LIVING POLITICS
Howard Fineman
The Bluegrass Battle
Could Obama do better than expected in Kentucky?
When I was starting out in journalism here in Louisville a zillion years ago, my newspaper colleagues and I viewed the neighborhood called Shively as an outpost of rural Kentucky in the midst of the city.
It was legally a jurisdiction unto itself, and the people there preferred it that way. Dixie Highway ran through it. It was the kind of place where you could buy a black velvet wall hanging with a hand-painted, neon-hued version of the Last Supper on it. The kind of place where you could attend one of the many small, evangelical churches that lined the highway. The folks who lived there tended to be immigrant families from small towns to the south—some as far away as Alabama—who had migrated north in search of industrial work.
Shively, not surprisingly, is where Bill Clinton has been campaigning in the final, gloomy days leading up to the Democratic presidential primary in Kentucky. His wife, Sen. Hillary Clinton, almost certainly will win big in the Bluegrass State. The question is: how big? The former president was here trying to make the margin impressive.
Sen. Barack Obama has a good organization here. He hasn't visited much, and his campaign is downplaying this state's importance in the race for the nomination, which he has almost wrapped up. Still, the Obama team is trying to exceed his low expectations here—which call for Hillary to win by at least 25 points.
He may do that, but I'm not quite convinced. Steve Henry, a former lieutenant governor and prominent Democrat, told me that he had organized for Clinton in western Kentucky—and failed to find a single county judge (that's the local chief executive) "who wasn't willing to support Hillary." In other words, most of the party structure in the state is for her, thanks in part to the Clintons' long, friendly ties to the state.
Louisville may be a somewhat different story. This gracious old city on the southern banks of the Ohio River has transformed itself under the shrewd, longtime leadership of Mayor Jerry Abramson. (The mayor has remained neutral in the presidential race. Much of his city's constituency is for Obama, but he has longstanding ties to the Clintons.) Louisville is on the cutting edge of a new New South, powered by arts, higher education and health care. The energetic and entrepreneurial sons and daughters of leading local families such as the Browns and the Binghams have returned to the city to renew their roots and pitch in.
Still, Kentucky is shaping up as another haunting asterisk in Obama's extra-inning victory box score. In the fall, Obama doesn't have to win all of the voters in Shively. Indeed, Kentucky may not even be in play in the race against Republican Sen. John McCain.
But Obama is going to need to reach them if he wants to become president of all the people, even of all the Democrats.
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Member Comments
Posted By: Concerned Canadian @ 05/20/2008 8:48:54 PM
Comment: Barack Hussein Obama has out spent Hillary Clinton by trillions and trillions of dollars and he still can't seal the nominee and he's also behind Hillary Clinton in the popular vote !
Each vote Barack received, cost his campaign $10,000. Each vote Hillary Clinton received , cost her campaign only 5 cents ! And she received more votes !
Conclusion, Hillary Clinton ran a much more cost effective and decisive campaign than Obama did.
Now, if Obama and Hillary Clinton were on , " The Apprentice " , Hillary Clinton would win the Project Manager job because her money used earned better results. Donald Trump would not stand for Obama's tremondous spending and not achieve the results close to what Hillary Clinton did. Donald Trump would have fired Obama a long time ago.
Obama....... " You're Fired " !!
Posted By: Henry of Alabama @ 05/20/2008 12:24:22 PM
Comment: NO. People kill people. They use religon as an excuse.
Posted By: Henry of Alabama @ 05/20/2008 11:51:33 AM
Comment: If you did not know, he has no class.