Peeling the Onion
I think Ben Smith and Jonathan Martin are on to something about the subtext of all this Ayers stuff billowing up out of the McCain campaign these days. Martin writes:
At best, this is to say that Obama doesn’t believe in American exceptionalism. At worst, and this is where the new ad goes, it means Obama doesn’t sufficiently love America and is actually apart from it.
And Smith concurs:
It’s not about an obscure ’60s radical; it’s about challenging Obama’s Americanness, which is why the language of the ads, deliberately or inadvertently, echoes the language of viral emails that do that more directly.
But in another sense, I think Martin and Smith stop a step too short in their analysis. The Ayers stuff is, as Martin says, “a mere means to an end,” but so is the charge against Obama’s Americanness. Exoticism isn’t enough, and the real goal of the hard right–and it’s a goal that until recently the McCain campaign has not accepted for itself–is to paint Obama as a very familiar (and very American) figure: the black radical. The right loves the image of Obama as a black radical as much as they profess to fear it, because it’s a figure they know how to use to devastating electoral effect.
Here’s how I peel back the layers of the onion:
According to National Review types (who protest perhaps a little too much that their speculations about Obama not about race) what lies behind their concerns over Obama’s Americanness is the belief that at his core Obama is nothing more than a Manchurian candidate for the radical left. In the face of all available evidence, many of them (most obviously Stanley Kurtz, but the others as well) think that if and when Obama’s elected he’s going to swing further left than Malcolm X. This is why the question “Who’s the Real Barack Obama?” has been so effective as a tagline in email smears and now McCain campaign ads.
The second layer, obviously (as the AP picked out over the weekend) is race. Saying that Obama is “unamerican” or invoking ad nauseam his ties to an “unrepentant former terrorist” are another way to remind people that Obama is black. (As the AP’s Douglass K. Daniel put it, “In a post-Sept. 11 America, terrorists are envisioned as dark-skinned radical Muslims, not the homegrown anarchists of Ayers’ day 40 years ago.”)
The combination of these two factors is what makes Jeremiah Wright such a terrifying specter–but also such a potent electoral tool–in the eyes of the right. He’s black and radical, exactly the person whom the right is convinced they’re running against. Or more cynically, he’s exactly the person whom they want to be running against. For it is a fact of political history that in America there are few better ways to win an election than to run against the image of an angry black man–and so much the better if he’s yelling “God damn America” at the top of his lungs.
I’m convinced that Obama’s electoral success so far has everything to do with the fact that he hasn’t let even a whiff of black radicalism attach to his person.* And this success explains why the right has been so desperate to enlist any surrogate they can find as a stand in for him, be it Ayers, Wright, or even Michelle. (Remember the National Review’s “Mrs. Grievance” cover with its scary picture of a scolding Michelle?) Now that Sarah Palin has declared it open season on Wright, I expect we’re in for one last ugly push to make something stick.
The sad thing about all of this, of course, is that while it has everything to do with this election, it has nothing to do with how the president, whoever he is, is going to handle the next four years leading this country. The happy part is that (fingers crossed, breath held) so far the majority of Americans seem to agree.
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* Note: That this is a practical requirement of American presidential politics is not something I’m happy about, but I think it would be hard to dispute as a fact.
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