Rethinking The Iraq Critics
Personal And Economic Recovery
Rev. Wright Launches Own 24-Hr. Channel; All Wright, All The Time, Preacher Promises
Horse Race Or An Honest Dialogue On Race Relations In America?
McCain Freaks Out
The Price of Delay
Wright's Tune Has a Familiar Ring
Race Cards And Speech Codes
A White Girl for Obama
Did Israel Drive Out The Arabs 60 Years Ago?
The Real Meaning of Mother's Day
It's Over
Recession, Recession, Where's The Recession?
End The Mistreatment of Race Horses
Playing Nice
Playing Performance Politics
An Indictment of Our Army’s Competence
Take That, Big Oil!
Presidential Pariah
Harper's Index
Obamicans Pile On Clinton At Own Peril
What John McCain Told Me, And What It Says About How Far He’s Fallen
‘The Change You Deserve’
Should We Impoverish The Persian Gulf?
Springtime Is Our Time And Viva Sweet Love
Apology Denied
In Visit To Israel, Bush Can Prevent A War With Iran
Too Late To The Duck Hunt
Sore Dems Want Out of Proportion Primaries
Vote For Justice
Breeding Sorrow
U.S. Must Stay In Iraq Till Day Is Done And Victory Won
Barack Obama's Bitter Half
Hillary And The Golden Handshake
Why Won't Hillary Adopt The Huckabee Option?
New Orleans Advances -- Slowly
McCainiac
Petronomics 101
McCain, Huckabee And The Evangelicals
Pursuing The Elusive White Voter
What Works: Freedom Project Instills Lofty Dreams In Black Students
If On The Wrong Track, Why Go Left?
The Caniddate And The Pastor
Needed -- Will Rogers
The Other Obama
Congressional Districts Deny Democracy
Hillary’s Role: Exit Stage Left
Hazy Thinking On Medical Marijuana
Battle of The Hawks
Students Take Flight Through Readers' Generosity
The Losing Candidate's Public Pain
Taking Out The Junk -- Interview With Steven Milloy
In Defense of ‘Big Oil’
It's Islamic Jihad, Not Extremism, Uncle Sam
Letter To African-Americans
Mississippi Harbinger
West Virginia: Then And Now



Michael Barone
Will Wright Damage Obama's Millennial Support?
Michael Barone 3/24/2008
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It's a generational thing. That was the theme of Barack Obama's speech last Tuesday, in which he both failed to renounce and at the same time separated himself from the man he has described as his spiritual mentor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

Obama said that Wright's bellowing, "God damn America," was just a response to the evil treatment of America's blacks all those years ago by an old man (66) who does not realize, as Obama does and as the success of Obama's candidacy shows, that America is not static but has been perfecting itself.

Obama's even tone and his supple rhetoric was a soothing contrast to Wright's rants, and his calls on blacks to urge their children to read were a concession to the majority of Americans who believe that black Americans' problems are not all the fault, as Wright suggests, of vicious white people.

It was an artful performance and a politically sensitive one. For Obama's candidacy is a generational phenomenon. His greatest support comes from black voters and from voters under 30, the Millennial generation born after 1980, first named by William Strauss and Neal Howe.

The exit polls in Democratic primaries this year have shown the widest generational split that I can remember in either
primaries or general elections. Upward of two-thirds of voters 65 and over have been supporting Hillary Clinton; even higher percentages of voters under 30 have been backing Obama. Evidence suggests that Obama has been attracting many new young voters — a source of strength for his party if he is nominated — and is even getting them to click on the campaign's emails and send in money.

The Wright sermons have probably not been a problem for Obama with black voters — they have heard this kind of thing before. And while it may be off-putting, it will not prompt them to reconsider their votes or diminish their enthusiasm.

Millennials are another matter. In a brilliantly well-timed new book, "Millennial Makeover: MySpace, YouTube and the Future of American Politics," Democratic Party veteran Morley Winograd and media researcher Michael Hais explain how this generation, with the highest percentages of blacks, Latinos and Asians in American history, doesn't care much for racial divisions and relies for news and advice on networks of friends and peers.

A newspaper story on Obama's pastor is not going to affect their view of him — they don't read newspapers except when a friend emails a link to a newspaper Website.

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By Eric Allie  - Caglecartoons.com  * Posted 03/19/2008
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