Posted on 02/24/2014 1:00:01 PM PST by nickcarraway
In Kentucky, Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is running even or slightly behind in polls for reelection, despite the states heavily Republican lean. The central dynamic of the race concerns whether the Democratic challenger, Alison Lundergan Grimes, can distance herself from President Obama. McConnell is painting Grimes as Obamas puppet, while Grimes is instead attaching herself to Bill and Hillary Clinton, who are far more popular in the state. Why is that? Here, in todays Washington Post, is an odd passage explaining Clintons popularity vis-à-vis Obama: While President Obamas approval rating in Kentucky is in the mid-30s, Bill Clinton with his southern roots and love of college basketball and horse racing is popular in the Bluegrass State, which he carried in both of his presidential elections.
Thats why Clinton runs so far ahead of Obama? Horse racing and college basketball? Obama loves college basketball. He makes a huge public show of it, filling out his bracket every year on national television and granting interviews during the NCAA tournament.
One reason for Clintons popularity is that all ex-presidents tend to gain favor as they recede from the partisan infighting of day-to-day politics and position themselves as revered elder statesmen. But the other reason Clinton could always compete in Kentucky while Obama never could is one that does not appear anywhere in the Post story: race.
Six years ago, in the midst of a still-heated contest for the Democratic presidential nomination, George Packer traveled to Kentucky, where voters there registered surprisingly candid reasons for their support for Hillary Clinton over Barack Obama. The mere fact that Kentuckians would endorse Clinton (whose base within the Party leaned heavily on the white working class) was the opposite of surprising. What shocked about Packers report was, first, the explicitly racial tone of the opposition. Voters were not bothering to couch their disdain for Obama in euphemisms about affirmative action or crime or even Jeremiah Wright. They were saying things like, I think [Obama] would put too many minorities in positions over the white race. Nearly as surprising was the fact that, despite such beliefs, they were willing to vote for Democrats anyway.
In his decisive 2008 win, Obama obviously improved on John Kerrys losing 2004 performance overall. But across a small band of counties concentrated in the Deep South and Appalachia, he actually performed worse than Kerry, despite running a good five points better nationwide:
I suppose you could attribute the difference to culture, with Obama representing elite academic urban America, but its not as if Kerry cut the figure of a prototypical Regular Joe. The difference is also hard to explain via other easy regional touchstones, like guns or coal, given that Obama was no more pro-environment or anti-gun than Kerry, and his opponent, John McCain, was hostile to the NRA and favorable to cap and trade. Its hard to come up with any explanation to rival what Packer found race.
Reporters approach this reality with varying levels of delicacy. The accusation of East Coast elitism always hangs unspoken, so it can be easier to attribute the unusually intense hostility to Obama in the region to his implied lack of enthusiasm for college basketball than to his skin color. But Jason Zengerles great profile of McConnell laid the dynamic perfectly bare:
We are still a racist state, I hate to admit it, says the Kentucky GOP strategist. Anything you can connect to Barack Obama is a winning thing for us. Or, as a prominent Kentucky Democrat puts it: The only way they can beat [Grimes] is to paint her skin a different color than it is and make her gender a different gender than it is. Theyre going to have to make her Barack Obama.
Sam Youngman the journalist who briefly commanded attention with a putatively confessional essay explaining his move from Washington to Lexington actually assailed Zengerles source for admitting this in public:
And to be sure, Kentucky is not a racist state in the sense that everybody in it is racist. But race is a central dynamic, and the outcome of the election will turn in large part on whether Grimes can appeal to white Democrats who dont want to support an African-American. (Probably many of these voters are the same ones who love the states new health-care law but hate Obamacare.) Its also a reality that is too uncomfortable for many observers to actually state.
Has that IDIOT Jonathan Shait, I mean Chait ever heard of COAL?
What is really shocking about RINO McConnell is that he is not being primaried. The "Appalachians," whateva TF they are, are not going to vote Republican anyway, so why the article. BTW, their numbers are not huge.
McConnell, among his faults, may have one redeeming virtue at home. While this guy might come across to us like Sweet Fatty Milquetoast, every Democrat's Butt Boy, he is an absolute Lord and Master of the Pork Process. While he's kissing Barry's Butt, reaching across the aisle, and Lunching with Reid and Pelosi, he is always bringing home lotsa bacon.
Plus, I bet he has a lock on RNC support and can outspend Bevin in the primary 20-1. McConnell is a fitting symbol of all that has gone wrong with the Republic, but he does wrong real good.
In fact, McConnell seems to be ignoring this guy in the primaries. I wonder what's going on.
Scary in one sense. This seems to be the sort of scenario where Team Obama might throw in a "Conservative" challenger to split the vote.
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