country - Feb-06Obama secures early win in the glamour stakes - Feb-05Mr Simpsons remarks help explain why Mr Obama is trailing Hillary Clinton, his Democratic rival, by 40 percentage points ahead of Tuesdays primary election in the heavily white and rural state, according to recent opinion polls.
A landslide victory for Mrs Clinton in West Virginia will do little to improve her fading hopes of winning the Democratic nomination, because Mr Obama has an almost insurmountable lead in the overall race.
But Tuesdays contest is likely to reinforce Mrs Clintons argument that she would be the stronger opponent for Mr McCain in November, and raise fresh doubts about whether the US is ready to elect its first black president.
Occupying a swathe of the Appalachian Mountains on the threshold between the Bible Belt and the Rust Belt, West Virginia is a swing state that voted twice for George W. Bush but backed Democrats in six of the eight prior presidential elections.
No Democrat has been elected to the White House without carrying West Virginia since 1916, yet Mr Obama appears to have little chance of winning there in November. Recent opinion polls indicate that Mrs Clinton would narrowly beat Mr McCain in the state but Mr Obama would lose by nearly 20 percentage points.
West Virginia is hostile territory for Mr Obama because it has few of the African-Americans and affluent, college-educated whites who provide his strongest support. The state has the lowest college graduation rate in the US, the second lowest median household income, and one of the highest proportions of white residents, at 96 per cent.
A visit to Mingo County, a Democratic stronghold in the heart of the Appalachian coalfields, reveals the scale of Mr Obamas challenge not only in West Virginia but in white, working-class communities across the US. With a gun shop on its main street and churches dotted throughout the town, Williamson is the kind of community evoked by Mr Obamas controversial comments last month about bitter small-town voters who cling to guns or religion.
If he is the nominee, the Democrats have no chance of winning West Virginia, said Missy Endicott, a 40- year-old school administrator. He doesnt understand ordinary Americans.
Ms Endicott was among roughly 500 people who crammed into the Williamson Fire Department building on Friday to attend a rally by Bill Clinton, the former president. He told them his wife represented people like you, in places like this, and urged voters to turn out in record numbers on Tuesday to send a message to the higher-type people who were trying to force her out of the race.
Local leaders said Mr Clinton was the most important visitor to Williamson since John F. Kennedy passed through during the 1960 election campaign. Mr Kennedys victory in the West Virginia primary that year was a crucial step towards proving his electability as the first Catholic president. Nearly five decades later, the state appears less willing to help Mr Obama break down barriers to the White House.
None of the 22 Democrats interviewed by the Financial Times at the Clinton rally would commit themselves to voting for Mr Obama if he became the nominee, and half said they definitely would not. The depth of opposition is particularly striking considering that Mingo County is one of the most Democratic places in West Virginia, having cast about 85 per cent of its votes for the party in the 2006 midterm elections. If Mr Obama cannot win there in November, he has little chance of carrying the state.
Most people questioned said they mistrusted Mr Obama because of doubts about his patriotism and values, stemming from his cosmopolitan background, his exotic name and the controversy surrounding anti-American sermons by Jeremiah Wright, his former pastor. Several people said they believed he was a Muslim an unfounded rumour that has circulated on the internet for months despite the contradiction with his 20-year membership of Mr Wrights church in Chicago. Others mentioned his refusal to wear a Stars and Stripes badge and controversial remarks by his wife, Michelle, who described America as mean and implied that she had never been proud of the US until her husband ran for president.
Conservative commentators have questioned Mr Obamas patriotism for months and the issue is expected to be one of the Republicans main lines of attack if he wins the nomination. The American people want a president who loves their country as much as they do, said Whit Ayres, a Republican strategist. Obama supporters believe patriotism is being used as code to harness racist sentiment.
Josh Fry, a 24-year-old ambulance driver from Williamson, insisted he was not racist but said he would feel more comfortable with Mr McCain, the 71-year-old Vietnam war hero, in the White House. I want someone who is a full-blooded American as president, he said. Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008
I love how Osama's cheerleaders in the MSM always point out that his being a Muslim is an "unfounded rumour...circulating on the internet", and then go on to support this statement by saying he can't possibly be Muslim because he attends church.
So which is better? Being a Muslim or attending a hate-whitey church for 20 years?
You know, it isnt so much about racism as it is not wanting the news media deciding who our candidate is.
People in this state don’t appreciate a potential first lady who only just now was proud of America, or a potential president who wants to ban most of our firearms, tax the crap out of us and wants to redefine patriotism to fit the needs of leftists who dont want anything to do with love of country.
screw them...
no not at all, but if they’re going to use all of the cliches it seems like they forgot one.
A “church” that sounds a lot like the “Nation of Islam” in its racially divisive message.
Quote from Barack Obamas book, Dreams Of My Father:
THE PERSON WHO MADE ME PROUDEST OF ALL, THOUGH, WAS MY [half brother], ROY..HE CONVERTED TO ISLAM.
From Dreams of my Father, IN INDONESIA, I SPEND TWO YEARS AT A MUSLIM SCHOOL ..I STUDIED THE KORAN..
From Audacity of Hope: LOLO (Obamas step father) FOLLOWED ISLAM....I LOOKED TO LOLO FOR GUIDANCE.
From The Audacity Of Hope, I WILL STAND WITH THE MUSLIMS SHOULD THE POLITICAL WINDS OF WAR SHIFT IN AN UGLY DIRECTION..
From The Audacity Of Hope, WE ARE NO LONGER JUST A CHRISTIAN NATION, we are also a Jewish nation, a MUSLIM NATION, a Buddhist nation, a Hindu nation, and a nation of nonbelievers.
‘Nobody is suffering more than the Palestinian people’ Barack Hussein Obama
http://www2.nysun.com/comments/54453
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